American Manganese Co. v. Virginia Manganese Co.

21 S.E. 466, 91 Va. 272, 1895 Va. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 28, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 21 S.E. 466 (American Manganese Co. v. Virginia Manganese Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Manganese Co. v. Virginia Manganese Co., 21 S.E. 466, 91 Va. 272, 1895 Va. LEXIS 23 (Va. 1895).

Opinion

Buchanan, J. :

The first assignment of error in this case is to the action of the Circuit Court in overruling the demurrer of the plaintiff in error, which was the plaintiff in the court below, to special plea No. 2, filed by the defendant.

The demurrer raises the question whether under our statute [280]*280(section 3299 of the Code), allowing special pleas of set-off to be filed, a defendant cau set np a claim for unliquidated damages founded upon a contract other than the contract sued on by the plaintiff. The claim of the defendant that the contract sued on and the contract set np in its plea, for the alleged breach of which it seeks damages, are parts of the same contract, cannot be sustained, as the pleadings show very clearly that they are separate and distinct agreements. The defendant insists that the provisions of section 3299 of the Code, which allows a defendant to plead- “any other matter, as would entitle him either to recover damages at law from the plaintiff or the person under whom the plaintiff claims, or to relief in equity, in whole or in part, against the obligation of the contract’ ’ sued on, is sufficiently broad to allow him to plead “any cause of action arising also on contract, express or implied, and existing at the commencement of the action, and such counterclaim may be either for liquidated or unliquidated damages.”

If the term “or any other matter” authorizes a defendant to make such a defense, is it not also sufficiently broad to authorize him to set up any claim for damages that may be due him arising out of tort as well as contract, and existing when plea is filed as well as when the action is brought ? 'Why-limit it to claims arising out of contracts, or to causes of action existing when the plaintiff institutes his action? There is nothing in the term “or any other matter” which justifies a construction which would include the one and exclude the other. The language of the term “or any other matter” is sufficiently broad, considered by itself, to include both of the defenses named; but considered in connection with its context and tested by settled rules of construction, I do not think it includes either. One of these rules of construction is that general words may be limited to the same genus or class as the specific words which precede them.

[281]*281In Sutherland on Statutory Construction (section 268) it is said that “when there are general words following particular and specific words, the former must be confined to things of the same kind. ’ ’

In Broom’s Legal Maxims (side page 651) the rule is laid down as follows: “Where a particular class [of persons or things] is spoken of, and general words follow, the class first mentioned is to be taken as the most comprehensive, and the general words treated as referring to matters ejusdem, generis with such class; the effect of general words when they follow particular words being thus restricted. ’ ’

Sedgwick, in his work on Construction of Statutes (page 361), says : “Where general words follow particular words, the rule is to construe the former as applicable to things or persons particularly mentioned.”

The decisions of the courts fully sustain the text-writers, that this is the true rule of construction in such cases, subject to certain limitations not necesssary to be mentioned here. City of Lynchburg v. Norfolk & W. R. R. Co., 80 Va. 237; Ashbury Railway, &c., Co. v. Riche, L. R. 7 H. L., at pages 664, 665; Insurance Co. v. Hamilton, 12 App. Cas. 484, 486; People v. New York & M. B. Ry. Co., 84 N. Y. 565; State v. McGarry, 21 Wis. 496; St. Louis v. Laughlin, 49 Mo. 559.

Applying this rule of construction to the language under consideration, and the conclusion necessarily follows that unliquidated damages based upon breach of a contract, other than the contract sued on by the plaintiff, cannot be set up in a plea, under section 3299 of the Code. The particular defenses provided for in the preceding words of that section are: (1) Failure in the consideration of the contract; (2) fraud in its procurement; (3) breach of warranty of the title or the soundness of personal property, for the price or value whereof he entered into the contract.

Each of these defenses is based upon matters directly con[282]*282nected with, and injuries growing out of, the contract sued on. The “plain purpose” of the legislature in enacting that section of the Code, as it now stands, was, as Judge Moncure says in. Huff v. Broyles, 26 Gratt. 283, 285, “to give precisely the same measure of relief, on a plea filed under the same, as could be obtained in an independent action brought for the same cause, and to prevent one cause of action from being divided into two. ’ ’ The term ‘or for any other matter’ ’ w as added so that such purpose could be fully accomplished by allowing, not only the defenses particularly and specifically named in the preceding part of the section, but to allow all defenses of that character or kind based upon such contract, or for injuries growing out of it, to be disposed of in one case. This is the construction put upon it by Mr. Minor and Mr. Bartcn (1 Minor’s Inst. p. 796; 1 Bart. Law. Prac. 511); and is, I think, clearly the true construction. The Circuit Court ought, therefore, to have sustained the demurrer to special plea Ho. 2.

The second assignment of error is as to the mode of ascertaining the damages resulting to the defendant for the alleged breach of the contract set up in special plea Ho. 2, but since that question cannot arise upen the next trial of the cause, it is unnecessary to decide it.

The next and last assignment of error is, that the jury, upon the evidence in the cause, ought not to have found that anything was due the defendant for royalties on manganese ore, as claimed by the defendant in special plea Ho. 1, and that the verdict of the jury on this question was contrary to the evidence, and should have been set aside.

The contract of lease provided that the manganese ore taken from the leased premises should be weighed before it was shipped, but the contract is not definite and clear whether the ore was to be w'eighed as it came wet from the washer, and a royalty of $2 per ton paid on that wet weight, or whether it [283]*283was to be weighed after it had dried out, and the royalty paid on its dry weight. The evidence, considered on a demurrer to evidence, shows that the ore as it came wet from the washer was about 3 per cent, heavier than it was thirty-six hours afterwards. The ore was weighed as it came wet from the washer, and was at once shipped by the railroad to Pennsylvania, and weighed by the railroad company when it reached its destination, and upon such railroad weight the freights were paid and the royalties adjusted at the beginning of each month, for the oie shipped the preceding month, during the seven years the plaintiff operated the lease. A full statement of the ore shipped each month, the adjustment made as to weights, and the condition of the accounts between the parties for such month, were furnished by the plaintiff to the defendant at the beginning of each month for the preceding month. With each statement a check was sent in payment of the balance appearing to be due for such month, and receipts taken every month by the plaintiff from the defendant in the following words, except as to dates and amounts: .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 S.E. 466, 91 Va. 272, 1895 Va. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-manganese-co-v-virginia-manganese-co-va-1895.