Commissioners of the Canal Fund v. Perry

5 Ohio 56
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Ohio 56 (Commissioners of the Canal Fund v. Perry) 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
Commissioners of the Canal Fund v. Perry, 5 Ohio 56 (Ohio 1831).

Opinion

Judge Wright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The first question claiming our attention in this case is, whether the subscription paper, upon which the suit is founded, affords a legal foundation for the action? It has been repeatedly decided in this state and elsewhere, that promises to pay money for the erection of school and court-houses, churches and bridges, would, the work being undertaken or done, sustain the action of assump.sit. A moral obligatiou is sufficient to support an action on an express promise. 6 Mass. *40; 3 Mass. 483. The subscription we are now called to examine does not rest alone upon the general principle, but may invoke to its aid a positive enactment [51]*51of the legislature. Section 10 of the act to provide for the internal improvement of the State of Ohio by navigable canals, 23 O. L. 57, expressly authorizes the canal commissioners to make application, in behalf of the state, to Congress, to land-holders, through or near which the canals may be proposed to pass, to public and private bodies politic, and to all the citizens or inhabitants of this or any other of the United States, for grants or ■donations, in land or money, for the 'purpose of aiding in the •construction of said canals, according to the direction of the donors, and to take, to the state, such conveyances as may be •competent to vest in the state a good title in the lands so to be granted.

It has not been disputed, nor even suggested, that the legislative competency in Ohio falls short of determining what shall be esteemed a sufficient consideration, upon which a contract or promise may be enforced in our courts of justice. Unless this competency can be questioned, the enactment referred to is conclusive of the legal efficacy of contracts under it. The contract here is not against good policy or good morals, nor against law,, but in conformity with its express provisions. It is urged, liowevei*, that the statute only contemplates grants of land, and donations of personal property, in presentí, and confers no authority to make contracts for either. We are bound to suppose the general assembly intended to confer power, to effect the only object they had in view. They have employed language too plain to admit any great latitude of construction; language addressed to the public spirit, and the interest of individuals. Yarious routes for canals were' contemplated; and in determining the choice, much depended upon the amount of contributions. Individual contributors would give more or less, according as the route adopted, or other circumstances, might be supposed to enhance the value of their property. Provisions looking to such a state of things were inserted in the law, subjecting the donations to the direction and conditions of the donor. Could a person be expected to give money or land, upon condition the canal should take a certain route, before that route *was settled, and trust to circumstances to obtain a return of the gift, or reconveyance of the land, if another route were selected ? We think the common usual method of doing such things was in the contemplation of the law, the obtaining a promise to give or convey, at an agreed time, upon whatever con[52]*52dition the giver chose to impose, and the obtaining written evidence of the undertaking. One proposes to give one thousand dollars in a year, if the canal goes through his land. The construction contended for by the defendant’s counsel, would deprive the state of power to avail itself of aid under such a condition. We are unable to perceive any sound reason against the making a valid contract, under the law, to pay on the happening of the condition.

Have the plaintiffs a right to sue on the contract? The declaration is upon a written promise, dated December 6, 1825, “ to pay to the commissioners of the canal fund of the State of Ohio, for the use of said fund,” the sum claimed, “ upon condition that the canal be located on the east side of the Cuyahoga river.” The suit is in the name of Brown, Buckingham, and Perkins, as commissioners of the canal fund of the State of Ohio, for the use of said fund.” It is averred that the said B., B., and P. were commissioners of the canal fund, when the money became due, and still are commissioners. At the date of the subscriptions, Trimble was commissioner with Brown and Buckingham; Perkins was appointed in the room of Brown, February 7, 1826. The individuals, therefore, named as plaintiffs were not, in fact, parties to the contract — the paper is not negotiable, and no transfer of it is alleged, and could not properly be received in evidence, in their favor. 6 Mass. 253; 10 Mass. 360; 5 Mass. 491. It is claimed that the fund commissioners are a corporation, with power to sue, and that their names may be rejected as surplusage; and, also, that inasmuch as the defendant has pleaded over to to the action, he can not now object to its form, or the right of the plaintiffs to recover, as they have declared.

Is the defendant precluded, by pleading over, from objecting the inability of the plaintiffs to sue ? In the Mayor, etc., of Stafford v. Bolton, 1 Bos. & Pul. 40, the court held the misdescription of a corporation like a mere misnomer of a ^natural person, plead-able only in abatement, while the non-existence of a plaintiff or corporation was matter in bar, of which the defendant might' avail himself, after pleading over. See also 1 Saund. 340, n. 2; Com. Dig. E, 16. The defendant can only plead nulitiel corporation in bar. Bro. Misnomer, 73. Pleading to the merits has been held by the Supreme Court of the United States to be an admission of the capacity of the plaintiff to sue. 1 Pet. 386. The general issue admits the competency of the plaintiffs to sue, in the [53]*53corporate capacity in which they have declared. 4 Pet. 501. In that suit, the plaintiffs had described themselves “ a corporation, duly established,” and no individuals were named in the writ or declaration. Upon first view, we were inclined to consider this decision conclusive against the defendant, in this stage of the proceedings, but upon closer examination, we think the case eaily reconciled with the others cited. If in this declaration, only the corporate name of the fund commissioners was set out, and it was .averred they Were a corporation, etc., the general issue might be held to admit its truth, but such is not the case. The individuals named have been treated by the officers of the court, .and the counsel on both sides, as the plaintiffs. Shall we now allow them to strike their names from the record, against their own understanding of the law, and deduce from legal fiction ..an admission that it was not them, but the description they gave themselves, and affixed to their names, the defendant was called into court to answer? The complaintis by B., B., and P., as commissioners of the canal fund, upon an indebtedness to them. We feel constrained to look upon this allegation as the plaintiffs themselves seem to have considered it in their proceedings, as deserip.tive of the persons suing, not as a substantive description of a mere corporative plaintiff, and, therefore, that its truth is not admitted by pleading over.

But are the canal fund commissioners a corporation, empowered to sue as such? It is not necessary in this case to determine, whether,for any purpose, this board of commissioners may be held a quasi corporation. An examination of the acts creating it, without aid from legal subtleties, would impress no one with the idea that the legislature intended*to create a corporation.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hassenzahl v. Bevins
14 Ohio C.C. Dec. 173 (Lucas Circuit Court, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioners-of-the-canal-fund-v-perry-ohio-1831.