Newby v. Oregon Cent. Ry. Co.

18 F. Cas. 42, 1 Sawy. 63, 3 Am. Law T. Rep. U.S. Cts. 127, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1650
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedMarch 8, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 F. Cas. 42 (Newby v. Oregon Cent. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newby v. Oregon Cent. Ry. Co., 18 F. Cas. 42, 1 Sawy. 63, 3 Am. Law T. Rep. U.S. Cts. 127, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1650 (circtdor 1870).

Opinion

DEADY, District Judge.

This suit was brought to enjoin the defendants from using the name of the complainant’s corporation— The Oregon Central Railway Company — and particularly from issuing bonds in the name of said corporation. It is alleged in the bill that the complainant is the owner and holder of two of said corporation’s bonds, of the denomination of $1,000 each, and that for reasons stated in the bill, the use of such name by the defendants and the issuing of such bonds by them, do and will depreciate the market value of complainant’s bonds to his damage not less than $1,000.

At the May term, 1869, the cause was heard on demurrer to the bill. On the argument a cause of demurrer was assigned ore tenus;— “That it does not appear from the bill that the complainant’s corporation had refused to-institute this suit, and therefore it should have been brought in the name of said corporation.”

On August 3, 1869, the court sustained the demurrer as above assigned, and decided that the complainant’s corporation must be made a party to the suit; and that if such corporation, after request by the complainant, refuses to bring such suit, the latter may allege such refusal in his hill, and make the corporation a party defendant. Newby v. Oregon Cent. R. Co. [Case No. 10,144].

Afterwards the complainant had leave to-amend his bill, which he did, by making his corporation a party defendant thereto, and by alleging “that before commencing this suit your orator requested the said defendant corporation, whose bonds your orator holds and owns, as aforesaid, to bring this suit for his protection, and the said last named corporation refused so to do, and do still refuse to-protect the rights of your orator aforesaid.”

To the bill as amended, the natural persons named therein as defendants, demurred. The corporation charged with the wrongful use of the corporate name, filed two pleas to distinct portions of the hill and demurred to the remainder. The complainant’s corporation made default.

On January 4, 1870, the defendants moved to dismiss the bill under equity rule 38, be[43]*43cause the complainant had not-replied to-.the pleas, or set down the same, or the demurrers', for argument. The motion was denied, because it did not appear that the complainant had notice of the filing of such pleas or demurrers, by entry in the order book, as prescribed in equity rule 4. Afterwards by consent of parties, the pleas and demurrers were set down for argument.

On the argument, the cause was submitted on the part of the complainant, with an admission as to the sufficiency of the second plea. The defendants filed a written brief in support of both pleas and' demurrers. Both pleas are voluminous and full of details, and are pleaded as pleas in abatement. In effect, the first one alleges that the complainant is not the real owner of the two bonds mentioned in the bill, but that the same were merely transferred and delivered to him by a director of this corporation, for the sole purpose of enabling him to maintain this suit in this court, for the benefit of, or in behalf of such corporation.

If, notwithstanding the rhetorical exaggerations of this plea, it appears that the complainant has the legal title to, or interest in these bonds, then this plea is insufficient. They are payable to bearer and the title to them passes by delivery, unless the contrary is shown. The motive with which they were delivered to the complainant or he received them makes no difference in this respect. Parties have a clear right to become the owners of property real or personal, by purchase or gift, for the express purpose of maintaining a Buit in this court concerning the same. In some of the earliest cases these are some dicta to the contrary of this, but their authority has not been recognized. Admitting all that can be claimed for the plea, and probably more than ought to be, it only amounts to an allegation that the father of the complainant delivered him these bonds as a gift, with the mutual understanding or expectation that the latter would commence and maintain this suit as the owner thereof. In all this there was nothing illegal or immoral or fraudulent. There is no rule of law or public policy which requires the national courts to discourage persons from seeking redress in those tribunals in every case where the constitution and laws fairly construed will permit it. This plea,.I think, should be held insufficient

The second plea alleges that it is not true that the complainant, before bringing this suit requested his corporation to bring the same for his protection; and also, that prior to the commencement thereof, such corporation did commence a suit in the circuit court for the county of Marion, to enjoin the defendants herein from using such corporate name and issuing such bonds, and that such suit is still pending in said court, and being prosecuted therein in good faith, by said complainant’s corporation.

Before disposing of this plea, I propose to call attention to the impropriety of pleading double in this case. A plea in equity is a special answer showing why the suit should be dismissed, delayed or barred, and that, therefore, the complainant ought not to have the answer of the defendant to the matters stated in the bill. It may consist of matter dehors the bill — new matter — then called a pure plea or of denials of some of the substantial matters set forth in the bill. Story, Eq. Pl. 649, 651. Two matters of defense cannot be stated in one plea, nor should a plea contain various facts, unless they are all con-ducivé to a single point, which constitutes a single defense. Otherwise it is open to the charge of duplicity and multifariousness. Id. 653-656. Two pleas in a suit are never allowed, even in bar, except in a particular case, by leave of the court first obtained, where great inconvenience might otherwise be sustained. A plea is not the only mode of defense to a suit in equity. It is only allowed for the purpose of enabling a defendant to make a defense upon some single point or matter, and thereby avoid the expense, delay and inconvenience of answering the bill in detail. But If the defendant is allowed to plead several pleas to as many parts of the bill, and thereby put the whole or any great part of it in issue, nothing is gained in this respect, but rather the contrary. Id. 657; Didier v. Davidson, 10 Paige, 515; Saltus v. Tobias, 7 Johns. Ch. 215; Lamb v. Starr [Case No. 8,021].

Nor do I think the first plea is a plea in abatement. It is an allegation that the complainant has no property in the bonds, and is, therefore, without interest in the subject matter of the suit. Such a fact, or facts showing this conclusion, may be pleaded in bar of the suit. Story, Eq. Pl. 728. A plea of bankruptcy of the plaintiff, being in effect a plea that the plaintiff has no title, so far as he is concerned, is a plea in bar. Id. 726.

But as no steps have been taken to strike out these double pleas or compel the defendants to elect which one they will rely upon, and as the complainant on the argument practically admitted the sufficiency of the second plea, it will be assumed for the present, that the defendants in filing the second plea abandoned the first

In accordance with the opinion expressed at the hearing on the original bill and demurrer thereto, this second plea is sufficient and constitutes a good defense to .the suit. By it the defendants controvert the allegation of the amended bill, that the complainant’s corporation had refused to bring this suit for the protection of his interests.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 F. Cas. 42, 1 Sawy. 63, 3 Am. Law T. Rep. U.S. Cts. 127, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newby-v-oregon-cent-ry-co-circtdor-1870.