Jewett v. Cunard

13 F. Cas. 594, 3 Woodb. & M. 277
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine
DecidedOctober 15, 1847
DocketCase No. 7,310
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 F. Cas. 594 (Jewett v. Cunard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jewett v. Cunard, 13 F. Cas. 594, 3 Woodb. & M. 277 (circtdme 1847).

Opinion

WOODBURY, Circuit Justice.

The first question in this case, not connected with the merits, and which it seems important to settle before an examination of the merits, is in respect to the non-joinder of Bryce Jewett as plaintiff. He has, it is true, some interest in the contract between the Cunards and the plaintiff, having owed some of the debts separately, and others in conjunction with Joshua Jewett, and some interests in the property, having been a tenant in common in some of the estate named in the contract, both real and personal. But at the same time having been a lessee of the property afterwards from the Cunards, and alleged by Joshua Jewett to have been guiity of neglect and mismanagement of the estate, he is prosecuted for that, with the Cunards, as a respondent, and for misconduct as a lessee, and could not without • an absurdity, prosecute himself for it as a co-plaintiff. The first answer then to this objection is this, that such conduct has since occurred as to the property and contract, by neglect and misbehavior, and which is one of the alleged grounds of recovery by this bill, that Bryce Jewett could not, as an agent charged wfith being guilty of that neglect, prosecute himself, but probably may well be made, as he is one of the respondents, alleged to have conducted unfaithfully towards the plaintiff. It is doubtful whether one tenant in common can ever join another in such a proceeding. Dothrop v. Arnold, 25 Me. 136. A second answer to the objection is, that Bryce Jewett had no interest whatever in some of the property sold by the Cunards, and no right, therefore, to damages for its misuse, and that portions of the contract were to Joshua alone, as if alone interested in them. 1 Story, Eq. PL §§ 75, 72, 276. The maxim thus well applies to such, “Reddenda singula sin-gulis” (‘Words may be transferred and distributed among several subjects, and have different meanings, as the matter differs, and as right requires”). 1 Spence, Eq. Jur. 540. So in 1 Spence, Eq. Jur. 545, it is laid down that “where the interest of the cove-nantees is several, they may maintain separate actions, though the language of the covenant he joint.” See, also, 1 Saund. 153. 154, note; 4 Bing. (N. C.) 426: “Lord Coke mentions six several instances in which the joint words of the parties shall be taken respectively and severally,” and one of them is if several interests of the grantors, as when tenants in common and another of the grantors exist Windham’s Case, 5 Coke, 8a. It is not only alleged here that the complainant owned some of the property alone, and some as tenant in common with Bryce, but that the value of his interest was seven-eighths of the whole. This is not denied, nor asked to be proved, and hence is virtually an admitted fact, and justifies a recovery by the complainant to that extent, if entitled to recover at all. Again, according to some of the allegations in the bill, and which are not denied in the answer, though some of the evidence might render it doubtful, Bryce Jewett in May, 1844, when the bill was filed, was a citizen of New Brunswick, and hence this court had jurisdiction over him as a defendant, but he could not have join- ] ed Joshua as a plaintiff, without defeating the | jurisdiction over the Cunards, who are alleged to belong to the same province. Harrison v. Urann [Case No. 6,146]. By express statute, there is a provision as to the joinder of defendants, that you may not unite them in such cases. Act Feb. 28, 1839, § 1 [5 Stat. 321]; Herriot v. Davis [Case No. 6,404]; [U. S. v. Freeman] 3 How. [44 U. S.] 556. And it would not be a very forced construction of the concluding language of that statute, to extend it to the non-joinder of plaintiffs. There certainly would be nothing unreasonable in not joining them, if their interests were in part-separate, and in part only that of tenants in common, as well as the contract being in part separate. Place v. Delegal. 4 Bing. (N. C.) 426. Again, the claims of Bryce Jewett may all have been settled or discharged, as seems probable by a writing, which he testifies in his deposition, as well as states in his answer, that he gave or intended to give to the Cunards. And for other reasons he might be unwilling, if he could, to risk the action so far as regards himself. Independent, however, of the consideration before named, I think he should join on strict legal principles. Hallett v. Hallett, 2 Paige, 18. In conclusion, then, on this point, as Bryce Jewett is now a defendant, and asks for such relief as the facts may justify, the parties are all on the record in form sufficient to justify such a decree as will not do injustice to any of them, on whichever side of the docket they may stand. 1 Story, Eq. Jur. 630; [Boone v. Chiles] 10 Pet. [35 U. S.] 177. In giving judgment for one plaintiff alone, we should, of course, go only to the extent of his interests, leaving the interests of the other, if not already adjusted out of court, to be settled equitably between him and the respondents in this or another action, on proper pleadings. 3 Johns. Ch. 555; Chamley v. Lord Dunsany, 2 Schoales & L. 718; Cross v. U. S. [Case No. 3,434]; West v. Randall [Id. 17,424]; 1 Smith, Ch. Prac. 90.

[600]*600The next preliminary question is, whether the answer of the Cunards,not being expressly requested in the bill to be under oath, should be voluntarily sworn to and treated as evidence by the respondents, in their own favor. I do not deem it very material, whether the answer is to be weighed here as if duly sworn to, or not; considering that the leading facts in the case are made out satisfactorily by the testimony of more than one witness. But the course of practice is to have the answer sworn to, and to give it effect as such, when the plaintiff does not expressly state in his bill that he wishes to dispense with it, and when the court and the defendant accede to the proposition. The oath is the general rule, and the dispensing with it the exception. 2 Story, Eq. Pl. § 874; 1 Smith, Ch. Frac. 2C0. When the defendant cannot be present, the answer is taken under a commission, whose form requires it to be sworn to. 1 Spence, Eq. Jur. 372. What the form given to it should be, after taken, whether technically as evidence by the respondent, or as a bar to a recovery, till more than proof by one witness is adduced, is another question, and not very material, except as a matter of correct phraseology. Chief Justice Marshal and. Judge Story have called it “evidence,” and such is the ordinary term aiiplied to it. Russel v. Clark, 7 Cranch [11 U. S.] 92; Cushman v. Ryan [Case No. 3,515]; Gould v. Gould [Id. 5,637]. But in strictness of phrase, perhaps, the answer is not evidence, but rather a portion of the pleadings, — rather a bar in the nature of a plea, and when sworn to, stands till overcome by more than one witness. 2 Daniel, Eq. Prac. 626; 6 Clark & F. 295. The oath to it is like the “decisory oath” in the Roman law, and stands as such, like- a decision or bar, till disproved by stronger evidence. 1 Spence, Eq. Jur. 677. Yet it does not seem to violate much either good precedent or sound analogy, to call such an answer, when sworn to, in common parlance, “evidence.”

We are now prepared to proceed to the consideration of the merits. In the threshold the respondents contend that their contract with the plaintiffs was a mere special contract which subjects them to pay nothing for the income of the property, unless it amounted to £550 in the first year from October 1st, 1830, to October 1st, 1S31. They insist, also, on a strict construction of it, and if that sum was not then realized, that they are not bound in any other way, or on any other terms, to account for the estate itself, whether real or personal.

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. Cas. 594, 3 Woodb. & M. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jewett-v-cunard-circtdme-1847.