Kansas Pacific Railway Co. v. McCormick

20 Kan. 107
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 20 Kan. 107 (Kansas Pacific Railway Co. v. McCormick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas Pacific Railway Co. v. McCormick, 20 Kan. 107 (kan 1878).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Brewer, J.:

Plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, filed its petition containing two causes of action. The first cause is thus stated:

“The plaintiff shows to the court, that the plaintiff was on the 1st of October 1867, and long previous thereto, and still is a railroad corporation, duly incorporated under the laws of Kansas, and owning and operating a railroad through the counties of Saline, Ellsworth, Russell, and Ellis, in Kansas. On or about the 1st of October 1867, the plaintiff engaged the defendant, and the defendant hired himself to the plaintiff as supervisor of the Smoky Hill division of its road, which division included all of said plaintiff’s railroad in said counties of Ellsworth, Russell and Ellis, and all of said railroad in the county of Saline, west of Brookville. The terms of such hiring were, that the plaintiff should pay the defend[108]*108ant the monthly wages of $110, and that the defendant should discharge such duties as are usually incident to the position of supervisor of a railroad, and amongst other things that defendant should supervise the supply of wood for fuel for its locomotives on the district intrusted to defendant’s care, and should safely keep and watch such wood when delivered to plaintiff, and faithfully and honestly protect his employer, said company, against fraud in the supply of said wood, and the theft and embezzlement thereof, and should, when so requested by the superintendent of such division, honestly and skillfully measure all quantities of wood offered for sale or tendered or delivered to said company, and report to such superintendent the true and correct quantity thereof. The defendant entered upon his duties as supervisor as herein-before set forth, and was employed in that capacity, until about the month of January 1875, and was during such time duly paid the salary above mentioned. On or about the 15th of March 1869, one Evander Light tendered to said company a lot of wood for fuel, under the terms of a contract by said Light with the plaintiff, for the supply of such wood at the price of $7 per cord; and said defendant was by virtue of his employment as supervisor as aforesaid, directed by B. Marshal], the superintendent of said division, to measure and inspect said wood as tendered, and to accept delivery thereof on behalf of plaintiff, and to report to said superintendent the correct quantity and measurement of said wood. The wood so tendered by said Light was placed on the right-of-way of said company, and there was also at that time placed upon the right-of-way of said company a lot of wood already purchased by and belonging to said company, and in quantity 287 cords, or thereabouts. Defendant well knew that said 287 cords was the property of plaintiff, and not of said Evander Light, but nevertheless, in violation of his contract with plaintiff, he conspired with said Evander Light to rob and defraud said company by measuring and taking delivery of said wood already belonging to said company, as if delivered by said Light, and falsely reporting to the superintendent, B. Marshal], that said Light had delivered that quantity of wood to said company, when he had not done so. Said defendant was directed by said B. Marshall to inspect and measure the cord-wood so tendered by said Light, and accordingly in pursuance of such conspiracy to defraud, said defendant in willful and fraudulent violation of his duties as supervisor, reported to said superintendent that said Light [109]*109had delivered to said company 287 cords of wood, when he had not in fact, as said defendant well knew, delivered any such wood at all, aud thereby enabled said Light to obtain from said company the price of the wood thus feigned to be sold and delivered, amounting to the sum of $2,000; and thus the defendant and said Light succeeded in robbing and defrauding the plaintiff of such sum, and for his share of the plunder arising from the fraud and robbery thus perpetrated by defendant and said Light, said defendant received from said Light one-half of said sum, being the sum of one thousand dollars. Plaintiff did not discover such fraud until the first day of December 1874.”

A motion, of which the following is a copy, was filed to make this petition more definite and certain:

{Title.) “Now comes the said named defendant, and moves the court to cause the said plaintiff to make its petition in this action more definite and certain, in this, to-wit:
“1st, To state the time when the defendant was directed by B. Marshall to inspect, measure and report to him, the wood mentioned in said petition.
“2d, To state when the wood was pretended to be measured by McCormick.
“ 3d, To state the time when the defendant reported to B. Marshall that Evander Light had 287 or 1,500 cords of wood, (or any other number of cords,) when in truth and in fact he had none on their right-of-way.
“ 4th, To state when it was that the defendant conspired with Evander Light to rob and defraud the plaintiff, and when it was that such robbery was accomplished.
“ 5th, To state how it was that the defendant defrauded or robbed the plaintiff.
“6th, To state when it was that defendant received any part of the money mentioned in the plaintiff’s petition.
“7th, To state how the defendant concealed the alleged fraud and fraudulent acts from the plaintiff, and of what it consisted.
“8th, To state when the concealment took place, and whether before or after the fraudulent acts are alleged to have been committed.
“9th, To state when the fraud was discovered.
“ 10th, To state how the fraud was discovered.
“11th, To state what acts of concealment were done by [110]*110defendant subsequent to the alleged fraud, and before its alleged discovery.
“12th, To state when the alleged cause of action of the plaintiff against the defendant accrued.”

This motion was sustained; and the plaintiff electing to stand upon its petition, judgment was entered against it, to reverse which this petition in error has been filed.

Oaght the motion to have been sustained? We think not. Such a motion is in order when the precise nature of the charge is not apparent. (Civil code, §119, Gen. Stat. 652.) It is not the function of a petition to narrate the evidence, but to state the substantive facts upon which the cause of action rests. This petition states those facts, and states them so that the precise nature of the charge is clear. There is no mere general allegation of a conspiracy to defraud, by means of which the plaintiff sustained loss, but a specific statement of the employment of defendant, his duties, his compensation, the conspiracy with Light, the circumstances under which the opportunity for wrong arose, the acts of defendant in carrying out the wrong, and the profits made by him thereby, and from whom received, as well as the injury sustained by plaintiff. All this is stated with precision. Nothing could be made clearer. The petition also alleges the time on or about which Light tendered wood in fulfillment of his contract, the measuring and inspection of which was the wrong done by the defendant, and the time at which the wrong was discovered by the company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 Kan. 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-pacific-railway-co-v-mccormick-kan-1878.