Kennaird v. Jones

9 Gratt. 183
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 9 Gratt. 183 (Kennaird v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennaird v. Jones, 9 Gratt. 183 (Va. 1852).

Opinions

LEE, J.

This was an action of assumpsit in the Circuit court of Wood county, in which Lewis Jones, the defendant in error, was plaintiff, and Kennaird and Murdock, the plaintiffs in error, were defendants.

The declaration consisted of three counts. The defendants appeared and demurred generally to the whole *declaration, and also to each count thereof, and the plaintiff joined in said demurrers. The defendants also pleaded “non assumpsere,” and “not guilty,” and the plaintiffs joined issue on both. The court then proceeded to hear the demurrers, and gave judgment thereon for the plaintiff, and that the same should be overruled. Whereupon the case being submitted to a jury, a verdict was found for the plaintiff, and judgment thereon was then rendered in his favor; and to this judgment the plaintiffs in error have obtained a supersedeas from this court.

The only questions presented by the record are those arising upon the demurrers to the declaration, and to the several counts which it contains. Upon the demurrer to the entire declaration we are first to enquire whether either of the counts be good; for if there be one good count, that demurrer must be overruled, unless it tie found united with some other which cannot properly be joined with it. Duke of Bedford v. Alcock, 1 Wils. R. 248; Mumford v. Fitzhugh, 18 John. R. 457; Roe v. Crutchfield, 1 Hen. & Munf. 361; Henderson v. Stringer, 6 Gratt. 130. The third count is the ordinary indebitatus assumpsit for the price of logs sold and delivered, and for money due upon an account stated, and is clearly good as it stands, on general demurrer. The first count is uoon a special contract for the sale of logs, and it is not contended that such a count might not properly be united with the third. But it is suggested that the second count is in the nature of a count in case, as for a tort, and cannot be properly joined with the other two. Such, however, is clearly not its true character: It is a count in assumpsit, upon a special contract of bailment, setting out the promise and undertaking of the defendants, the consideration upon which it was founded, the breach of that promise by the defendants, and their neglect and carelessness, and the loss to the plaintiff occasioned thereby. The *count is fully sustained by the precedent in 2 Chit. Pl. 333, and is undoubtedly good, as assumpsit may be maintained against any bailee, upon the contract of bailment, for any neglect or breach of duty. 1 Chit. Pl. 115; and it is not only proper and correct, but recommended as advisable, to add to such counts, counts for goods sold and delivered, &c., and the general money counts. 2 Chit. Pl. 335, 6. I think, therefore, there can be no doubt the demurrer to the declaration was properly overruled.

I have already expressed the opinion that the second and third counts in the declaration are good, and the only remaining question is as to the first count; and this depends upon the true meaning and construction of the contract which this count sets out, and its legal effect. If it amounts to a mere sale of property, in the ordinary way, at a specified price, a part of which was paid in hand, and the balance to be [86]*86paid when requested, a simple count in indebitatus assumpsit, to the effect stated, would be quite sufficient. But the plaintiff did not think it safe to rely upon a general count of this kind, but deemed it expedient to declare upon and set out the special contract. He alleges, that in consideration that he would sell the defendants a raft of logs belonging to him, then lying in the Ohio river, about half a mile below the landing of the defendants, for a given sum, deducting therefrom the expense of navigating and floating the said logs to the landing of defendants, which they might incur over and above the services of Murdock (one of the defendants) and a negro in his employ, the defendants promised to pay him for the same the'sum of 3 dollars down, earnest money, and the residue of the agreed price, less the expense aforesaid, when they should be afterwards requested; and that they (the defendants) would cause the raft to be navigated and floated to their landing aforesaid as soon as the state *of the river would permit. It then avers, that the plaintiff thereupon sold and delivered the raft to the defendants, who paid the 3 dollars earnest money, but have failed to pay the balance of the agreed price, less the expense of floating the logs to their landing, although often requested so to do, and although plaintiff had been always ready to pay the expense of floating them as aforesaid. The question then arises upon this special contract, at what time the parties contemplated and agreed that the balance of the money (less the expense of floating the logs should be paid? Was it to be paid at the time of the sale and delivery of the logs,) or when they should be floated by the defendants up to their landing-, and the expense of that work should be ascertained (or which would be the same) when the defendants should have had a reasonable opportunity and time for floating them, and ascertaining the expense after the state of the river had become such as to admit of it? If it was to be paid at the time of the sale and delivery, the simple indebitatus count would have sufficed; and it would have been unnecessary to have distinguished between the 3 dollars earnest money and the residue of the price of the logs. It would also have been unnecessary to aver that the defendants undertook on their part to navigate and float the logs up to their landing as soon as the state of the river should permit. It would seem rather from the stipulation, for the payment of the 3 dollars down, that the residue was not to be paid until a subsequent period; and when it is observed that this balance was to be subject to a deduction for the amount of certain expenses thereafter to be incurred about the logs, to wit, for floating them up to defendants’ landing, and thereafter to be ascertained, it may be fairly inferred that it was not to be paid until the logs had been floated to the specified point, and the necessary expense of the work properly *adjusted; supposing, of course, that the defendants, who took that duty upon themselves, should perform it in due season when the state of the river would permit. But as the defendants might unduly delay this work of floating up the logs, and thus keep the plaintiff waiting for an unreasonable time for his money, it was stipulated that the defendants should perform that work as soon as the state of the river would permit. It seems to me, therefore, that the parties must have contemplated and understood that the balance of the price of the logs was not to be paid until the logs should have been floated up to the defendants’ landing, and the expense thereby incurred ascertained and deducted; or until the defendants had had reasonable time and opportunity (after the state of the river should have become such as to admit of it) to float them up to their landing, and had delayed and neglected so to do. And in this view, and adopting this as the true interpretation of the contract between the parties, it would seem that the declaration should aver either that the logs had been floated up to the defendants’ landing, or that the state of the river had become such as to admit of it, but that the defendants had unduly neglected, failed or delayed to do it; and for want of such an averment, or its equivalent, it seems to me that the first count is defective, as not showing a perfect and consummate right of action.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bell v. Kanawha Traction & Electric Co.
98 S.E. 885 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1919)
Anderson v. Hygeia Hotel Co.
24 S.E. 269 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1896)
Gray v. Kemp
16 S.E. 225 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1891)
Holliday's Ex'rs v. Myers
11 W. Va. 276 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1877)
Young v. Woodward
44 N.H. 250 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1860)
Archer v. Ward
9 Gratt. 622 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1853)
Kennaird v. Jones
9 Gratt. 183 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1852)
Mason v. Moyers
2 Va. 606 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1844)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Gratt. 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennaird-v-jones-va-1852.