Stanley v. Stanton

36 Ind. 445
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 36 Ind. 445 (Stanley v. Stanton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanley v. Stanton, 36 Ind. 445 (Ind. 1871).

Opinion

Downey, J.

Stanton sued Stanley on the 19th day of February, 1870, alleging that in 1848, Seth Cox was indebted to Zachariah Bennett in the sum of one hundred dollars and fifty cents, due on the 25th of December, 1848, and paid the same to the defendant upon his representation that he was authorized, as the agent of Bennett, to receive the same, and on his special agreement that he would pay it to said Bennett, and take up Cox’s note previously given for the same, and then in the hands of Bennett, and return it to Cox, or destroy it; the said Cox relied on the statements and promise of the defendant, and supposed he had done as he had promised, until in the fall of 1869, when the defendant told Cox, for the first time, that he had not done so, and had not been the agent of Bennett, or authorized by him to receive said money; by which means the defendant became indebted to Cox in the said sum of one hundred dollars and fifty cents, which indebtedness, and the fact of his failure to pay over to said Bennett the said money, and that he was [447]*447not agent to receive the same for said Bennett, the said Stanley thenceforward until the fall of 1869, concealed from said Cox; that the defendant refused, and yet refuses to pay the said sum of money, amounting, with the interest, to two hundred and twenty-seven dollars and sixty-three cents, so falling due to said Cox from him; that Cox sold and assigned the same, for value received, to the plaintiff, on the * 1st day of February, 1870, as per account and assignment thereof filed with the complaint. Cox was made a defendant to answer as to his interest ill the account and as to the assignment thereof.

After demurring unsuccessfully to the complaint, Stanley answered: first, by a general denial; second, statute of limitations of six years; third, that the plaintiff is not the real party in interest in said action, but, on the contrary, the said defendant Cox is the real party in interest, who fraudulently transferred said pretended cause of action to the plaintiff) for the purpose of rendering the wife of said Cox a competent witness in said cause; that said pretended cause of action was transferred to said plaintiff without any consideration; fourth, that Cox is the real party in interest in'said cause, and the transfer of said pretended cause of action was champertous and -void, in this, that the plaintiff gave said defendant Cox no consideration therefor, but by the terms of the contract was-to collect the same and bear all expenses of collection, and pay over to said defendant Cox fifty per cent, of the proceeds of said claim, and in the event of said plaintiff failing-to collect the same, Cox was to pay tire costs and attorney’s-fees.

There was a reply filed, which consisted, first, of a general denial of the whole answer; and second, in addition thereto, as to the second paragraph of the answer, as follows: that •Cox paid the money to the defendant on his claim that he was the agent of the said Bennett, and authorized to receive the same, when in point of fact he was not such agent, or authorized to receive said money; and he says that when said money was so paid the-defendant, he concealed from said Cox [448]*448the fact that he was not such agent, and while assuring the said Cox that he was such agent, pledged himself to pay-over the money to Bennett and take up and destroy the note of said Cox in his hands before letting him have the money; which statement of facts as to his agency, and as to the payment of the money and the destruction of the note as aforesaid, was made to conceal the fact that he was not the agent of said Bennett, and by the receipt of the money from said Cox he became liable to him for it, and to avoid inquiries on the part of Cox as to the facts, and to prevent him from making any demand on him for the money, and the same had this effect; and the plaintiff says that said Cox never learned until the fall of 1869 that said Stanley was not the agent of said Bennett, and was not authorized to receive said money, and had not destroyed said note. The' facts in manner and form aforesaid, and that he owed said money, the defendant concealed from said Cox until the fall of 1869.

The defendant, Stanley, demurred to the second paragraph of the reply, and his demurrer was overruled, to which he excepted. ®

A trial by jury terminated in a general verdict for the plaintiff for $228.60, and also certain special findings in answer to interrogatories propounded, which, however, we need not specially notice.

A motion for a new trial was made by the defendant, which was overruled, and he excepted. The evidence is all in the record.

The first alleged error is the action of the court in overruling the defendant’s demurrer to the second paragraph of the reply. Counsel for the appellee rely exclusively on Boyd v. Boyd, 27 Ind. 429. In that case the reply alleged that the defendant had concealed his liability to the action by certain false pretences made by himself, and certain misrepresentations which he induced others to make, as to subsequent transactions, the actual truth of which would otherwise have been known to the plaintiff, and would have put him on inquiry, whereby he would have discovered the fraud; that [449]*449thus deceived he remained ignorant of the facts, etc. It is very evident that the reply in that case differs in one essential particular, at least, from the reply in this case. There the. false pretences made by himself and the misrepresentations by others which he induced them to make were as to subsequent transactions, the truth of which would otherwise have been known to the plaintiff.

In this case no such allegation is in the reply. The facts, and only the facts, necessary to show the existence of it, are relied upon to show a concealment-of the cause of action. It seems to us to be a contradiction in-terms to talk of concealing a cause of action before the same has any existence. When did the cause of action accrue?' Not, surely, when the money was placed in the hands of the defendant, Stanley, for he was entitled to a reasonable time,- at least, in which to pay the money over to Bennett before any right of action could have accrued to any one to sue him for a breach of the undertaking.

In Earnhart v. Robertson, 10 Ind. 8, facts are. disclosed which present such a case as seems to us to have been contemplated , by the legislature in the enactment of the statute in question, 2 G. & H. 162, sec. 219. There, the defendant was employed to collect certain money at a distant point, and did so collect it, but after he had done so, and had returned to this State, he falsely represented to his principal that he had collected a much smaller amount, and no more. Afterwards, on inquiry made of him by his principal, whose suspicions had been excited, he again affirmed that he had collected no more money.

The provision in the criminal code, 2 G. & H. 393, sec. 13, “ conceals the fact of the crime,” is so nearly similar to the. provision in question as to render the decisions .in-.relation; thereto authority on this question. In Jones v. The State, 14 Ind. 120, it was held that the concealment must be the result of positive acts done by the accused, and calculated to prevent a discovery of the fact of the commission of the of-[450]*450fence of which he stands charged. This case was followed and approved in the case of Randolph v. The State, 14 Ind. 232, and it was then held that the particular acts of concealment must be set out in the indictment.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ind. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanley-v-stanton-ind-1871.