Consociated Presbyterian Society v. Staples

23 Conn. 544
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 23 Conn. 544 (Consociated Presbyterian Society v. Staples) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consociated Presbyterian Society v. Staples, 23 Conn. 544 (Colo. 1855).

Opinions

Hinman, J.

The bill alleges that the plaintiffs contracted, in writing, with Hawley & Wheeler, to build for them a church edifice, to be completed on, or before, the 15th day of October, 1852, for which they were to pay the builders the sum of $4,750 in instalments, the last of which, being $1,250, was to be paid when the house was completed ; that Hawley & Wheeler went on to perform labor, and furnished materials, though not to the complete fulfilment of the contract ; that the plaintiffs paid all the instalments except the last, and Hawley & Wheeler claimed that they had performed extra work on said building, to the amount of about thirty dollars, which has not been paid, and is not admitted to be due to the full extent of the claim; that several persons, by divers distinct titles, claim the whole amount due from the plaintiffs, viz., Staples & Adams’ claim, $570.67; William S. Edgerton, $68; Elnathan Wheeler, $43.69; Henry B. Lockwood, $35.11; Charles W. Hall, $34; Daniel Burr, $40; Hezekiah Lockwood, $29.94; John S. Hyde, $100.55; [553]*553John Goodsell, $10.87; T. B. and H. Wakeman, $136.77; and that Joseph B. French, as assignee of said Hawley & Wheeler, claim the whole of said instalment, together with the amount due for said extra work, and to recover the same, he has an action at law, now pending, against the plaintiffs. It is there stated that the plaintiffs are willing to pay whatever sum they are justly owing on said contract, to such persons as the court shall direct, but that the several persons, claiming the above balances, threaten to bring actions against them for the recovery thereof. The plaintiffs thereupon pray, that the balance due from them be settled and adjusted by the court, and that the defendants set forth, and discover, what right they, each of them, have to the balance claimed by each respectively, and that they interplead and settle their demands among themselves; the plaintiffs offering to pay the balance so found due from them on said contract, and to bring the same into court for that purpose.

The court found the allegations in the bill true, and ordered that the plaintiffs be allowed to retain in their hands the costs of the bill, and that the defendants, respectively, interplead, and set forth, their claims to the money. This being done, a committee was appointed, at a subsequent term of the court, to find and report the facts in the case, and on the coming in of the report, the case was reserved for the advice of this court.

On the trial before the committee, the plaintiffs admitted that enough was due from them to pay all the claims, except that made by French, the general assignee, and whether any more was due, was left open, and undetermined by the committee, no evidence being taken, or heard, in reference thereto.

The bill has thus far been treated as a mere bill of inter-pleader, but by the English practice, which prevails also in many of the United States, it could not be sustained as such, because it does not admit any definite sum to be due from the plaintiffs, but calls upon the court, for relief, in first settling [554]*554for them, the amount of their indebtedness for the building of the church. Sto. Eq. Pl., p. 16, § 18, and p. 345, § 297.

It seems to have been irregular, therefore, for the parties to cause the court to find the ‘allegations in the bill true, and authorize the plaintiffs to retain their costs, and then, before it appeared in any way, what sum was due, or, indeed, that anything was due, except; perhaps, by inference, to order the defendants to interplead. “ It is,” says Judge Story, “ the very foundation of a bill of this sort, that the plaintiff is a mere holder of the stake, which is equally contested by the defendants, and that he is wholly indifferent between them.” And it is upon this ground, that the plaintiff is ordinarily authorized to retain the costs of the application. If he has any other object to accomplish than barely to learn who is entitled to the money, which he has in his hands, there seems to be no propriety in his retaining a portion of the fund to pay his costs, until it is determined whether he is entitled to the relief which he seeks; and even then, the court might think him not entitled to his costs, though it might grant the relief asked for; and if the bill may properly be treated as a bill, in the nature of a bill of interpleader, it would seem to have been proper for the court to ascertain the amount of the plaintiffs’ indebtedness, before it ordered the parties to interplead; or, at least, to have appointed the committee to find the amount of it, as well as the facts in respect to the answers of the defendants. But none of the defendants, at the proper stage of the cause, saw fit to demur, or take any exception to the bill as originally framed ; and although it is said that the court may, in any stage of a case, dismiss a bill for similar irregularities, we do not understand it to be claimed that it is bound to do so, and it appears to us better, upon the whole to dispose of the case, upon the facts found in the report of the committee, applicable to all the defendants, except the general assignee of Hawley & Wheeler, leaving him to prosecute his action at law, for such balance of the indebtedness, as may be due, after paying such of the other defendants as.are [555]*555entitled to a portion of the fund. We do not see that any injustice can be done by this course. The plaintiffs admitted there was enough due from them to pay, to all these defendants, the several amounts of their respective claims; and as we are of opinion that some of them are not entitled to their claims, it follows, that something must be left for the general assignee, which he will recover in his action at law, and this will leave him in the same condition, as to costs, that he would be in, if the bill was dismissed. We do this the more readily, under the peculiar circumstances of the case, in which the parties are numerous, the litigation expensive in reference to the small sums claimed by several of them, and all parties, except the general assignee, are anxious to have their rights to the fund settled; and the assignee, at this late stage of the proceedings, ought not to be heard to complain, when he had it in his power to stop the proceedings at the commencement, if the suggestions, which he now makes, are well founded. Besides, our chancery practice is, in many respects, variant from that which prevails in England, and in many of the states of this Union, and how far it is proper for us to go in adopting the English practice, it does not seem necessary for us now to determine. When no exception is taken to a bill of interpleader, before the hearing is closed, on account of its asking for relief, other than that upon which such bills are founded, it seems inequitable that the parties should be put to the expense of further unnecessary litigation. And in the case of Nash v. Smith, 6 Conn. R., 421, this court departed entirely from the well settled English practice of requiring an affidavit of the absence of fraud and collusion, to accompany the bringing of such bills, and permitted the plaintiff to proceed, although there was no offer to bring the money into court, and it had, in fact, been paid over to one of the claimants. Indeed, it has always been the course of our courts to simplify our practice, in regard to matters of form, as far as it was deemed safe to do so without endangering the administration of sub[556]

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Bluebook (online)
23 Conn. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consociated-presbyterian-society-v-staples-conn-1855.