Coster v. New York & Erie Railroad

3 Abb. Pr. 332, 6 Duer 43
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJuly 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 Abb. Pr. 332 (Coster v. New York & Erie Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coster v. New York & Erie Railroad, 3 Abb. Pr. 332, 6 Duer 43 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1856).

Opinion

By the Court—Woodruff, J.

This case comes on to be heard upon an appeal from the judgment of the special term in favor of the defendants, upon their several demurrers to the complaint.

The complaint, in the first nineteen folios thereof, avers that the plaintiffs and Cornelius Vanderbilt and James B. Townsend were, on October 22, 1853, owners of the steamboat Francis Skiddy, in the proportions following:—Coster and Andrews the plaintiffs each two-twentieths, Vanderbilt eleven-twentieths, and Townsend five-twentieths. That being such owners, they on the day aforesaid entered into an agreement with the defendants, the New York & Erie Railroad Company, by which they let and delivered to the Company the said boat, and the Company hired and took possession thereof and agreed to pay all expenses of running the same and to keep her in good repair, and to pay to the said plaintiffs and Vanderbilt and Townsend for the use thereof, one hundred dollars per day, “ during all such times as the said plaintiffs and Vanderbilt and Townsend should permit the said boat to be and continue in the possession of the said Company and not withdraw the same from such possession.” That from the date of such agreement until now, the said boat has been and now is in the possession of the Company under such agreement, by the permission of the plaintiffs and Vanderbilt and Townsend, and has never been withdrawn by them. That the said plaintiffs and Vanderbilt and Townsend have duly performed, &e.; but that the said Company have never paid the .aid sum of one hundred dollars per day for the use of the [346]*346said boat. That the said Company are liable to pay the amount aforesaid and that the plaintiffs are each entitled to one-tenth part thereof, and that the Company refuse to pay the same or any part thereof.”

This is a plain statement of a good and sufficient cause of action on a special contract, and for the recovery of money, which upon the facts stated is due to the plaintiffs and Vanderbilt and Townsend. The contract set forth is single and entire. The agreements on the part of the Company are to and with the plaintiffs and Vanderbilt and Townsend jointly and not severally. There is no intimation that the defendants have undertaken to pay the charter money to the several owners in the proportion of their respective interests in the boat.

We know of no rule of pleading, nor any principle of law authorizing the plaintiff to maintain a separate action for their particular portion of these moneys without making Vanderbilt and Townsend parties. A joint cause of action vested in two or more, cannot be split up into several, at the option of those in whom it is vested. The Company are not liable to be vexed with two or more separate suits for the same cause of action, and, having, as the case may be, litigated the claim of two of the owners, to be again called upon to litigate the same matters under the same joint contract with Vanderbilt, and again with Townsend. The circumstance that the consideration for the agreement by the Company was the use of a steamboat or vessel of which the defendants are part owners, makes no difference. Besides, if there was any warrant for permitting such an agreement to be treated as in effect running to each severally, and entitling each to recover the proportion of the charter money, which as between the co-owners would fall to his share, (which however cannot be conceded in this case,) then the plaintiffs themselves could not join in the action. If their interests are several and their rights several, their title to the money to be recovered by each respectively is several, and the causes of action thus assumed to be several, cannot be joined.

But in truth, as before observed, the company’s agreement is single,—it is made with all,—the title to recover under it is vested in all. The money due upon the agreement belongs to [347]*347all (irrespective of the state of the accounts between them, and the respective shares into which it may be divisible when recovered, with which the Company have nothing to do,) and all must unite in the action brought to enforce the agreement and recover the charter money, unless some facts are stated in. the complaint which excuse the plaintiffs from uniting Vanderbilt and Townsend with them as plaintiffs. If that be done, then notwithstanding the rule be as we have stated it in actions at law, the plaintiffs may unquestionably proceed upon their equitable rights, and in equity enforce them and recover their money. But even then, they must make Vanderbilt and Townsend parties to the action as defendants, unless they also, show that Vanderbilt and Townsend have ceased to have any interest in the matters in controversy.

What facts then further appear in this complaint which are-relied upon as an excuse for not joining them as plaintiffs ?

The only further statement in the complaint affecting Vanderbilt and Townsend in any measure, and therefore the only one that bears upon the question above considered, is, that afterwards the Company with malicious -intent to cheat and injure the plaintiffs, &c., &c., fraudulently purchased from Vanderbilt and Townsend their respective five and eleven-twentieth parts of the said steamboat in the name of Eli Kelly, but in trust for and for the benefit of the said Company.

Whether this purchase was made with a bad motive or not, is quite immaterial; the motive furnishes no ground of appeal to any court, unless nor until some wrongful act is done, attempted, or threatened, which act it is proper should be either restrained or redressed. The act charged here is a perfectly lawful act, a purchase. The plaintiffs have no cause of complaint in that respect; Vanderbilt and Townsend had a right to sell, the Company had a right to buy, and unless the plaintiffs mean that the purchase was a fraud upon Vanderbilt and Townsend, no wrong was done to any one thereby. When Vanderbilt and Townsend come into court alleging that the purchase was fraudulent, the allegation may be material. This averment of fraud therefore has no bearing upon the question whether Vanderbilt and Townsend should be parties to the action. The plaintiffs do not, and could not upon any [348]*348facts stated, ask to have the sale set aside, and if they did they must make Vanderbilt and Townsend parties, either plaintiffs or defendants.

The case stands then, upon the facts averred, thus:—that Townsend on November 14, 1853, and Vanderbilt on March 10, 1854, sold to the defendants (who purchased in the name ■of Eli Kelly) their respective twentieth parts of the said boat. And the plaintiffs’ claim to recover for not only the money accrued and payable for the use of the boat since those dates, but also from the day the original agreement was made; that is over thirteen thousand dollars accrued before Vanderbilt sold his share of the boat. And there is not •an intimation in the complaint that Townsend for the period in which he continued to be an owner and "V anderbilt for the residue of the time, are not jointly interested with the plaintiffs in the recovery of that money. The averment of the sale of the boat does -not therefore constitute any reason for not making Vanderbilt and Townsend parties.

• If not made parties plaintiff, they should have been made defendants. There is no averment that they refuse to join in •the action. There is no averment that they have been guilty ■of any fraud, or are parties to, or are even cognizant of, any •fraud done, attempted or contemplated by the Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Abb. Pr. 332, 6 Duer 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coster-v-new-york-erie-railroad-nysuperctnyc-1856.