Rodgers v. Black
Rodgers v. Black
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
In the bond upon which the plaintiff brought his suit there occurs this provision: “ For the purpose of settling the question as to who is legally entitled to receive the said sum, the said Edgar N. Black, Jr., hereby agrees to join with the said John Rodgers in any legal proceedings that may be appropriate for the purpose of settling the said question, the cost of which to come out of the said fund.” Could there be a recovery upon this bond, without a previous submission in some form to a competent legal tribunal of the question as to who was legally entitled to receive the amount thereof ? The court below took the view that it could be settled in the present action. We see no difficulty in this view of the case. The law seeks to avoid a multiplicity of actions. The fact that the defendant appeared and pleaded may be regarded as a compliance with his agreement to join with the plaintiff in legal proceedings appropriate for the purpose of settling the question as to the legal title to the money held by him. There was certainly no necessity for two actions, the one to determine the liability of the defendant to pay and another to enforce that liability.
The plaintiff was appointed by the United States Circuit Court as “ receiver of the crops growing on the land or harvested since the acknowledgment of the marshal’s deed.” Instead of having the grass cut and cured in the usual way, he acted as an agistor, and had it cropped by ponies as pasturage. Whether used in the one way or the other, it was undoubtedly a crop growing on the land and as such was under the control of the receiver, and was necessarily to be accounted for by him. It was so helu by the court below, and this ruling upon the question constitutes one of the principal specifications of error. The view of the court was so clearly correct that no discussion of it is necessary. Grass growing upon the land is one of the valuable products of agriculture and one of the principal commercial crops. The fact that it was fed to the ponies upon the stalk instead of being cut and cured and fed subsequently as hay, made no difference whatever. It had a commercial value in either case and for that the receiver was responsible.
The question as to whether or not the plaintiff was legally entitled to receive the amount, for the payment of which the bond in suit was conditioned, depended upon the testimony
The portion of the bond above quoted provides that the cost of the proceedings necessary to settle the question as to who is legally entitled to receive the said sum is “ to come out of the said fund.” A general judgment was entered upon the verdict with interest which would, of course, carry costs. This was an inadvertence and should not, under the terms of the bond, be allowed. It is not necessary, however, to send the case back for a new trial, in order to remedy this inadvertence. We may modify it in pursuance of the general power given to us in the act creating this court. The assignments of error are all overruled and the judgment of the court below is so modified as to direct the payment of the costs in the court below and in this court out of the amount of the judgment entered upon the verdict, and with this modification, the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.