Chicago & Northeastern Railroad v. Sturgis

7 N.W. 213, 44 Mich. 538, 1880 Mich. LEXIS 629
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 7 N.W. 213 (Chicago & Northeastern Railroad v. Sturgis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago & Northeastern Railroad v. Sturgis, 7 N.W. 213, 44 Mich. 538, 1880 Mich. LEXIS 629 (Mich. 1880).

Opinion

Graves, J.

The circuit judge ruled, against objection, that the declaration was sufficient for the defendant in error to prove a case against the corporation under the act to provide for the protection of laborers and persons furnishing material for the construction and repairing of railroads in this State.” The statute is compiled as §§ 2393, 2391, 2395. The ruling was erroneous. The declaration consisted of the common counts; two being repeated with allusions, and nothing more, to the statute, with an added statement of the plaintiff’s title by assignment.

A party must set forth his case if he have one, and where his title to sue is statutory and the right of action depends on a special construction of facts defined in the statute, the declaration, if left to the reasons of the common law, must aver the existence of such facts.’ Unless this is done the defendant may insist that the cause of action relied on is not [540]*540pleaded and cannot be used as a ground of proof and recovery. The charge brought against him is not the charge the plaintiff is endeavoring to urge and there is no foundation on. thfe record for it. The general counts in assumpsit have no application. They disclose no such cause of action and the law refuses to regard them or any of them as amounting to a symbol of it. Howser v. Melcher 40 Mich. 185 ; Delashman v. Berry 21 Mich. 516; Butterfield v. Seligman 17 Mich. 95; Benalleck v. People 31 Mich. 200; Austin v. Goodrich 49 N. Y. 266 ; Churchill v. Onderdonk 59 N. Y. 134; Bartlett v. Crozier 17 Johns. 449 ; Nickerson v. Bridgeport Hydraulic Co. 46 Conn. 24; Inhabitants of Bath v. Inhabitants of Freeport 5 Mass. 325 ; Drowne v. Stimpson 2 Mass. 441, 444; Pumpelly v. Green Bay Co. 13 Wall. 166 ; Barron v. Frink 30 Cal. 489; Smith v. Curry 16 Ill. 149 ; Moore v. Wade 8 Kan. 390; Hunt v. Hunter 29 E. L. & E. 195; Hopkins v. Mayor etc. of Swansea 4 M. & W. 620. The law may be remedial as to laborers and persons furnishing materials, but it gives the remedy against the corporation, which otherwise would not be liable to them at all, and must therefore be pursued with some degree of strictness.

So long as the claims preserve their original character of demands for labor and materials, and the sole change is one of ownership, no reason is perceived for denying to the new owner, although he may have become such owner by assignment, the right to enforce the demands against the corporation in as ample a manner as the first owner might have done. A contrary construction would often prove very embarrassing, and in certain cases would defeat the purpose of the statute. In case of the first owner’s death, the right would be determined, and possibly-also in cases of insolvency and bankruptcy.

The protection ” provided for is confined to “ laborers for and persons furnishing materials to contractors and "subcontractors.” A distinction is clearly marked between those who contract for labor and materials and the persons who actually perform labor and actually furnish materials. The [541]*541law limits its protection to the one who labors, and does not extend it to the one who merely hires ont the labor of others. But the labor done by a man’s team may be fairly regarded as labor done by him within the meaning of this statute. No right arises to any one ont of its service except to him. Persons in his employment have distinct rights of their own.

The circuit judge permitted the introduction of certain papers which a sub-contractor had issued to laborers as tokens of their service. They are spoken of as time-checks. Their admission against objection was error. According to the record they were hearsay and not evidence against the company.

The suggestion that the road belonged to Bancroft

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.W. 213, 44 Mich. 538, 1880 Mich. LEXIS 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-northeastern-railroad-v-sturgis-mich-1880.