Hayes v. Burkam

94 Ind. 311, 1884 Ind. LEXIS 63
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1884
DocketNo. 8799
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 94 Ind. 311 (Hayes v. Burkam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Burkam, 94 Ind. 311, 1884 Ind. LEXIS 63 (Ind. 1884).

Opinion

Niblack, J.

This was an action by Joseph H. Burkam against the Lawrenceburgh Woollen Manufacturing Company, Levin B. Lewis, Ezra G. Hayes, Elijah S. Blasdel and Anson Marshall, the latter being the assignor of the cause of action and being summoned merely to answer as to his interest, if any, in the matter in controversy. For that reason reference hereafter made to the defendants in the action will be understood as not including him.

The complaint was originally in two paragraphs. Issues were formed upon these paragraphs between the plaintiff and defendant Hayes, and a trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. That judgment was reversed by this court. See Hayes v. Burkam, 51 Ind. 130.

After the cause was remanded to the circuit court, the plaintiff assigned his interest in the action to William D. Burkam, who was substituted as plaintiff, and who, upon leave granted, filed an additional and third paragraph of complaint.

As the complaint then stood the first paragraph charged that on the 30th day of October, 1867, the defendants procured from Anson Marshall the loan of $10,000, par value, of 5-20 U. S. bonds, then of the value of $15,000, and then and there promised to return to the said Marshall like U. S. bonds of the same date and general description, at the expiration of one year from that time, which the defendants had failed to do; that the contract was reduced to writing and was to have been signed by all the defendants, but for reasons stated it was not signed by the defendant Hayes, which un[313]*313signed writing was filed with the complaint as exhibit A. For further particulars as to this paragraph reference is made to the opinion in the case of Hayes v. Burkam, supra.

The second paragraph chai’ged that on the said 30th day of October, 1867, the defendants borrowed from Marshall $10,-000, par value, in U. S. 5-20 bonds, for the use of the Woollen Manufacturing Company, on the terms mentioned in the unsigned writing filed with the complaint; that the loan was obtained under the following circumstances: Blasdel, acting as the agent of the defendants, and having competent authority to do so, negotiated the loan on the joint credit of all the defendants, with the understanding that the contract was to be reduced to writing and to be signed-by them and placed in the bank where the bonds were kept before such bonds were to be taken from the bank and delivered, but that Blasdel, as such agent for the defendants, with the knowledge of the defendant Hayes, took the bonds from the bank without the signature of Hayes to the contract as it was afterwards reduced to writing; that the defendants have failed to return said bonds, or to account for the same in any way, but have sold and converted the same to their own use, to the damage of the plaintiff.

The third paragraph charged the obtaining of the loan of 5-20 U. S. bonds substantially as stated in the preceding paragraphs ; that the bonds were at the time on deposit in the First National Bank of Lawrenceburgh; that Blasdel acted as the agent of all the other defendants in all matters connected with the loan, having full authority so to do; that it was agreed that the bonds should not be delivered until the written obligation referred to in the preceding paragraphs should be signed by all the defendants; that Marshall thereupon made a written order on the cashier of the said First National Bank of Lawrenceburgh for the delivery of the bonds when the written obligation should be signed by all of the defendants, and not till then, and placed the same in the ha'nds of his son, Firman Marshall, to be delivered when such obliga[314]*314tion should be so signed ; that the defendants thereafter falsely and fraudulently represented to the said Firman Marshall that the written obligation had been signed by all of them, and he, believing that said obligation had been so signed, and upon the faith thereof, caused said bonds to be delivered to the-defendants by the cashier of the bank in which they were on deposit, as herein above stated; that the defendants had failed to return said bonds, or to pay the value thereof.

Hayes answered the third paragraph of the complaint:

First. In denial; Second. That the cause of action therein stated did not accrue within six years; Third. Payment.

A demurrer, for want of sufficient facts, was sustained to the second paragraph of this answer, and upon a second trial of the cause there was a general verdict for the plaintiff, assessing his damages at $9,500. Accompanying the general verdict were answers-to numerous interrogatories submitted to the jury at the request of the parties respectively. A motion for a new trial being first denied, judgment was rendered against Hayes upon the general verdict.

The question of the sufficiency of the third paragraph of the complaint was indirectly raised by the demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer to that paragraph of complaint, and it is argued that the demurrer ought to have been carried back and sustained to this third paragraph of the complaint, because of its alleged insufficiency upon demurrer. Fox v. Wray, 56 Ind. 423; Gould v. Steyer, 75 Ind. 50; Reed v. Higgins, 86 Ind. 143.

The paragraph of complaint in question was, we .think, defective in one material respect at least, and that is, it failed to aver that Hayes had not, in fact, signed the written obligation concerning which the alleged false and fraudulent representations were made by the defendants, at the time they obtained possession of the bonds through the agency of Firman Marshall. The averment that Hayes had not signed that obligation at some previous time was not sufficient to supply that omission.

[315]*315It was made to appear by the evidence that Blasdel, at the time he entered into negotiations with Anson Marshall for the loan of the bonds, was, and for some time thereafter continued to be, the president and general business manager of the Lawrenceburgh Woollen Manufacturing Company, and that all he did in obtaining the loan was done primarily in the interest of that company, to the use of which the proceeds of the loan were intended to be, and were in fact, applied ; also, that during the negotiation he was the be.arer of propositions between the respective parties, other than himself, and that it was through his active exertions that an .agreement as to the terms upon which the loan was to be made was reached, and that the bonds were obtained for the use of the company so represented by him. It was also made to appear at the trial that Hayes was not present when the bonds were delivered to Blasdel at the bank in which they had been previously kept, and did not personally participate in any of the alleged representations which induced Firman Marshall to authorize a premature delivery of the bonds to Blasdel. ' The theory upon which the action was prosecuted was that in all matters connected with the negotiations for the loan, .and with the measures taken to get premature possession of the bonds, Blasdel acted, also, as the agent of Hayes. ‘

The question as to whether Blasdel did, also, so act as the .agent of Hayes, and consequently whether Hayes was bound by the acts and declarations of .Blasdel in connection with the negotiations and the procurement of-the bonds, was made an important, and, indeed, the controlling, question at the trial.

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Bluebook (online)
94 Ind. 311, 1884 Ind. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-burkam-ind-1884.