Moundsville, Benwood & Wheeling Railway Co. v. Wilson
Moundsville, Benwood & Wheeling Railway Co. v. Wilson
Opinion of the Court
J. W. Burchinal and oihers obtained a writ of error to a judgment of the circuit court of Marshall County, rendered on the 20th day of July, 1901, in favor of the Moundsville, Ben-wood and Wheeling Railway Company for the sum of $3,065.55, and assign the following errors:
Fir si, The overruling of the demurrer to the declaration;
Second, The rejection of the plea of ultra, vires; and,
Third, That the judgment is not sustained by the evidence.
The declaration is founded on a bond executed by the defendants with the following condition, to-wit: “The condition of the above obligation is such that whereas the above bound principal obligors and M. F. Cox, the stockholders of the Mounds-ville, Benwood & Wheeling Railway Compan)', did, on the twenty-first day of August, 1897, enter into a written agreement, under seal, with the above named obligees, the purpose of which was to provide for a re-organization of the said railway company (which.is now in the hands of a receiver under an order of the United States Circuit Court) and for the payment of its debts by means chiefly to be furnished by the said obligees; And whereas it is, among other things, provided by the said agreement that the parties of the first part therein (corresponding with the principal obligors herein) shall well and truly pay off and discharge all the debts and liabilities now existing against the said company in excess of one hundred and fifteen thousand dollars, which last mentioned amount is to be settled in part by the use of one hundred thousand dollars, cash, which the second parties in said agreement are to furnish, and in part by the assumption or payment by the comtcmplated reorganized ppmpany of a floating indebtedness mf fifteen thousand dollars, and that the said first parties will give bond, with soeurit.y, to assure the payment of such excess;
“Now, therefore, if the obligors herein, or any person for them,*649 shall well and truly pay off and discharge all of the liabilities now existing against the said Moundsville, Benwood & Wheeling Railway Company which shall not be satisfied by the use of said one hundred thousand dollars, cash, and the 'assumption by said contemplated reorganized company of fifteen thousand dollars thereof, then shall the above obligation be void, otherwise it shall be and remain in full force and effect.”
The bond was payable to J. A. Miller and others, who assigned the same to the plaintiff for whose benefit and protection it was taken, its object being to indemnify the plaintiff against the outstanding indebtedness of the old company in excess of one hundred and fifteen thousand dollars. Such indebtedness must have presumptively at least been known to' the defendants and also the fact that the one hundred and fifteen thousand dollars had been furnished. Hence averment of notice of these things was wholly unnecessary in the declaration. The defendants’ 'means of knowing them were fully as great as those of the plaintiff, for the money could not have been furnished and the debts paid without their knowledge, as the business of the company was still under their control or that of their receiver until the contract for re-organization had been consummated. As soon as this was accomplished they became liable for the excess of indebtedness intended to be secured by the bond. The suit itself is notice and demand for the payment thereof. 14 En. Plead. & Prac., 1067.
It is claimed the declaration is bad for failure to aver nonpayment of the penalty to 'the obligees before assignment. It is necessary to aver non-payment of the penalty. Riggs & Co. v. Parsons, et al., 29 W. Va. 522; State v. Phares, 24 W. Va. 657; Braxton’s Adm’r v. Lipscomb, 2 Mumf. 282. Still this averment need be only in the most general terms. Cobbs v. Fontaine, 3 Rand. 484. The averment in this case is in those words: “Yet the said defendants, although often requested have not nor has either of them as yet paid the said plaintiff the said sum of twenty thousand dollars or part thereof, but the same to pay hath hitherto wholly neglected and refused and still do neglect and refuse.” This is undoubtedly broad enough to cover the obligees and assignors of the bond, although it might have easily been made more specific without the pleader becoming prolix.
It is true the assignors of the bond have suffered no damages
Nor is the plea of ultra vires broad enough to cover if at all applicable to this case. The assignment was a mere nominal matter to enable the plaintiff to sue in its own name without controversy. Otherwise it would have had the right to sue in the names of the obligees for its use and benefit, as it was the real beneficiary of the bond. The assignment was but intended to simplify the legal proceedings for the enforcement of the bond. This bond was taken to protect the stockholders of the reorganized company, and hence the company from the pajunent or loss of the indebtedness of the old company in excess of $115,000.00. The real consideration for the assignment was that the plaintiff must pay this excess of indebtedness, and therefore having it to pay it was entitled to recover it from those who had obligated themselves to pay it for the relief of the reorganized company and its stockholders. This was strictly the business of the company, and in no wise in violation of its charter or the purposes for which it was created.
The various objections as to the sufficiency of the evidence are so fine «pun and technical that it is hardly worth while to notice them except as matter of respect to the able and learned counsel presenting them. It is insisted that there is no proof of notice. As heretofore shown, under the circumstances of this case no notice was necessary except in so far as the suit furnishes a notice and demand that defendants comply with their agreement and bond. The evidence of Alfred Paul; as manager of the reorganized company fairly shows that the obligees fully complied with their contract, and undoubtedly presents a fair prima facie case against the obligors. The defendants introduced no evidence.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
070rehearing
Additional opinion by
.On petition for rehearing defendant’s counsel insist that some one or all of the legal quibbles raised by them are sufficient to reverse the judgment in this case, and without using their own capabilities for,settling these questions of oasyr solution, impose upon this Court the labor of doing so, in seeming disregard of the recommendation contained in section 2, Rule Y, 23 W. Ya., of the rules of this Court. The first point relied on is that the declaration fails to allege the non-payment of the penalty of the bond by Charles W. Yance in his lifetime, or by his administrator since his death. Neither the deceased nor his administrator is made a party to this action. In the case of Reynolds v. Hurst, 18 W. Va. 648, it was settled that it was only necessary to allege non-payment of the penalty by the defendants, in a suit on a joint and several bond, -thereby expressly overruling the case of Vandiver v. Hager, 5 W. Va. 414, in which the contrary had been held. Not only is this good practice for the reasons there given, but for the further reason that the allegation of nonpayment by the defendants is usually broad enough to cover any payment that they may be entitled to the benefit of by whoever made, for that which is done for a person, is the same as though done by himself. The declaration' by use of the following language shows that the action is against the defendants alone, to-wit, “Whereby by force of the condition aforesaid of the said writing obligatory an action hath accrued to the said plaintiff to demand and have of and from the said defendants the said sum of twenty thousand dollars above demanded.” As is said by Judge Patton in the case of Reynolds v. Hurst, 18 W. Va. 656. “I understand the authorities to-be, that where one is sued on a joint obligation, the averment of promise and non-payment on the part of the one sued is sufficient without noticing the other and that defendant can neither by demurrer nor on the trial prevent a recovery; his only remedy is by plea in abatement. More especially is this true, where the obligation is joint and several. In suing on it in its several character in legal effect it is only the bond of the one sued, and as to that suit the bond musí be treated, as if no other person had executed it.”
It is plain that the assignors, the obligors, were not acting for themselves individually, but wholly in behalf of the plaintiff, and that the bond was taken wholly for its benefit, that is to secure the payment of its indebtedness in excess of one hundred and fifteen thousand dollars. This the obligors agreed to pajr, but failing to do this, the plaintiff had it to pay. It was therefore equitably entitled to recover the same from such obligors, and this it might legally do under section 2, chapter 71, Codee The bond, however, was nominally payable to the obligees, and they to make the legal and the equitable rights correspond executed an assignment thereof to plaintiff. While the obligation seemingly is to pay the indebtedness in excess of the sum of one hundred and fifteen thousand dollars, as no creditor, debt or
The only issue in this case is made up on a plea of covenants performed, not specifying acts of performance. Such a plea has been held insufficient. Norfolk, &c., Co., v. Suffolk Lumber Co., 92 W. Va. 413, (23 S. E. 737) Hogg’s Pleadings & Forms, 309, 810; Arnold v. Cole, 42 W. Va. 663. Such a plea admits the plaintiff’s case so far as properly pleaded, and is an
Counsel present no error calling for a reversal of this case, and the judgment must stand.
Reference
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published