Electric Welding Co. v. Prince

86 N.E. 947, 200 Mass. 386, 1909 Mass. LEXIS 1005
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 86 N.E. 947 (Electric Welding Co. v. Prince) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Electric Welding Co. v. Prince, 86 N.E. 947, 200 Mass. 386, 1909 Mass. LEXIS 1005 (Mass. 1909).

Opinion

Knowlton, C. J.

These seventeen cases, brought to enforce the same kind of a liability against different defendants, were tried together in the Superior Court and were reported by agreement of the parties for our determination. They, have been before us previously, and the report of them may be found in 195 Mass. 242. At the first trial verdicts for the defendants were ordered, and the cases were reported to this court on questions of law.

There were three counts in the declaration in each case. The verdict was treated as a separate verdict on each count, and the result of the hearing in this court was to leave the verdict to stand upon the first and third counts, and to set it aside on the second count in all the cases. The order in each rescript was “ Case to stand for trial on the second count.” This left the cases pending on the second count only. After the close of the evidence at the last trial an amendment to the declaration was allowed, which introduced a fourth count that rests upon the same general grounds as the second count, but seemingly was designed to meet the defendants’ contention that there was a variance between the averments and the proof. The [389]*389principal facts appear in the report of the former decision of this court.

Besides the evidence taken at the first trial, which consisted of an auditor’s report, answers to interrogatories, and decisions, there was additional evidence at the last trial, consisting of a deposition, testimony of some of the defendants, and particularly the oral testimony of a very eminent English barrister, Mr. Hamilton, who has written a text book of authority known as “ Hamilton’s Company Law ” and has often argued important cases of company law before the highest courts of England. He was called by the defendants and testified at great length, discussing and expounding most if not all of the numerous English decisions bearing upon the questions of law at issue in these cases. All of these decisions were put in evidence, many of them by the plaintiff, so that the court had before it a large body of English law contained in many decisions of the courts, together with the opinion of this expert in regard to these decisions and the act of Parliament in question. The statute is “ The companies’ act,” 25 & 26 Viet. c. 89, and the language on which the plaintiff sought particularly to hold the defendants is the last clause of § 323, as follows : “ and every other person who has agreed to become a member of the company under this act, and whose name is entered on the register of members, shall be deemed to be a member of the company.” The plaintiff’s' contention is that the defendants, by virtue of their several agreements with a promoter to underwrite certain amounts of the stock of the plaintiff corporation at its organization, and of the entry of their names as stockholders upon the registry of the corporation about sixteen months later, without their knowledge, followed by notice of the registration and their omission to take any action in regard to it, became bound to pay to the corporation the par value of the stock allotted to them. At the close of the evidence the presiding judge ordered verdicts for the plaintiff against the defendants Prince and Pope, each of whom had made a payment after the registration, and ordered verdicts for all the other defendants, and reported the cases.

The first questions that arise under the report are whether these orders were right as a matter of law. The principal contention between the parties was in regard to the law of Eng[390]*390land by which their rights are governed. The law of a foreign country is not judicially recognized by our courts, but is a fact to be proved like any other fact in a case. Ufford v. Spaulding, 156 Mass. 65. Hazelton v. Valentine, 113 Mass. 472, 478. Said Mr. Justice Endicott in Ames v. McCamber, 124 Mass. 85, 91: “ When the law of another State is in dispute, it is to be determined as a question of fact by the court or jury trying the cause. ... If the evidence was conflicting, as the plaintiff contends, we have no authority to revise the finding, although the judge has reported the evidence.” The proof of the law of a foreign country may be by the introduction in evidence of its statutes and judicial decisions, or by the testimony of experts learned in the law, or by both. If the law is found in a single statute or in a single decision, the construction of it, like that of any other writing, is a question of law for the court. As was said in Wylie v. Cotter, 170 Mass. 356, 357: “ The law of another State is a fact to be proved, like any other fact, by evidence. Where the evidence is a single statute or a decision of a court, the language of which is not in dispute, the interpretation of it presents a question of law for the court; but where the law is to be determined by considering numerous decisions which may be more or less conflicting, or which bear upon the subject only collaterally, or by way of analogy, and where inferences may be drawn from them, the question to be determined is one of fact, and not of law.” Questions of the latter kind must be decided by the jury and not by the judge.

In the present case, if the jury followed the opinion of the expert, they would decide that there was no liability on the part of those defendants who made no payments after the registration. We are of opinion that there was evidence in his testimony, taken in connection with inferences that might have been drawn from other evidence, which would have warranted them in reaching the same result as to the defendants Prince and Pope, against whom verdicts were ordered. The counsel on both sides have been able to make strong arguments in favor of their respective contentions. A tribunal of fact well might find upon the whole evidence that there was no ground for charging the defendants under the law of England. On the other hand, all the decisions were in evidence on which this [391]*391court, in the former opinion, held that there was evidence which should have been submitted to the jury on which the defendants might have been found liable. These decisions would warrant a tribunal of fact in returning verdicts for the plaintiff. In its facts this case differs materially from any decided by the English courts, and such a tribunal might think that the expert witness was wrong in his application of the principles of law to the evidence. Then too, in connection with the determination of- what the law of England is, comes the question what inferences shall be drawn from the findings of the auditor and the other evidence, considered in connection with the English statute as interpreted by the English courts. We are of opinion that all or nearly all the important questions in dispute were questions of fact, upon which the judge could not properly rule as matter of law, and that all the verdicts must be set aside.

The plaintiff’s offer of the former opinion of this court as evidence was rightly rejected. The opinion was not evidence of the law of England. Gordon v. Knott, 199 Mass. 173, 179. Our decision as to that part of the cases which was left open was only that the cases should have been submitted to the jury on the second count. In dealing with the law of England as a fact, the court held that the decisions put in evidence at the trial would warrant the jury in finding for the plaintiff.

In making his report the judge, with the consent of the parties, has undertaken to present to this court the question what verdicts the jury should have rendered, if the cases had been submitted to them.

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.E. 947, 200 Mass. 386, 1909 Mass. LEXIS 1005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/electric-welding-co-v-prince-mass-1909.