Fresh v. Gilson

41 U.S. 327, 10 L. Ed. 982, 16 Pet. 327, 1842 U.S. LEXIS 375
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 16, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 41 U.S. 327 (Fresh v. Gilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fresh v. Gilson, 41 U.S. 327, 10 L. Ed. 982, 16 Pet. 327, 1842 U.S. LEXIS 375 (1842).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Daniel

delivered .the opinion of the Court.

This case arjses un,der the attachment law pf the state of Maryland, passed in 1795; and comes before this Court upon a writ of .error to the-Circuit Court of the District of Columbia, for Washington county; within which the law of Maryland above mentioned-is in force. The proceedings instituted in this case, although commencing by an attachment, and upon what is termed- a- short note in lieu of-a formal declaration, assume, nevertheless, the essential character, and in some respects the usual forms of, the action of-assumpsit, and must be governed by the *328 rules applicable 'to such an action. The defendants dissolved the attachment by appearing and entering special bail, and pleading “non-assumpsit;” and upon the issue made up on this plea, the cause was tried in the Circuit Court.

Upon the trial, exceptions were taken m five separate instances to the rulings of the Circuit Court, and in each of them. the ex, ception sealed by the judges is made a part of the record. To test the accuracy both of the decisions thus pronounced, and of the objections alleged against them, it will be necessary, to advert to the facts adduced in proof.

It appears that on the 23d of August, 1832, the defendants in error entered into a covenant with the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, for certain rates and prices stipulated in a covenant sealed between the defendant and the company by their president, and in a specification appended to the said covenant, to construct in a substantial and workmanlike manner, culvert No. 116, on the 150th section of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal-;' and to prosecute the work upon the said culvert .without intermission, with such force as should in the opinion of; the resident engineer secure its completion by the first day of August, 1833:

On the third' day of November, 1832, a covenant was entered into between the plaintiff in error and the defendants, -or rather with Riah Gilson, one of the defendants, styling himself superintendent for- Gilson and Company, by which the construction of the culvert No.. 116 was let to the plaintiff, at the contract prices to be paid by the company for the work; with the exception that Fresh should pay to the defendants, from whom he took this contract, the sum of one hundred dollars,- which sum appears to have been a profit reserved to themselves by the first contractors upon the transfer of their undertaking. In this .second covenant, the plaintiff in error bound himself “ to be urgent- in the performance of the work, so that it might progress in accordance with the specification and directions of the engineers.” And' further, that in the event of neglect or failure on his part;-the defendants'should have authority to declare the work abandoned, to assume the direction, and to complete it at the plaintiff^ ex-. pense. - Having thus obtained a contract under the defendants, the plaintiff, on the second day of May, 1833, made an agreement with Elijah Barret for building of this culvert, by the latter; *329 stipulating to pay Barret the price of one dollar twelve and a half cents for every perch of stone work of twenty-five cubic feet, upon a certificate and approval of the engineer or superintendent of masonry as to the fidelity of the work. The plaintiff on the trial offered these several contracts ■ in evidence; also an account against the defendant stated, on the 24th of December, 1833, for masonry, excavation, and paving performed, and for cement not supplied by the plaintiff in the construction of culvert 116; on which account, after allowing a credit of one thousand one hundred and forty-two dollars and seventy-three cents, a balance of one thousand three hundred and forty-three dollars and one cent was claimed. This was the. account on which the warrant óf attachment issued. The plaintiff further proved the delivery of the letter dated December 25th, 1833, addressed by him to Wells the agent of the defendant, in which he required, a statement of his account with them, and expressly forbade the payment to Elijah Barret of any amount whatever.

The defendants, to rebut the plaintiff’s demand, offered the account, exhibit (C), commencing December 5th,. 1832, and ter'minating the 21st of December, 1833, amounting to the sum of one thousand three hundred and sixty-nine dollars and thirty-six cents; and proved by their clerk that the work on the said culvert was completed on the 21st of December, 1833, and that the account last mentioned was received by the plaintiff without objection except as to the quantity of cement charged therein. The defendants likewise offered in evidence several orders, numbered from 1 to 7, drawn by Elijah Barret, by himself and his agents, in favour of William Harris, upon the defendants, at different periods during the autumn and winter of 1833, and claimed the benefit of them as payments to the plaintiff. These orders purport to have been paid all on the same day, viz., April 29th, 1835, rather more than two years posterior to the date of the letter delivered to the defendant’s agent,.positively forbidding any payment to be made to Barret or to his order, and nearly one month after the institution' of this suit. And it is admitted that the orders were never shown to the plaintiff, nor expressly recognised by him at any time. The defendant offered seven other papers purporting to be orders and due-bills signed and certified by Elisha Barret, in November and December, 1833; three of them *330 said to be for work done upon culvert No. 1165 and amounting in the whole to two hundred and seventy-three dollars and fifty cents; these last orders and certificates, it is also admitted, were never shown t'o the plaintiff, nor acknowledged by him, and it does pot appear that they .have ever been paid. . Oral testimony was also introduced on the part of tne defendants, in order to show that the work had been abandoned by. the plaintiff, and its completion assumed and accomplished by the defendants; and on the part of the plaintiff, like evidence was offered 'to prove that he continued on the'work and laboured on it until-it was finished on the 21st of December, 1833.

Upon the foregoing state of facts, the counsel for the plaintiff moved the Court to exclude from the jury the orders drawn by Barret in favour of Harris,, as well as the evidence offered to prove the payment of those orders in April, 1835, more than two years after their payment had been forbidden bv the plaintiff: the Court, admitted this evidence to go to the jury, and this produces the auestion presented by the first bill of exceptions.

We aré unable to perceive upon wfiat correct legal principle this question was ruled as it has been by the Circuit Court. There is no express power apparent in the record,nor indeedwas any attempted to be shown in the proofs, existing in Barret to bind Fresh for any amount with any person. It is true, that under the contract between them, the former would have had a claim on his own behalf, whenever he should have fulfilled his undertaking; but not even then until he should have procured a certificate from the engineer of the company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 U.S. 327, 10 L. Ed. 982, 16 Pet. 327, 1842 U.S. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fresh-v-gilson-scotus-1842.