Duncan v. Willis

51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 433
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 433 (Duncan v. Willis) 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
Duncan v. Willis, 51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 433 (Ohio 1894).

Opinion

Spear, J.

The ground of reversal was that there was a defect of parties plaintiff, and hence the common pleas erred in not sustaining the second g-round of demurrer.

In support of this holding it is argued that the case is controlled by section 5007, Revised Statutes, which requires that “Parties who are united in interest must be joined, as plaintiffs or defendants.” That a contract by one person with two or more jointly does not comprehend or involve a contract with either separately, and a defendant, who has made but one contract, or incurred a single liability, obviously has the right to require the whole case to be disposed of in one action. And, applying these considerations to the case at bar, inasmuch as R. W. Duncan was a party to the contract of purchase he was united in interest with the plaintiff, and was a necessary party to the action, because Willis, having made a single contract, incurred only a single liability, and hence had the right to have R. W. Duncan broug-ht in so that the whole question of liability might be disposed of in one action.

The general rule undoubtedly is that in a suit for the breach of a joint contract all the parties to the contract must be joined as parties in the action, and if any refuse to become plaintiffs they may be made defendants. This rule rests not only upon the ground that the defendant may well ask that his entire liability be determined in one [439]*439action, but upon what seems to us a reason equally good, viz.: That if several were permitted to bring several actions for one and the same cause, the court would be in doubt for which of them to give judgment. But there are exceptions to the rule.

The allegations of the petition in this case present a condition differing from the ordinary cause of action for breach of a joint contract, and this leads to the inquiry whether the case comes within the ordinary rule or falls within some recognized exception. A defendant may, with great propriety insist, where he has made a sale to a number of purchasers who, for anything appearing to the contrary, are to use the property jointly, or dispose of it on joint account, that he should not be subjected to damages by two or more actions, for, in such case, it may fairly be said that he did not contemplate, and ought not to have contemplated, liability to each separately. He may, also, insist that the right of action be confined to the exact persons for whose benefit his contract was made. So it was held in Edwards v. Owen, 15 Ohio, 500, that while an action on the case might be maintained against a debtor for representing’ himself insolvent and thereby inducing his creditor to discharge a note for less than its value, yet it was error to instruct a jury that proof of false and fraudulent declarations thus made to other creditors would sustain a declaration counting upon representations made directly to the plaintiff. And in McCracken v. West, 17 Ohio, 16, it was held that “if a person write a letter to another, desiring him to introduce the bearer to such merchants as he may desire, and describing him as a man of property, and the person having such letter do not deliver it to the [440]*440person to whom it is directed, but use it to obtain credit elsewhere, the person so giving the credit cannot maintain an action for deceit, though the representations in the letter are untrue.” Also, in Wells v. Cook, 16 Ohio St., 67, it was held that where the owner- of a flock of sheep, apparently sound and healthy, but known to him tobe diseased with a contagious malady, falsely and fraudulently represents them as sound and healthy to one known to be acting as the agent of a third person, and the agent confiding in such representations, buys them for his principal with the avowed purpose of mingling them with a large flock then belonging to the principal, whereby the united flock was infected, and, the agent and principal being-still unaware of the existence of the disease, the agent buys the united flock from the principal and suffers damage from the continued spread of the disease, he could not maintain an action against the seller for the deceit, the representations not having been made to him to induce him to act upon them in any manner affecting his own interests.

In these cases it is manifest that there was an entire lack of privity between the several complaining parties and those accused of deceit, • and hence there could be no right of action. Whatever liability would naturally attach to the deceit complained of, one thing- was plain, and that was that the right to be compensated did not inure to the complaining parties. It could not be said in either ease that the person guilty of fraud ought to have contemplated injury to the person complaining.

Not so, however, in the case at bar. The plaintiff, being a party to the contract, was one of those necessarily within the contemplation of the defendant as likely to be injured by the fraud. Was he [441]*441so related to the transaction as that the defendant should be held to have contemplated injury to him separate and distinct from any possible injury to the other purchaser? To determine this let us look at the contract.

The petition discloses that Willis, having knowledge that the plaintiff and his brother were desirous of purchasing, each for his own separate use, a number of head of light feeding hogs, represented to them that he had one hundred hogs to sell of the kind and quality desired which were sound, healthy, and free from disease, and for which he had paid $5.00 per 100 pounds, but declined to sell in separate lots; he would sell the Duncans the entire lot and they could divide them to suit themselves. Relying upon these representations the brothers purchased the one ■ hundred hogs, paying $5.12^ per 100 pounds, the plaintiff and his brother each to have fifty head of the hogs as his separate and individual property, and to feed separately on their respective farms. On the same day the hog's were divided in accordance with the agreement, and plaintiff took his fifty at once to his own farm, where some of them died on the same day by reason of hog cholera. They had been exposed to this disease and were infected with it at the time of the sale, all of which was known to the defendant, who had in fact purchased them as diseased hogs, and for a much less sum than $5.00 per 100 pounds. Not only did plaintiff lose the diseased hogs which died, but the disease was communicated to his other hogs, and he was greatly injured thereby.

It would seem that this contract of purchase, though joint in form, and based upon a consideration moving jointly from the two, was in spirit and [442]*442essence, so far as it is involved in the present controversy, a separate contract as to each,, and that the rights acquired under it by the purchasers were separate and distinct. That is to say, so far as the agreement of the sale, payment of purchase price, and delivery were concerned, it was a joint contract, but the representations, and the agreement of warranty entailed obligations for the performance of several duties to each. The contract belong’s to that class which, although the ag'reement, in its inception, be entire, the performance is several, and, therefore, the contract in its nature divisible. This depends, as said by Lord Ellenbo rough, in Ritchie v. Atkinson, 10 East, 295, “not on any formal arrangement of the words, but on the reason and sense of the thing, as it is collected from the whole contract.”

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Bluebook (online)
51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncan-v-willis-ohio-1894.