Hale v. Crow
Hale v. Crow
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action of trespass on the case brought by the defendants in error against the plaintiff in the Circuit court of Grayson county. The defendant demurred generally to the declaration, which contained but a single count, and the plaintiffs joined in demurrer ; and after argument, the said demurrer was overruled by the court. The defendant then pleaded “not guilty,” and the plaintiffs joined issue thereon. Upon this issue the parties went to trial, and there was a verdict for the plaintiffs on which the court gave judgment. Whereupon the defendant applied for and obtained a supersedeas from this court.
The declaration alleges that before the making of the agreement thereinafter to be mentioned, between the female plaintiff and the defendant, one Abner Jones had been the surveyor of Grayson county, and in consideration of certain sums named, which the female plaintiff had paid him, had promised to furnish a land warrant and to enter and survey for her a certain piece of vacant land in Grayson county, with a view to enable her to obtain a grant for the same from the commonwealth. That the said Jones wholly failed to make such entry; and that the defendant having become the successor of the said Jones in the office of surveyor of Grayson county, in consideration of the promises of the said Jones and of the payments made to him by the female plaintiff, and being required by her to enter said piece of land for her, agreed that he would furnish the necessary land warrant for the purpose, and would enter the same in her name in his office, and in due time would survey the same in order that she might obtain a grant; and that she on her part, agreed to pay the defendant his fees for the said surveying whenever performed. The declaration then alleges that the defendant utterly failed to furnish a land warrant and enter said land for and in the name of the
Considering this as a declaration in assumpsit for the breach of a special contract between the female plaintiff in the action and the defendant, it must be regarded as defective, because it alleges no sufficient consideration moving from her to the defendant to ground and support the promise and undertaking imputed to him. The promises and undertakings of his predecessor in office and the payments made to him were not binding upon the defendant, nor could they constitute any valid or sufficient consideration for a promise on his part to make good the shortcomings of that predecessor. Nor does it change the case, that the female plaintiff, as the declaration alleges, agreed to pay the defendant his fees for the surveying when it should be performed. For it is clear that the payment of those fees constituted no part of the consideration for the promise to furnish the land warrant and make the entry; they were to be the compensation for the particular service of making the survey, plat, &c., and the promise to pay them amounted to nothing more than the right the law gave to the surveyor to demand them upon rendering the services. The court is therefore of opinion that the declaration cannot be held a good declaration in assumpsit.
• If the declaration, however, is to be considered as in case, to recover damages against the defendant for misbehavior or neglect of duty in his office of surveyor of Grayson county, (and as such the parties from the pleadings would seem to have treated it,) then it is to be enquired whether it alleges the doing of any act or the omission of any duty on the part of
After the entry shall have been made, it is the duty ■of the surveyor to proceed with all practicable despatch to make the survey upon' it, first giving the notice of the time of doing so to the party in the manner •prescribed by the act, and it is then the duty, of the party entering the land to attend with proper chain carriers and a marker, on pain of losing the benefit of his entry; and a surveyor failing in this duty, or any other of the duties required by law, is made liable to. any party injured for all damages he may sustain by-reason of such failure. In this case, the declaration does not allege any failure to survey or to give notice, of the time of doing so, that the plaintiff might attend with her chain carriers and markers. It rests the. complaint of breach of duty on the failure to furnish the land warrant and make the entry. It is therefore unnecessary to consider under what circumstances a surveyor will be held liable for a failure to make a survey upon an entry as required by law. It is true it ■ has been argued that a failure to make a survey in this case is sufficiently implied in the allegation, that the ' defendant had entered and surveyed the land for an■other person; but if the failure in this respect were the gist of the action, the ground on which the recovery is sought to be rested, it surely could not be sufficient to leave so material a matter to mere implication and intendment. It should have been directly and formally averred. But in truth, there is no necessary or proper implication to be made that the defendant failed to survey the land for the femalq
Without considering therefore the other objections that have been urged to the declaration, the court is of opinion, for the reasons that have been stated, that the declaration in this case cannot be held good on demurrer, either as a declaration in assumpsit upon a special contract, or in case for damages occasioned to the plaintiffs by neglect of duty as surveyor on the part of the defendant. And this renders it unnecessary to decide any other question arising in the cause.
The judgment must be reversed with costs, the verdict set aside, and the cause remanded to the Circuit court, with instructions to sustain the defendant’s demurrer to the declaration, unless the plaintiff shall apply for leave to amend the same, which, under the circumstances of this case, is to be granted if asked for, upon the usual terms of the said Circuit court.
Judgment reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Hale v. Crow & wife
- Status
- Published