North Carolina Rail Road v. Leach

49 N.C. 340
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 49 N.C. 340 (North Carolina Rail Road v. Leach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Carolina Rail Road v. Leach, 49 N.C. 340 (N.C. 1857).

Opinion

Battle, J.

We understand that the counsel for the par *343 ties agree to waive all objections to matters of mere form in tbe first count of tbe plaintiff’s declai'ation, and the first and seconds pleas of tbe defendant, that tbe cause may be decided on its merits as arising from those parts of tbe pleadings, without reference to tbe sale of tbe defendant’s stock.

The first count of tbe declaration is upon a special contract, which it alleges, that tbe defendant has broken, by having failed to pay, when called upon, the instalments (except the first) becoming due, from time to time,'on his subscription for stock according to the terms of the charter which gave a corporate existence to the plaintiff. ¡

The first plea denies the liability of the defendant, for the ■reason, that at the time he made his subscription, he was assured by the agents of the plaintiffs that their line of road should be so located and established as to run through, or within half a mile of the town of Smithfield, in the couuty of. Johnston, and that he subscribed upon the express condition that the road should be so run, and not otherwise: Whereas, the line of the said road, as actually located and established, did not pass within two miles of the said town.

The testimony offered in support of the issue raised by this plea, was, that at the time when he was about to subscribe for the stock, and before he made the subscription, Linn B. Saunders, one of the commissioners appointed to receive subscriptions at the town of Smithfield, by parol, informed and assured him, that the line of the road should run through that town, and that he made his subscription upon that assurance, and in consideration thereof.

The plaintiff, admitting that the road did not run through the town of Smithfield, and that the testimony, if competent, was true, objected to its introduction, upon the ground, that the terms of the subscription were in writing, and could not, therefore, be added to or varied by parol proof. The general rule is undoubtedly such as is contended for by the plaintiffs, and the question is whether the present case is an admisssi-ble exception to it. We are clearly of opinion that it is not. The terms of the subscription, as expressed in writing, were, *344 that the subscribers promised and agreed to take the number of shares of stock affixed to their respective names, according to the provisions of the act of the General Assembly, entitled an act to incorporate the North Carolina rail-road company.” The provisions of that act, so far as the line of the road was concerned, were, that it was to run from the point on the Wilmington and Raleigh (now Wilmington and Weldon) railroad, where it crosses the river Neuse, in the county of Wayne, via Raleigh and Salisbury to Charlotte. The route between these termini and given points was designedly left to be as- ' certained and fixed by the engineers, upon actual surveys. The contract between the parties, then, was that defendant agreed to take the number of shares of stock for which he made his written subscription in a rail-road, the line of which was to run according to the directions of the charter. It forms no part of such directions, either expressed or implied', that the road was to pass through Smithfield. A stipulation that it shall pass through that town, must therefore be either an additional stipulation, or the variation of a former written one, and being by parol, is clearly inadmissible.

The case differs very materially from those of Twidy v. Saunderson, 9 Ire. Rep. 5 ; Manning v. Jones, Busb. 368 ; Daughtrey v. Boothe, 4 Jones’ Rep. 87 ; where the parol contract, though made at the same time, and relating to the same subject-matter, was in its nature, necessarily separate and distinct from the written one.

But supposing that we are mistaken, and that the testimony is competent, it may well be doubted whether it proves any contract, or is to be taken as an agreed condition between the agents of the plaintiff, and the defendant, that the road should run through Smithfield. The proof is, that one of the commissioners assured the defendant that the road should so run, and that he subscribed upon that assurance. Now, considering that one only of the three commissioners, who were required by the charter to take subscriptions at the town of Smithfield, made the assurance, the transaction has very much the appearance of its having been the mere confident expres- *345 Bion of the opinion of the commissioner, that the road would bo run, and that the defendant, confiding in that opinion, made his subscription accordingly. If'such were the case, it was very clearly no contract to that effect between the parties. But whether that be so or nol, it does not appear that Linn B. Saunders, or any other single commissioner, was authoris-ed to make any sueh contract, or to stipulate for any such condition. The charter required that books for subscription should be opened at Smithfield, under the direction of John McLeod, Bythan Bryan, L. B. Saunders, Baldy Saunders, and Thaddeus W. Whiteley, or any three of them. If the commissioners thus appointed, or any three of them who acted, were authorised to make any sueh “assurances” as that, the benefit of which is claimed by. the defendant, it is impossible to suppose that either one of them alone had sueh authority ; for if any one of them had it, then each one of them might have had it; and thus, while one commissioner was assuring Mr. Leach that the road should pass through Smith-field, another might agree with Mr. A B that it shonld run by his farm, and the third might enter into a solemn contract with Mr. C D that it should pass right by the door of his mill-house ; while the relative position of the town, the farm, and the mill, might be such as to make it greatly inconvenient, if not impracticable, to accommodate all. An authority to agents that could lead to such consequences, would never have been expressly given by a principal, and we, therefore, cannot construe it to have been given byimplication. Our opinion, then, is, that the testimony offered by the defendant in support of the issue joined on his first plea, was incompetent ; but if in that we are mistaken, and it is admissible, it does -not sustain the defense set up under that plea. This makes it unnecessary for us to consider an additional objection made to it by the plaintiff;-that if such a condition were annexed to the defendant’s subscription, it was waived by his payment of five per cent on it at the time, and subsequently by his proxy assisting and voting in the meetings of the stockholders, which organised the company, without insisting on *346 the alleged condition. His main ground of defense, the defendant insists upon under his second plea. It is admitted that the eastern terminus of the plaintiffs’ road was materially changed from the point designated in the charter, and the defendant contends that he was thereby released from the obligation to pay for the stock for which he had subscribed. The argument is, that the contract created by his subscription was that he would pay for the stock taken by him, if, or upon condition, that the road should be built according to the termini,

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.C. 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-carolina-rail-road-v-leach-nc-1857.