Atlantic City v. Warren Bros.

226 F. 372, 141 C.C.A. 202, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2205
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 16, 1915
DocketNo. 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 226 F. 372 (Atlantic City v. Warren Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic City v. Warren Bros., 226 F. 372, 141 C.C.A. 202, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2205 (3d Cir. 1915).

Opinion

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

This action was instituted by Warren Brothers Company, a corporation of the State of West Virginia, against Atlantic City, a municipal corporation under the law of the State of New Jersey, being chapter 107 of the Laws of 1902, p. 284, relating to and regulating the government of cities. The plaintiff declared upon an assignment of claims for extra work done under a contract purporting to have been made between one Frank S. Lockwood and Atlantic City, and sought to recover thereupon the sum of $60,583.19, with interest from October 17, 1911. During the progress of the trial, Frank S. Lockwood and William I. Cherry, who held tlie remaining unassigned rights under the contract, were, by amendment, made parties plaintiff, and upon verdict judgment was entered for the plaintiffs, Frank S. Lockwood and William I. Cherry for $3,-142.38 and for Warren Brothers Company for $69,734.45, with costs.

The trial of this cause embraced so many issues, and the numerous errors assigned are so inter-related, that the case and the theory upon which it was tried, can be developed only by an orderly consideration of the questions submitted for review.

On November 3, 1909, Atlantic City, acting through its Board of Water Commissioners, entered into a contract with one Frank S. Lockwood, in which Lockwood undertook to build a forty-eight inch wooden stave pipe line from the city’s water works at Absecon to Atlantic City, of an approximate length of 25,000 lineal feet, and Atlantic City engaged to pay therefor the sum of $224,981.47, the said sum to be proportionately increased or decreased as the line, when completed, was greater or less than the length designated. The contract was in writing and contained many provisions. Upon these provisions as construed, and upon the conduct of the parties thereunder, depends the right of recovery.

The first question raised was the jurisdiction of the trial court, which involved (a) the question, under the Federal law, of the diverse citizenship of the parties; and (b) the right of Warren Brothers Company under the law of 1he State of New Jersey, to sue alone upon the assignment.

[376]*376[1] (a) Acting under authority of the statute which created the Board of Water Commissioners of Atlantic City and conferred upon it the power to maintain, extend and improve the water works of the city, .and in pursuance of resolutions of the Common Council of Atlantic City, appropriating the sum of $300,000 for that special purpose, the Board of Water Commissioners entered into the contract with Frank S. Lockwood for the construction of a water main of the type indicated.

One Louis Kuehnle was the president of the Beard of Water Commissioners. He was also> a stockholder and a director of the United Paving Company, a corporation engaged in the business of constructing municipal works. Frank S. Lockwood was an employee and superintendent of the United Paving Company. The contract was awarded by the Board of Water Commissioners, of which Kuehnle was a member, to Lockwood, an, employee of the Paving Company of which Kuehnle was a stockholder and director. Being without means to prosecute the work, Lockwood at once applied to one William I. Cherry for financial assistance. Cherry was the president of the Paving Company. Cherry agreed to supply Lockwood with money, and as security took an assignment of 99/ioo interest in the contract, Lockwood retaining Vioo interest therein. The work was started by Lockwood and was completed by him with the tools and implements of the Paving Company and with money supplied by Cherry. The money that Cherry advanced was withdrawn from the treasury of the Paving Company, it is alleged, without the knowledge of its directors and stockholders, and amounted in the whole to about $60,000.

In order to obtain funds with which to reimburse the Paving Copany, Cherry made application to Warren Brothers Company (the original plaintiff in this suit) for a loan of $60,000. He offered as security an assignment of the money due under the contract for extra work which was about completed, claims for which about equaled the amount he desired to borrow. Warren Brothers Company preferred to deal with the Paving Company, and offered to advance the money if the application for the loan came from that company. Thereupon, an assignment of the claims for extra work under the cohtract was made by Cherry arid Lbckwood to 'the Paving Company, which in turn assigned the same to Warren Brothers Company, the consideration paid by the latter being approximately the sum of $60,000, an amount sufficient to enable Cherry to replace the funds withdrawn by him from the Paving Company. The assigned claims were presented to-the city and payment refused, whereupon this suit was brought.

The learned trial judge charged the jury that primarily the right of Warren Brothers Company to recover in this action for money due for extra work done under the contract, depended upon the rigdit of Lockwood to recover, had he not assigned the claims and had he brought suit in his own right, and that the right of Lockwood to recover depended upon whether Lockwood was the real contractor with the city, or whether in fact, although not in form, the contract was really between the city and the United Paving Company.

The question who was the real contractor was, therefore, a question [377]*377o£ fact to be determined by the jury. The question embraced more than ilie legality of the conduct of Kuehnle, a director of the Board of Whiter Commissioners, in awarding a contract to a corporation in which lie was financially interested. It involved the citizenship of the parties, and upon the diverse character of their citizenship, when ascertained, depended the jurisdiction of the District Court under the Federal law.

Warren Brothers Company was a corporation of the State of West Virginia. It was testified that Lockwood was a citizen of the State of North Carolina and Cherry a citizen of the State of New York. The United Paving Company and Atlantic City were corporations of the State of New Jersey. Of these facts, some were admitted, others controverted.

The learned trial judge submitted to the jury in limine, the questions, first, whether Lockwood and Cherry were citizens respectively of the States of North Carolina and New York, or of the State of Mew Jersey, and second, whether the contract in suit was in fact made with Lockwood, or, though in form with Lockwood, was in truth made with the United Paving Company, and instructed the jury that if it found that the Paving Company, a New Jersey corporation, was the real contractor, it could not have brought this suit in the District Court against Atlantic City, likewise a New Jersey corporation, and that as the rights of Warren Brothers Company were no greater than those of the Paving Company, Warren 'Brothers Company could not maintain this action, and accordingly the verdict should be for the defendant.

The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiffs. A verdict for the •plaintiffs upon the preliminary issues submitted, embraced several findings of fact, and determined that the contract was made in good faith, that it was made between the city and Lockwood and not between the city- and the United Paving Company, and that it was made between citizens of different states, thereby satisfying the requirement of the Federal statute conferring jurisdiction upon the District Court to entertain the action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 F. 372, 141 C.C.A. 202, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-city-v-warren-bros-ca3-1915.