M'Lughan v. Bovard

4 Watts 308
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 15, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 4 Watts 308 (M'Lughan v. Bovard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M'Lughan v. Bovard, 4 Watts 308 (Pa. 1835).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Gibson, C. J.

—As provision was not made to extinguish the liability of Hill for the accruing costs, his deposition was properly excluded, though the case seems to fall, in other respects, within the principle of Steele v. The Phoenix, and Willing v. Peters. The terms of the assignment to Mr Craft, who is now the real plaintiff, do not appear; and if, as has been supposed, the claim was taken by him in payment of a precedent debt, which, according to M’Ginn v. Holmes, 2 Watts 121, would leave him still liable' to the debt if the claim should prove worthless, it lay on the defendants to show it. But their exception was not put on that ground at the trial, and it is not our business to imagine circumstances to support it here.

An important question as regards the event, arises on the paper called a case stated, which was admitted as prima facie evidence of the facts contained in it. The case had been set aside on terms which purported to make it such ; but granting, for the argument, the power of the court to impose them, yet if the agreement had ceased to exist for every purpose, its suppression was a nullity which did not authorise the court to burthen the applicant for it with an alternative, or exact an equivalent. An agreement may be rescinded by tacit as well as by express consent; and it is virtually so where the parties have evinced, by acts inconsistent with its purpose, that they have abandoned it. Now nothing move satisfactorily evinces the abandonment of a case stated which is but an agreement, than subsequently pleading to issue ; because a contest before a jury is utterly inconsistent with an adherence to facts previously established. A case stated is a substitute for a verdict, resorted to for convenience and to save the expense of a trial, its purpose being not to make evidence for a jury, but to supersede the action of a jury altogether, by imparting to facts ascertained by consent, the judicial certainty requisite to enable the court to pass upon the law, and give judgment on the whole ; and its existence is consequently inconsistent with an issue to draw the facts again into contest. Now the case in question was stated, as appears by the caption, not in the scire facias suit, but on a rule to show cause why satisfaction should not be entered of the judgment in the original action. The date of it is not conclusively ascertained, but it certainly was not later than the inception of the scire facias, which was consequently brought in disaffirmance of the agreement; on which disaffirmance the defendants joined by pleading generally and putting themselves on the country. By their plea they waived the previous case made; and thus stood matters when the plaintiff applied to have it withdrawn. The parties were at issue on every fact contained in it; and the motion was [313]*313to have it formally disposed of, in order, I presume, to give the parties a clear field—a matter altogether unnecessary, as it was no part of the proceeding on the scire facias, and had, for every legal purpose, ceased to exist. The unfounded apprehension of the plaintiff that it might be otherwise, did not authorise the court to treat it as an existing document and exact terms for the setting of it aside.

Independent of the effect imparted to it by those terms, it is supposed to have acquired a degree of credit from the bare statement of the case as an admission of the facts. For what purpose and on what condition was that admission % Exclusively to have the judgment of the court on the facts submitted, and not to give them effect for any other purpose. Each may have been willing to put the law upon the circumstances, without intending to admit, or even without believing them to be an accurate representation of the truth; and without consenting to be bound by them in another proceeding. A counsel, confident that the law of the case depends entirely on a particular fact, which, if found, would be decisive for him, might be willing to say to his antagonist, “give me that fact and make the rest of the case as you pleaseyet a statement immaterial in point of legal effect, which could well be risked before a court, might expose the party to the most inveterate prejudices of a jury; and if the consequences of admissions thus made were to follow him on subsequent occasions into an inquiry by another tribunal, there would be an end of agreements to settle facts by consent. A rejected offer of compromise shall not prejudice ¡‘because it may have been proposed at a sacrifice as the price of peace, or with a view to compensation by concessions on the adverse part, and because the admissions implied by it were to have an effect limited to the particular occasion. In these respects its analogue is a case stated, whose explosion ought not, on any principle of justice, to do the parties a mischief to which they had not consented to expose themselves, especially when the advantages expected from the cheapness and convenience of it had not been realized. But it is conclusive that a case withdrawn is in effect a verdict set aside or reversed for error, which has no further operation. And there is in this respect no difference whether it be general or special, as was held in Mahoney v. Ashton, 4 Har. & M’Hen. 295; nor can there be a difference in principle between a verdict and a case stated; for the legal effect must be the same, whether the parties undertake to say the truth for themselves or put themselves on a jury to say it for them.

But the supposed admissions of the case being actually in evidence, the testimony of the counsel who signed it became unquestionably competent to show, not only that his signature was gained by artifice, but that the actual assent of his client was not had. A client is doubtless bound by the legal effect of his attorney’s act, whether specially authorized or not; but there is no adjudged case to show that he is bound by an unauthorized concession of facts which have lost all legal effect by being thrown open to the inspection of a jury, [314]*314A mistaken concession of the client himself is open to. explanation by proof of ignorance or misconception ; and a fortiori a mistaken concession of his counsel ought to be so by proof of an exclusive reliance on misrepresentations of the adverse counsel. For defect of authority it was held, in Campbell v. Kent, 3 Penns. Rep. 72, that the client was not bound even by the legal consequences of his attorney’s act. But the principle which governs the competency of allegations in a chancery bill comes still nearer to the point. These operate sometimes as admissions. “ If no proceedings have been had on the bill, the allegations which it contains will not operate as evi- ' dence against the plaint iff, by way of admission, unless his privity be proved. But if the privity of the plaintiff can be established, the bill will be evidence against him, though the facts were suggested for the purpose of discovery upon the surmise of counsel.” Slarkic's Ev., part 2,p. 286. On this principle can it be doubted that the testimony of the counsel was competent to prove want of privity of his client, in a case stated on which there had. been no further proceeding? Had judgment been rendered on it, the facts conceded in it might undoubtedly have been introduced to affect him like facts found in a special verdict. But even had it not been withdrawn, the order to set it aside could not have been considered as a proceeding on it, but on the rule to show cause. The rejected part of the testimony ought to have been received.

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

Related

Romaine v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board
901 A.2d 477 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2006)
Raymond v. Costallas
70 A.2d 636 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1950)
Hix v. Womelsdorf Bank & Trust Co.
51 Pa. D. & C. 334 (Berks County Court of Common Pleas, 1943)
Philadelphia Saving Fund Society v. Bethlehem
17 A.2d 750 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1940)
Cherniak v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America
14 A.2d 334 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1940)
Donosa v. Ueltzen
97 Pa. Super. 556 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1929)
Morrett v. Fire Ass'n
108 A. 171 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1919)
Gibson v. Rowland
35 Pa. Super. 158 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1908)
Scott v. First National Bank of Tulsa
68 L.R.A. 488 (Court Of Appeals Of Indian Territory, 1904)
Crumley v. Lutz
36 A. 929 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1897)
Hunter v. Moul
98 Pa. 13 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1881)
Whitin v. Paul
13 R.I. 40 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1880)
In re Hurst
12 F. Cas. 1020 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan, 1876)
Kephart v. Butcher
17 Iowa 240 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1864)
Schoneman v. Fegley
7 Pa. 433 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1848)
Crozer v. Leland
4 Whart. 12 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1839)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Watts 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mlughan-v-bovard-pa-1835.