Central Ohio Railroad v. Thompson

5 F. Cas. 359, 2 Bond 296
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio
DecidedOctober 15, 1869
StatusPublished

This text of 5 F. Cas. 359 (Central Ohio Railroad v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Ohio Railroad v. Thompson, 5 F. Cas. 359, 2 Bond 296 (circtsdoh 1869).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT.

The questions now before the court arise on a special demurrer to the third plea of the defendant. The declaration, in four separate counts, sets forth the grounds on which the plaintiffs seek a recovery. The first and second counts aver that the plaintiffs are the holders and owners of the drafts or bills described in said counts, alleged to have been drawn by the defendant through his agent on himself, payable at one day’s sight at the Bank of the Metropolis, in the District of Columbia, with exchange on New York. These drafts, it is averred, were drawn on a sufficient consideration, and were duly accepted by the defendant and not being paid, were protested, whereby the defendant became liable to pay to the plaintiffs the amount of said several drafts. The third count is on another draft or bill, drawn in the same manner as those described in the first and second counts, and for a like consideration; but not accepted or paid by the defendant. The fourth is a general count, averring an indebtedness to the plaintiffs for the transportation of horses and mules for the defendant, and at his request, with the usual averment of a promise to pay.

As introductory to the plaintiffs’ right of action on the bills or drafts described in the first, second, and third counts of the declaration, and explanatory of their ownership of and legal right thereto, the declaration avers, in substance, that on October 1, 1861, in consideration that the plaintiffs, before that time, at the instance and request of the defendant, had transported a large number of mules from and to the places named in the declaration, the defendant was indebted to the plaintiffs in the several sums stated in the several counts, agreed and undertook to pay the same by drafts, to be drawn by his agent or himself, to be accepted by him as already stated. There is no averment, however, that the mules transported were the property of the defendant; and the basis of the plaintiffs’ right to a recovery in this action, is the promise and undertaking of the defendant to accept and pay the bills or drafts drawn on him by his agent, and his neglect or refusal to do so. As the demurrer to the defendant’s third plea, by a familiar rule of pleading, reaches to the declaration, it will be proper here to inquire preliminarily whether the plaintiffs, in the case made by them, have shown a right to maintain an action to recover the sums stated in the first, second, and third counts, on the several bills or drafts described, upon the averment that they are the holders and owners of the same, without indorsement to them. This can not be a question on this demurrer, for the reason that the supreme court of the United States, in the case in chancery between these parties appealed from this court, adjudged that the remedy of the plaintiffs was not in equity, but by action at law, and therefore remanded the case to this court to be tried in an action at lavt [Thompson v. Central Ohio R. Co.] 6 Wall. [73 U. S.] 134. And there seems to be no room for a doubt that the averments of the declaration show a promise and undertaking by the defendant, creating a legal liability, for which an action may be sustained. There is set forth a promise, upon an alleged consideration, to do an act which the defendant has failed to perform, by reason of which a right of action has accrued to the plaintiffs.

The only inquiry for the court on this demurrer is, therefore, whether the third plea of the defendant sets forth legal and sufficient grounds to defeat the plaintiffs’ [361]*361Tight to a recovery in this action. Without reciting in detail the defendant’s third plea, which is of great length, and seemingly obnoxious to the charge of prolixity, it "will he sufficient to state its substance. It be.gins with an averment that the several causes of action stated in the declaration are all parts of one and the same transaction, growing out of the same contract, in which the promises of the defendant were conditional and dependent on obligations to be performed by the plaintiffs, which they did not, and would not, perform. The plea then avers that on August 30, 1861, and prior and subsequent to that date, the plaintiffs were two railroad companies, each constituting a part of a through line for the transportation of live stock and other property from Cincinnati, to Pittsburg, Harrisburg, Baltimore, and other places; that the joint agent of the two companies at Cincinnati on the said August 30, 1861, submitted a proposition in writing, by which the railroads offered to transport all the horses and mules that Thompson and Groom, and such other persons as they might be interested with, might wish to transport within the next forty days from Cincinnati, by way of Columbus Steubenville, or Bellair to Pittsburg and Harrisburg, or Baltimore, at certain rates for each car-load, as named in the proposition. And after other stipulations, not material to notice, the written offer of the agent proposed, that for the transportation of horses and mules, William Stuart, as agent of the plaintiffs at Pitts-burg. should be authorized to draw on the defendant at the Bank of the Metropolis, in Washington, D. C., at one day’s sight for each shipment, separately, as forwarded from Pittsburg, the drafts to be paid promptly in exchange on New Tork. Tne plea then avers, that on the same day, and as a part of the same transaction, the defendant accepted in writing the said offer of the plaintiffs’ agent, signing the name of Thompson & Groom. The xffea then sets forth, that, at the same time, the defendant, in his individual name, signed a written stipulation to the effect that, in pursuance of the foregoing agreement, he authorized William Stuart, as his agent at Pittsburg, to draw on him at one day’s sight, at the Bank of the Metropolis, Washington City, payable in exchange on New Tork, for each shipment by Thompson & Groom, as the same should be forwarded from Pittsburg. The plea then .avers, that pursuant to this arrangement large numbers of horses and mules were offered to the plaintiffs for transportation and were received by them; and that, although some were transported under said agreement, in relation to other portions of the .animals the plaintiffs were guilty of sundry wrongful acts of commission and omission whereby the animals were greatly injured, -and the owners suffered damage to an amount exceeding 824,000, and largely in excess of the sum claimed in this action as due to the plaintiffs. These alleged tortious acts on the part of the plaintiffs are set forth at great length and with great particularity in the plea; but, for the purposes of the question on this demurrer, it is unnecessary to notice them in detail.

This statement presents, in brief, the grounds of defense set up in the third plea. It purports to be, in its main features, a plea in bar. It is certainly somewhat peculiar in its structure, and has not been drawn with a very strict reference to the rules of special pleading still in force in this court. It is not proposed to notice the numerous points made by the counsel for the plaintiffs in his very elaborate argu. ment in support of the demurrer. There are two objections to the plea which seem to be decisive, and these will be noticed very briefly. The first is, that the plea, without denying the material allegations of the declaration on which the plaintiffs base their right to recover, avers, in avoidance of the defendant’s liability, the failure of the plaintiffs to perform another agreement between other parties, the performance of which is alleged to be a condition precedent to any liability by the defendant on his promise or undertaking as set out in the declaration.

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 359, 2 Bond 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-ohio-railroad-v-thompson-circtsdoh-1869.