Columbus, Hocking Valley & Toledo Railway Co. v. Gaffney

65 Ohio St. (N.S.) 104
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 65 Ohio St. (N.S.) 104 (Columbus, Hocking Valley & Toledo Railway Co. v. Gaffney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Columbus, Hocking Valley & Toledo Railway Co. v. Gaffney, 65 Ohio St. (N.S.) 104 (Ohio 1901).

Opinion

Minshaul, C. J.

The real question in the case, and the only one we shall consider, aside from one of pleading and evidence, is whether on the admitted facts the plaintiff below, Gaffney, was entitled to recover of the defendant on an implied contract, the value of the services for which he claims compensation. The plaintiff had a contract with the general government by which, for a compensation, he was bound to carry the mails to and from the depot of the Columbus, Hocking Valley & Toledo Railway Company to the postoffice at Lancaster, Ohio, and also to and from the Cincinnati & Muskingum Valley Railway Company at the same place. These two roads at this point form a junction, the roads running on.opposite sides of a common depot, within forty feet of each other. Each of these roads had a contract with the government for carrying mails over its road, by which each was required to transfer the mails over its road, to that of the other when required in the course of transit, as the distance between them was less than eighty rods, the contract with the government imposing that duty on each when the distance between them is no greater. During the entire period for which compensation was claimed this work had been performed by the plaintiff — a period of over six years — part of the time under a contract of the government with one Turner, of which the plaintiff was the assignee, and the residue of the time under a contract with himself, the terms of both contracts being alike. The plaintiff during the entire time supposed that it was his duty under his contract with the gov[113]*113erament in regard to carrying the mails between tbe depot and the postoffice, to make tbis transfer between tbe two roads, and performed tbe service under tbis impression, until be was informed by an agent of tbe government that it was not bis duty and was ordered to desist from doing so. No demand for compensation was made until be bad received tbis order from tbe government agent, and be at no time supposed that be was entitled to any until tbis time; nor was there any express request on tbe part of tbe company or its agents, for tbe performance óf tbe service, the company having agents of its own at the depot who should have performed tbe service. It also appears that at' tbe time Turner assigned bis contract to tbe plaintiff be informed him that tbis service was a part of bis duty under the contract with tbe government. On this state of facts, it is claimed that a contract should be implied on the part of tbe defendant to pay tbe plaintiff what bis services were reasonably worth in so transferring tbe mails for the defendant at tbe depot. Tbe common pleas rendered a judgment in his favor for $603.58, being for a period of-some six years, and tbe judgment was affirmed on error by tbe circuit court.

There is some confusion in tbe statement of the law applicable to what are frequently called implied contracts, arising from tbe fact that obligations generically different have been classed as such, not because of any real analogy, but because where tbe procedure of tbe common law prevails, by tbe adoption of a fiction in pleading — that of a promise where none in fact exists or can in reason be supposed to exist — the favorite remedy of implied assumpsit could be adopted. This was so in that large class of cases, where suit is brought to recover money paid by mis[114]*114take or has been obtained by fraud. Here it is said the law implies a promise to repay the money, when it was well understood that the promise was a mere fiction, and in most cases without any foundation whatever in fact. The same practice was adopted where necessaries had been furnished an insane person or a neglected wife or child. In all these cases no true contract exists. They are, by many authors, termed quasi contracts, a term borrowed from the civil law. In all these cases no more is meant than that the law imposes a civil obligation on the defendant to restore money so obtained, or to compensate one who has furnished necessaries to his wife or child, where he has neglected his duty to provide for them, or, by reason of mental infirmity, is unable to obtain them for himself. But contracts that are true contracts are frequently termed implied contracts, as, where from the facts and circumstances, a court or jury may fairly infer, as a matter of fact, that a contract existed between the parties, explanatory of the relation existing between them. Such implied contracts are not generically different from express contracts; the difference exists simply in the mode of proof. Express contracts are proved by showing that the terms were expressly agreed on by the parties, whilst in the other ease the terms are inferred as a Matter of fact from the evidence offered of the circumstances surrounding the parties, making it reasonable that a contract existed between them by tacit understanding. In such cases no fictions are, or can be, indulged. The evidence must satisfy the court and jury, that the- parties understood that each sustained to the other a contractual relation; and that' by reason of this relation the defendant is indebted to the plaintiff for services performed or for goods sold and delivered.

In the leading case of Hertzog v. Hertzog, 29 Pa. [115]*115St., 465, the distinction is clearly stated by Judge Lowrie. After quoting from Blackstone, and observing that bis language is open to criticism, be says: “There is some looseness of thought in supposing that reason and justice ever dictate any contracts between parties, or impose such upon them. All true contracts grow out of tbe intentions of parties to transactions, and are dictated only by their mutual and accordant wills. When tbe intention is expressed, we call tbe contract an express one. When it is not expressed, it may be inferred, implied, or presumed, from circumstances really existing, and then tbe contract, thus ascertained, is called an implied one.” * * * “it is quite apparent, therefore, that radically different relations are classified under tbe same term, and this often gives rise to indistinctness of tbougbt. And this was not at all necessary; for we have another well-authorized technical term exactly adapted to tbe office of making the true distinction. Tbe latter class are merely constructive contracts, while tbe former are only implied ones. In one case tbe contract is a mere fiction, a form imposed in order to adapt tbe case to a given remedy; in tbe other it is a fact legitimately inferred. In one tbe intention is disregarded; in tbe other, it is ascertained and enforced. In one, tbe duty defines tbe contract; in tbe other, the contract defines tbe duty.” Tbe subject is instructively treated by Prof. Keener in chapter 1 of bis work on Qttasi-Contracts. He expresses the difference between an express contract and a true implied contract as follows: “In tbe one case tbe language of contract is in terms used, and because of tbe expressions used, tbe contract is called an express contract; whereas in the other case tbe contract is established by tbe conduct of tbe parties, viewed in tbe light of surrounding circumstances, and is called a contract implied in fact.”

[116]*116The language quoted by counsel for defendant in error from Swan’s Treatise, 509, that • "an implied contract is established by proof of circumstances, showing either that in. justice or honesty a contract ought to he implied, or that the parties intended to contract,” is doubtless due to "the looseness of thought” on the subject, to which the learned judge above refers. The language is quite appropriate to quasi,

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Bluebook (online)
65 Ohio St. (N.S.) 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbus-hocking-valley-toledo-railway-co-v-gaffney-ohio-1901.