Baltimore & O. R. v. Vanderwerker

28 S.E. 829, 44 W. Va. 229, 1897 W. Va. LEXIS 112
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 S.E. 829 (Baltimore & O. R. v. Vanderwerker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore & O. R. v. Vanderwerker, 28 S.E. 829, 44 W. Va. 229, 1897 W. Va. LEXIS 112 (W. Va. 1897).

Opinion

English, Judge:

The transactions out of which this litigation grew originated in 1852-53. Isaac J. Vanderwerker was a contractor on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, and constructed a portion of said railroad, and while thus engaged became indebted to several parties. Prior to October, 1853, several suits had been brought against said Vanderwerker by different persons for debts claimed to be due them, in which suit said railroad company was summoned as garnishee; and in October, 1853, said company filed its bill of interpleader in the circuit court of Marion county, in order that the matter might be settled in one suit, as to who was entitled to the money in its hands belonging to Vanderwerker. In the bill said company stated that it was indebted to Vander-werker in the sum of five thousand, three hundred and thirty-three dollars and twenty-five cents; and in June, 1854, it paid that amount into court, as money to which Van-derwerker was entitled. This amount was not accepted as the true amount of indebtedness of said company to Van-[231]*231derwerker, and such proceedings were had in the case that on February 3,1864, said company was directed to pay the additional sum of four thousand, three hundred and foui*teen dollars and thirty-four cents, with interest thereon from June 23, 1854. From the decree requiring the pay-' ment of this additional sum into court as the balance due Vanderwerker, the railroad company appealed; and that appeal was passed upon by this Court in March, 1882, and remanded for further proceedings. 19 W. Va., 265. It would serve no good purpose, in considering the questions presented by the assignments of error in the petition for the appeal now under consideration, to give the details of the litigation which has resulted from the various contentions of the parties with reference to this fund.

The case is now for the fourth time in this Court. Upon the present appeal it was argued and submitted, and an opinion (prepared by Judge Holt) handed down affirming the decree complained of. A petition for rehearing was presented by counsel, and granted, and the case reheard. A brief history of the case is given by Brannon, Judge, in the case of Railroad Co. v. Vanderwerker, decided November 18, 1889, and reported in 33 W. Va., 191, (10 S E. 289).

Counsel for the appellant, in their brief filed upon the rehearing of this cause, claim that this Court, in its opinion, overlooked the fact that there was a commissioner’s report filed in the cause, and unexcepted to, which determines all the questions of ownership as to the Cheney and other claims differently from the decree complained of, which decree was affirmed, and claim that for this reason alone the decree complained of should be reversed. The commissioner’s report referred to in said brief is the report of W. R. D. Dent, who was appointed by a decree of the circuit court of Taylor county, at its March term, 1885, with directions to ascertain and report whether all or any of the six claims mentioned in Receiver Watson’s report were assigned to the complainant, and, if so, when and by. whom said assignments were made, and upon what consideration, and whether the complainant, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, had paid and satisfied any, and, if any, which, of said claims, for which no assignments [232]*232were taken, and the amount paid by the complainant on each of said claims, to whom paid, the date of every payment, and whether the claims so paid were taken in full satisfaction of said claims; also whether Dudley S. Nye is the assignee in bankruptcy of the defendant George A. Cheney, and whether Robert Smith is the assignee and transferee of Stephen Benson and Robert Parlin, and what sums, if any, are coming to said Smith and Nye, respectively ; also, what sum, if anything-, is due and owing to the defendant Vanderwerker on account of the decrees theretofore made and entered in the above cause. In pursuance of the requirements of said decree, said W. R. D. Dent, as commissioner, reported that Dudley S. Nye was the as-signee in bankeuptcy of George Cheney; that Robert Smith was the assignee and transferee of Stephen Benson and Robert Parlin ; that there was in the hands of James O. Watson, receiver, six thousand one hundred and eighty-four dollars and ninety-nine cents, including interest to November 4, 1885; and that said amount should be disbursed as follows : Two thousand three hundred and sixty-six dollars and ninety-eight cents to Dudley S. Nye, assignee in bankruptcy of George A. Cheney ; two hundred and thirty-one dollars and eighty-five cents to Robert Smith, assignee of Stephen Benson; eight hundred and forty-one dollars and thirty-five cents to same as assignee of Benjamin Parlin; one hundred and forty-seven dollars and eight cents to Moore & Kidwell; six hundred and twenty-one dollars and fifty-eight cents to James Kirby, use of J. D. Parkerson; and three hundred and forty-eight dollars and eight cents to J. D. Parkerson. Said commissioner further reported that the above-mentioned six claims were in fact never paid to James O. Watson, general receiver, by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, but said company claiming to be the owner of them, gave him a bond of indemnity against any claimant to said claims; that the evidence in the case clearly proved that they were not the owners of the first three above-mentioned claims ; and that said company failed to produce any evidence that it was the owner of the other three of said claims. And he recommended that said money be paid to the general receiver, to be properly distributed. This re[233]*233port of Commissioner Dent does not appear to have ever been excepted to. On the contrary, in the decree rendered in the cause on April 7,1886, it is stated that “the cause came on that day to be heard upon the papers heretofore read, decrees and orders had, and the report of Commissioner W. R. D. Dent, to which report there were no exceptions.” After the case of Railroad Co. v. Vanderwerker was decided, on November 18, 1889, and the cause reversed and remanded for further pleading's, Isaac J. Vanderwerker and Dudley S. Nye, who claimed to be the assignee of Cheney, and Robert Smith, who claimed to be the owner of two debts decreed to Parlin and Benson, filed their petitions, charging1 that there were several sums of money in the hands of the receiver which had not been paid out, and which ought to have been distributed among them as they were entitled thereto, and claiming that they were the owners of six several claims therein described, that the money had never in fact been paid, and they were entitled to recover the amounts specified in said petitions from the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company. To these petitions said railroad company filed its answer, denying that Nye, as such assignee in bankruptcy, was entitled to any part of this fund. Denying that he had any right to it. Alleging that'his office had expired, and that he had been discharged. Claiming that these debts, and each of them, had been assigned to it by Cheney and the other persons named, as owners thereof (especially Cheney, Smith, Benson, and Parlin), and that said company was the rightful owner of them ; that Cheney having been a bankrupt, and so adjudged, and the assignee having made no claim to this fund, as against the said company, within two years from the time of his appointment, his right to the recovery was barred, — and it relied upon the statute of limitations, and prayed that said company be decreed the rightful owner of these claims. To this answer said petitioners filed a general replication.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E. 829, 44 W. Va. 229, 1897 W. Va. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-o-r-v-vanderwerker-wva-1897.