Hamilton v. Wheeling Public Service Co.

107 S.E. 401, 88 W. Va. 573, 21 A.L.R. 433, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 117
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 107 S.E. 401 (Hamilton v. Wheeling Public Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamilton v. Wheeling Public Service Co., 107 S.E. 401, 88 W. Va. 573, 21 A.L.R. 433, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 117 (W. Va. 1921).

Opinion

Lynch, Judge:

The notices prepared at the instance and on behalf of A. M. Hamilton, plaintiff in the first styled action, and served on Wheeling Public Service Company and City & Elm Grove Railroad Company, corporations, joint defendants therein, and at the instance and on behalf of William G. Caldwell', plaintiff in the second, on Wheeling Public Service Company, sole defendant therein, were preliminary processes or warnings of intended motions' for judgments against de-. fendants in each of the actions so begun in favor of the respective plaintiffs. They were given pursuant to the provisions of section 6, chapter. 121, Code. Their sufficiency for the purposes of the recovery of the judgments contemplated were questioned by defendants and each of them for reasons by the trial court deemed insufficient upon motions to quash. They did not demur. The rulings that court certified here for re-examination and approval or disapproval.

But two questions, arise, and the trial court perhaps considered these only and no others. The first challenges the right of Caldwell to sue and recover a judgment against Wheeling Public Service Company in an action at law and the right of Hamilton to sue and recover a joint judgment against the same company and City & Elm Grove Railroad Company. The actions rest upon over-due interest coupons theretofore attached to and as parts of bond issues authorized and sold by City & Elm Grove Railroad Company, secured by a mortgage binding its property for their pay[575]*575ment both as to principal and interest, payable semi-annually on the first days of January and July of each succeeding year until the maturity of the bonds. The date of the issuance is not disclosed in the notices or elsewhere in the proceedings. The coupons, the par value of which together with interest theréon from the date of their maturity for payment, form the basis of the actions, were, as to those owned by Hamilton, due and payable January 1, 1920, and as to those owned by Caldwell, on July 1st of the same year.

Sometime after the date of the mortgage Wheeling Public Service Company acquired the title to the mortgaged property, and, as may be inferred, now is the owner and operator of the utility encumbered, as well as every other species of property of the mortgagor used in connection with such operation. As part of the consideration for the transfer from one corporation to the other, Wheeling Public Service Company assumed liability for the corporate indebtedness of its grantor, including the outstanding and unliquidated bonds and the coupons annexed to them, and thereby bound itself to be prompt in the discharge of these and other obligations, pursuant to the terms and conditions of the conveyance.

It is not material, according to our view, whether, at the time the notices were given, plaintiffs did or did not then own the bonds, or whether the coupons were or were not detached, although in at least one jurisdiction this difference seems to have some weight upon the second phase of this review. What is being considered now is the right of the plaintiffs to proceed to judgment in the Caldwell action against Wheeling Public Service Company, and in the Hamilton action against the same defendant and the mortgagor, City & Elm Grove Railroad Company, jointly.

There can be no question as to the primary liability' of the mortgagor. The property formerly owned by City & Elm Grove Railroad Company that company encumbered to insure and protect prospective or probable purchasers in the payment of the bonds issued by it, including the semiannual payments of the interest provided for in the-mort[576]*576gage and evidenced by tbe coupons thereto attached. Upon the faith of the solvency of the security and the payability of the indebtedness secured, plaintiffs and doubtless others seeking sources of investment purchased the bonds in reliance upon the prompt payment of the coupons. The is7 suance of the bonds and the execution of the mortgage fixed-the status of the mortgagor as the debtor pledged to protect investors in the securities placed by it upon the market. That it contracted to do when the bonds were sold and the proceeds received by the mortgagor, although the purchasers were unknown on the date of the contract. Within the terms of that instrument were included the coupons as well as- the bonds themselvep. There was, therefore, in law and fact such privity between the mortgagor and the investors in the bonds as warrants the proceeding by Hamilton against City & Elm Grove Railroad Company. But it does not follow as a matter of course that there is such warrant for suing it jointly with the present owner of the property so pledged, notwithstanding assumption by the latter of the liabilities of the former in consideration of the property conveyed. If the two corporations cannot be joined in one action in a court of law, may Wheeling Public Service Company be sued alone by Caldwell? Between it and plaintiffs there is no privity of contract, at least the notices dislose none. The mere fact that it has assumed to pay the indebtness created by its grantor is not sufficient to show such privity as a court can and will recognize and act upon.

Section 2, chapter 71, Code, does not sanction or authorize such procedure. Insofar as its provisions are applicable to the question now being considered, it says: “If a covenant or promise be made for the sole benefit of a peri-son with whom it is not made, or with whom it is made jointly with others, such person may maintain in his own name any action thereon which he might maintain in case it had been made with him only and the consideration had moved from him to the party making such promise or covenant.’ In Johnson v. McClung, 26 W. Va. 659, and King v. Scott, 76 W. Va. 58, this statute is construed. In the latter-case [577]*577cited the plaintiff predicated his right to a judgment against the defendant on a deed wherehy Mrs. Reed and her husband conveyed real estate owned by one of them to Scott, part of the consideration for the conveyance being his assumption of the indebtedness decreed to be liens upon the real estate conveyed. The points of the syllabus, two in number, are these: “Section 2 of chapter 71 of the Code, does not authorize one not a party to a contract made, for his benefit to sue thereon in a court of law, unless such contract was made for his sole benefit. A lien creditor of the grantor in a deed by which the land subject to the lien has been conveyed to a third person, in consideration of a certain sum in cash and his assumption of the valid liens thereon and agreement with the vendor to settle the same, cannot maintain an action at law against the grantee on such deed for recovery of the amount of his lien on the land.”

Although each of the plaintiffs has a lien on the land and other property of the mortgagor as security for the prompt payment of the bonds and coupons, they are without right to recover in the first instance against 'the grantee of the mortgagor of the property encumbered. In this respect the court erred, in its ruling on the motion to quash the notice in the Caldwell action, as it did also in the Hamilton case, with this difference in the result, that in the latter it is within the power of the plaintiff to amend the notice or to prepáre and serve another, as the necessities of the case may require, while the notice in the former case apparently is not so amendable. Though somewhat technical, the rule laid down is of ancient origin and^ prevails in this state. But the parties are not remediless save in a court of law in circumstances such as these records present.

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Bluebook (online)
107 S.E. 401, 88 W. Va. 573, 21 A.L.R. 433, 1921 W. Va. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-wheeling-public-service-co-wva-1921.