Russell v. The Minnesota Outfit

1 Minn. 162
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Minn. 162 (Russell v. The Minnesota Outfit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. The Minnesota Outfit, 1 Minn. 162 (Mich. 1854).

Opinion

By the Oourt.

Sherburne, J.

This is an action in the nature of mdebitatus assumpsit, to recover a sum of money alleged to be due from tbe Defendants on account of freighting done by the Steamboat Gov. Ramsey. The Plaintiff alleges an assignment of the demand to him from the proprietors of the Boat, by one Parker, agent for and part owner of said Steamboat, “ for a valuable consideration.”

'The action was submitted to a Referee by the District Court, who reported in substance, among other things not material to the questions at issue here — that he had heard the parties and found 4hat the steamboat Gov. Ramsey had done the freighting for the Defendants as alleged; that one Benjamin Parker was the commander and part owner of said boat, and was duly authorized as agent of the owners to settle all accounts for carrying freight on said boat and to transact all [163]*163business and make all contracts relating thereto; that said Parker, acting as such agent, and by the express authority and consent of those who owned a majority or greater portion of the stock in said boat, on the 15th day of March, 1853, sold and assigned to the Plaintiff in this action, the said account against fire Defendants “ for a valuable considerationthat the Defendants were part owners of said steamboat during the time when said freighting was done, and were partners with the other owners of the boat in the transaction of said business of carrying freight, and as partners, -were jointly interested with the other owners of said boat at the time said account was assigned, as aforesaid; that the assignment was made without the knowledge or consent of the Defendants, and that they had not received any portion of the proceeds of it; and that the Minnesota Outfit are indebted to the Plaintiff on account of the demand, as aforesaid, including debt and interest, in the sum of $825 4A.

Upon this report, judgment was rendered for the plaintiff in the above sum, from which judgment the Defendants have appealed to this Court.

The Defendants claim that the judgment should be reversed for the following reasons:

First. Tire Defendants being jointly interested in the claim with the other part owners of the boat, and it having accrued in their joint favor, they wore not divested of their interest and rights in it by the pretended sale and assignment made by Parker to the Plaintiff without their knowledge or consent, and Parker had no authority or power to make such sale and assignment.

Second. It does not appear from the report, and the fact is not found, that any sufficient or adequate consideration was paid by the Plaintiff, or passed between the parties, for such sale and assignment; nor what the character or amount of the consideration was, which must appear to enable the Plaintiff to recover.

Third. The Plaintiff, as assignee of the account, bought it subject to all equities, setoffs, or other defence, existing in favor of the Defendant at the time.

[164]*164Fowrth. The facts found and reported by the referee, show that the Defendants were tenants in common with the other part-owners in the boat at the time the freighting was done, and when the claim accrued, and were jointly entitled to the earnings of the boat and joint-owners of this account with the other parties. Therefore the facts found are strictly the subject matter of equity jurisdiction, for an equitable adjustment between the several owners aud for equitable relief only; and that can only be obtained upon a complaint properly framed, ■according to the facts found, and ashing the appropriate relief. And no action in the nature of an action at law can be maintained against the Defendants for want of proper parties to it.

Fifth. The facts found and reported are strictly the subject matter for equity jurisdiction upon a complaint framed in conformity to the facts ashing proper relief; and the action should have been in the nature of one in equity, and the rules and principles of equity law can only be applied to the facts of this case. The action as it is brought being strictly and purely an action of law, and the complaint containing only facts constituting a purely legal cause of action in assumpsit, is not sustained by the facts found, but in conflict with them, and no judgment can be sustained under it upon the facts found.

Sixth. The judgment below is not supported or warranted by the facts found by the referee, and is contrary to law and unjust to the Defendants.

There can be no doubt that if this action had been brought in its present form in the name of the proprietors or owners of the boat, it must have failed. The Statute provisions of 1853, abolishing the distinction between law and equity, has not changed the character of the relief to which a party is entitled, but only the form and manner of obtaining it. The Legislature may have power to authorize one copartner to bring his action against another, demanding a specific sum of money, in the form of an action at law; but it has made no such attempt. The form in this respect has not been changed. The rights of the parties remain the same as before the passage of the act referred to.

[165]*165How far the act has changed or blended the forms of law and equity, it is impossible now to say. Different Judges of New York, of distinguished talent, have differed widely upon the question, and up to the present time no certain rules have been adopted by the Courts of that State which may be considered as safe guides of practice in all cases. New cases will continue to develope new difficulties, and many years must pass away before these difficulties can be entirely removed, the conflicting opinions of Courts harmonized, and a well-digested, safe, and certain code of practice brought into use.

There are, however, some requisites which appear so obvious in the forms of pleading under any system, that they may be assumed as necessary without fear of mistake. One is that the party who comes into Court to obtain relief, shall distinctly state in his bill, writ or complaint, the grounds upon which he demands relief and the relief which he demands. If this were not necessary, written pleadings would be a deception, wholly useless, except to mislead. The Statute upon this point is in harmony with the general principles of law and equity. Section 60 on page 337, provides that a complaint must contain — ■

“Second, A statement of the facts constituting the cause of of action in ordinary and concise language, without repetition, and in such a manner as to enable a person of common understanding to know what is intended.
“Third, A demevnd of the relief to which the Plaintiff supposes hi/mself entitled. If the recovery of money be demanded, the amount thereof must be stated.”

Even in form then, the Statute blending law and equity has not made and .cannot make so important a change as might be inferred from a first reading of it. The complaint must, as before the passage of the act, be drawn with a special view to the relief demanded; and unless it is so drawn, the action must fail, except in cases where the error is cured by amendment.

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Related

Bidwell v. Coleman
11 Minn. 78 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1865)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Minn. 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-the-minnesota-outfit-minn-1854.