Madison, Watertown & Milwaukee Plank Road Co. v. Watertown & Portland Plank Road Co.

5 Wis. 173
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 5 Wis. 173 (Madison, Watertown & Milwaukee Plank Road Co. v. Watertown & Portland Plank Road Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madison, Watertown & Milwaukee Plank Road Co. v. Watertown & Portland Plank Road Co., 5 Wis. 173 (Wis. 1856).

Opinion

By the Court,

Smith, J.

This was a bill filed by the complainants, appellees, against the defendants, appellants, for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage executed by the defendants to the complainants, to secure the payment and interest of three several evidences of debt, called by the complainants certain [178]*178instruments in writing, or simple bills,” by wbicb tbe defendants acknowledged themselves to owe, for borrowed money, tbe complainants, or bearer, tbe respective sums of $1,000, $2,000 and $1,000, wbicb said sums tbe defendants promised to pay to tbe complainants in four years from tbe date thereof, respectively, with interest thereon, payable annually, at tbe rate of twelve per cent, per annum, at tbe office of tbe complainants, in tbe city of Milwaukee ; and to secure the payment of tbe said several sums and interest mentioned in tbe said bills, tbe defendants executed and delivered to tbe complainants, for tbe consideration of $4,000, a mortgage upon so much of their plank road as lies between tbe village of Portland and Watertown, together with all their franchises, and ■ all their personal property of any kind and description, and all their privileges ; to have and to bold, &c. Tbe bill also states that tbe whole sum of $4,000, together with interest since June 8th, 1852, remains due and unpaid, and that no proceedings at law have been bad, &c.; closing with tbe usual prayer.

To this bill tbe defendants interposed tbe following plea:

To the Circuit Court for the county of Jefferson: In Equity. Tbe plea of tbe Watertown and Portland Plank Road Company, defendants to tbe bill of complaint of tbe Madison, Water-town and Milwaukee Plank Road Company, complainants:
“ This defendant, by protestation, not confessing or acknowledging all, or any of tbe matters and things in tbe said complainant’s bill of complaint mentioned and contained, to be true in such form and manner as tbe same are therein set forth and alleged, for plea to tbe whole of tbe said bill, says, that tbe instruments in writing, or simple bills and mortgage mentioned in tbe said bill of complaint, were made, executed and delivered by tbe said defendants to tbe said complainants, for money loaned by tbe said complainants .to tbe said defendants, as in tbe said instruments in writing, or simple bills, is stated; and that tbe said complainant is a body corporate by virtue of an act of tbe legislature'of tbe territory of Wisconsin, entitled, ‘An act to incorporate tbe Lisbon and Milwaukee Plank Road Com[179]*179pany,’ which said act was amended by an act of the legislature of the territory of Wisconsin, entitled, 1 An act to provide for the continuation of the Lisbon and Milwaukee plank road from Watertown to Madison;’ and that by the said acts of incorporation and amendment, the said complainant is invested •with no power to loan money, or take any securities for the loan of money, and that the said loan of money was .not made in the usual or necessary course of the business of the said complainant ; and that the said complainant cannot, and ought not to recover any portion of the money mentioned in the said bill of complaint, for the causes herein above set forth.
“ Therefore, this defendant pleads the said acts of incorporation and amendment, and the lack of power in said complainant to loan any money, or to take securities therefor, in bar to the whole of the said complainant’s bill; and prays the judgment of this honorable court whether they shall be compelled to make any further answer to the said bill, and pray to be dismissed with their reasonable costs and charges in that behalf most wrongfully sustained.”

The plea was set down for hearing, and at the March term, 1856, of the Circuit Court, the case came on to be heard, whereupon the plea was overruled by the court, and the defendants were ordered to answer on or before the 20th day of April, then next ensuing.

There is but a single question here presented for the consideration of this court. Are" the facts, in the manner and form as they are stated in the plea, sufficient to defeat the relief prayed for in the complainant’s bill ?

However agreeable or instructive it would be, to enter into a full discussion of the powers, duties, rights and liabilities of cor-jmrations, it is scarcely necessary or proper to do so in the present stage of this cause. We have no desire to anticipate the facts of the case, however they may be disclosed by answer or proof. In doing so, remarks might possibly be made prejudicial to one or another of the parties. All that we have now to consider are, the facts stated in the plea, in the manner and form as [180]*180therein set forth. Farther than that we cannot go, and hence our discussion is reduced to a very narrow compass. The pleadings, and the statutes appertaining to the case, inform us that the parties are two. plank road companies, the termini of whose roads are at the city of Watertown, the one approaching that city from the east, and the other from the west. The plea of the defendants avers:

1st. That the instruments in writing, or simple hills and mortgage mentioned in the complainant’s hill of complaint, were made, executed and delivered by the defendants to the complainants, for money loaned to the former hy the latter.

2. That the complainants are a body corporate hy virtue of an act of the legislature, and by neither of said acts, nor the several amendments thereto, are the complainants invested with power to loan money, or take any securities for the loan of money; and

3. That said loan of money was not made in the usual or necessary course of the business of the said complainants.

The object of a plea to a bill in chancery is, to reduce the cause to a single point, and from thence create a bar to the suit, or to the part to which it applies. 1 Mitf. 219; 1 Atk. 54; 2 Bligh P. C. 614; 15 Ves. 82. But this plea, whether • sufficient or insufficient, whether a defence or not, goes to the whole bill of complaint. A plea collects the rule of law on which the defence rests, from new matter stated by the defendant in that form. Lube, 341. It is therefore apparent, that where a plea goes to the whole matter of complaint and relief, it must be full and perfect in itself, so that if true it will be adequate to the determination of the whole case. Canal vs. Warring, 4 Johns. Ch. Rep. 693.

The first point of the plea is, that the complainants are a corporate body, and that the bills were given for a loan of money. This general statement of itself is no objection to. the relief prayed for by the bill. The second is, that the complainants are not authorized by their charter to loan money, or to take securities therefor. This is a mere legal conclusion, to be determined by inspection of their charter. The third is, that the loan [181]*181was not made in tbe usual and necessary course of tbe business of tbe complainants.”

This last appears to us to be tbe only material allegation to be considered, and was really tbe only point urged in tbe argument. Tbe plea was set down for bearing by tbe complainants, and by so doing they undoubtedly admitted tbe truth of all tbe facts stated therein, for all the purposes of tbe suit; but a mere legal proposition stated in tbe plea, is not thereby made the stronger or better.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Wis. 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madison-watertown-milwaukee-plank-road-co-v-watertown-portland-plank-wis-1856.