Wooddy v. Commonwealth
Wooddy v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a writ of error to a judgment of the corporation court of Fredericksburg, in a case of misdemeanor. The plaintiff in error, James P. Wooddy, was -indicted for acting as a ship-broker without a license. The indictment found against him contained two counts. In the first, it was charged generally, that he “ did unlawfully act as a ship broker without a license authorized by law.”
Several errors are assigned In the petition for a writ of error, but there is only one question in the ease: whether, upon the facts proved in the case, the plaintiff in error acted as a ship-broker in the transaction certified to have been proved on the trial.
The law under which the indictment was found is the act approved March 27,1876. Acts of assembly 1875-6, p. 162. By section 62 of that act, page 189, it is, among other things, enacted that “ no person or corporation shall, without a license authorized by law, act as a ship-broker, stock-broker or private banker. Any person engaged in
A definition of “ship-broker” is thus given by the act. And “ did the defendant act as such ship-broker, in the meaning of the said definition, in the transaction referred to,” is the question we now have to solve.
The facts certified to have been proved at the tidal are as follows: “That James P. Wooddy, the accused, had not a ship-broker’s license as required by the state of Virginia, upon the 29th day of August, 1877, nor since that date, nor for twelve months before; that on the 21st or 22d of August, 1877, the accused, being the agent for the owners of a lai’ge amount of lumber in the town of Fredericksburg, and the owners residing in New York city, offered one Captain W. E. Phillips, the captain of a schooner called the Lizzie Titus, which had recently before arrived in Fredericksburg from New York, a return freight or load of lumber at $5 per 1,000 feet as freight, provided Captain Phillips would allow him (Wooddy) a commission of two and a half per cent, on the amount received by Captain Phillips as freight on ■said lumber; that Captain Phillips would not agree to tiffs, and that Captain Wooddy then offered, by writing to his principals in New York, to obtain for Phillips, as freight, $5.50 per thousand feet of lumber if Captain Phillips would allow him (Wooddy) a commission of five per cent, on the amount he was to receive from the freight on said lumber; that Captain Phillips did not agree to
The court is of opinion, that the accused did nor act as a ship-broker, within the meaning of the said definition, in the transaction referred to in the said statement of facts. He was not thereby engaged in the management of a business matter occurring between the owners of the schooner “Lizzie Titus” and the shippers or consignors of the lumber which it carried on the occasion referred to. The transaction was a single one between the accused, who was the agent of the owners of the lumber, (the said agent residing in Fredericksburg, and the said owners of the lumber in the city of New York), and Phillips, the captain of the said schooner. It does not appear that the owners of the said lumber, or the owners of the said schooner, all of whom were, no doubt, non-residents of the state, had anything to do with the transaction, or ever had any knowledge of it. The accused made two propositions to Phillips to furnish him’ with a return load of lumber for the said schooner, on condition of receiving from him a certain commission on the freight; each of which was rejected. Afterwards, without any new proposition or any agreement in regard to receiving any such commission, so far as the record shows, the vessel was loaded with the said lumber, and the freight for the same was fixed at five and a half dollars per thousand feet of said lumber. During the loading of the lumber the accused, Captain "Wooddy, was about the schooner and in the hold working, as well as superintending the loading of the lumber, and employed two men to assist the crew, and these two men were paid by the accused. These duties pei’formed by the accused were those of a stevedore, “whose occupation is to load
Thus it appears that the compensation received by the accused from the said Phillip's was merely for services performed by the former, at the request or with the consent and acquiescence and for the benefit of the latter, and the amount ivas fixed by an arbitrator agreed upon by the parties, and that in performing those services the accused acted as a stevedore, and not as a ship-broker. It is not probable that there is a licensed ship-broker, or any occasion for any, in the city of Fredericksburg. We are informed that there are but two in the city of Richmond; though these facts do not appear in the record, and they are not material to the decision of this case.
The court is therefore of opinion that the said judgment is erroneous and ought to be reversed and annulled, and the verdict of the jury set aside, and the cause re
The judgment was as follows:
The court is of opinion, for reasons stated in writing and filed with the record, that the plaintiff’ in error did not act as a ship-broker in the transaction stated in the certificate of facts proved at the trial of this cause, and that the corporation court of Fredericksburg erred in overruling the motion' of the plaintiff1 in error to set aside the verdict of the jury and grant him a new trial. Therefore itis considered, ordered and adjudged, that the said judgment of the said corporation court is erroneous, and that it be reversed and annulled, and that the verdict of the jury be set aside, and the cause remanded to the corporation court for a new trial to be had therein in conformity with the foregoing opinion; which is ordered to be certified to the said corporation court of Fredericksburg.
Judgment reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Wooddy v. The Commonwealth
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- Published