The Fifth Congregational Church of Washington v. Bright

28 App. D.C. 229
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 7, 1906
DocketNos. 1671 and 1674
StatusPublished

This text of 28 App. D.C. 229 (The Fifth Congregational Church of Washington v. Bright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Fifth Congregational Church of Washington v. Bright, 28 App. D.C. 229 (D.C. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bobb

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The appellee now moves to dismiss the appeal of the church [237]*237■on tlie ground that it had no right to be heard unless through a supplemental bill. We think appellant was properly permitted to intervene, as the rights of the appellee were in no way prejudiced thereby; neither was there any unnecessary delay on the part of the church in filing its motion to intervene, since there was no necessity for intervention so long as its predecessor in title was willing to conduct the defense. The appellee had known for some time that the church was the real party in interest. The mere substitution of the real for the nominal party in interest, “subject to all equities and defenses which might exist against its grantor, the said El ward Parsons Seymour,” in no way prejudiced the appellee.

The motion to dismiss, therefore, will be denied.

We will next consider the motion to dismiss the special appeal.

It appears: First, that the interest of the intervener was acquired October 1, 1903.

Second, the suit was defended by counsel for Ohappel and Seymour, who were also assisted by counsel for intervener.

Third, after the purchase by the church, consent to intervene for the protection of its interests was requested of counsel for complainant, and denied.

Fourth, the court announced its opinion on May 18, 1905, in favor of appellee.

Fifth, on May 31, 1905, the petition for intervention was filed, and same granted July 13, 1905, before entry of final decree on that day.

Sixth, on the same day the intervener noted an appeal from the decree in open court, and bond was fixed.

Seventh, on August 4, 1905, the intervener asked leave to sever from its codefendants, who had declined to appeal, and on the same day the order was made.

The special appeal from the order requiring the intervener to pay costs was presented to this court and allowed May 4, 1906. This appeal now seems to have been unnecessary. It was granted, however, without much inquiry as to its necessity, because the main case was already in the court, and no possible injury could result from granting the special appeal. It fur[238]*238ther appears that the payment of costs was not made a condition, to the leave to intervene, although such an order was sought.

The intervener was before the court, and the order was made regarding the payment of costs, and is to be regarded as a part of the final decree entered on the same day. A mere decree for the payment of costs, especially in an equity cause, being a matter of discretion with the trial court, no appeal will lie therefrom, but, if an appeal be taken from a whole decree, the question of costs, as a part of that decree, will be talien notice of as incidentally connected therewith, when that is the question directly before the court. United States v. The Malek Adhel, 2 How. 210, 233, 11 L. ed. 239, 249; Canter v. American Ins. Co. 3 Pet. 307, 7 L. ed. 688; Du Bois v. Kirh, 168 U. S. 68, 67, 39 L. ed. 895, 15 Sup. Ct. Rep. 726; Tuohy v. Hanlon, 18 App. D. C. 225, 230. In 2 How. 237, 11 L. ed. 251, the court said: “The matter of costs is not per se the proper subject of an appeal, and it can be taken notice of only incidentally, as connected with the principal decree, when the correctness of the latter is directly before the court.”

The special appeal will therefore.be dismissed, with costs.

The first assignment of error which it is necessary to notice relates to the ruling that the note in suit is genuine. While the evidence, as we view it, is not at all convincing on this point, we will assume for the purposes of this opinion that this note is the identical note signed by Oella and Loring Chappel on January 7, 1898.

The third and fourth assignments of error may be considered together, as the third challenges the ruling that Ashford was the agent of Seymour, while the fourth specifies as error the failure of the court to rule that Ashford was the agent of Bright, the appellee.

We think the facts stated clearly indicate for whom Ashford was acting when he received payment on the note. Prior to its maturity Bright sent the note to Ashford, at whose office it was payable, with full authority to receive payment thereon, and, of course, to execute a release of the trust. Seymour, the equitable owner of the property covered by the trust, paid Ash-ford, in whose custody the note then was, $2,060, principal [239]*239and interest due on the note at maturity. We think, clearly that Ashford was acting for Bright, and, therefore, his agent. No negligence can be attributed to Seymour, as he was careful to have a sufficient release of the trust executed and recorded. He also procured the cancelation of a $2,000 note, which Ashford undoubtedly represented to be the original and genuine note, and which must have looked like the original, because Mr. Ellis, Ashford, cotrustee, who was familiar with the signatures of the Chappels, after careful examination, believed it genuine and joined Ashford in the release.

It was suggested at bar that Seymour should have made his check payable to Bright, instead of Ashford. This objection is without merit, for the reason that Seymour would have been within his rights had he made a cash payment to Ashford. Indeed, Ashford might have declined to accept any but a cash payment.

Objection is also made that Seymour did not demand surrender of the note at the time of payment. The only evidence upon which to base this objection is the testimony that the $400 canceled note was found among Seymour’s papers after his death, but that the $2,000 canceled note was not. It is immaterial whether Seymour retained this note or destroyed it. The evidence certainly does not warrant the conclusion that it was left in Ashford’s possession. Neither is there any contention that the note in suit is the note marked “Paid and Canceled,” which was exhibited to Mr. Ellis by Ashford. Moreover, Mr. Bright, in selecting Ashford as his agent for the collection of this note, made the fraud possible, for it is apparent that Ash-ford used two notes, one of which must have been a forgery. To obtain the money from Seymour and to procure the signature of his cotrustee to the release, he marked one “Paid and Canceled,” and the other he sent his principal, Mr. Bright, marked “Extended.” Throughout the transaction, as above stated, he represented Mr. Bright as Mr. Bright’s agent, and, as this court said in Carusi v. Savary, 6 App. D. C. [at page] 344: “The question .in this case, as we understand it, is which of two innocent persons should be required to suffer the loss occasioned by the wrongful act of a third person; the one who, by his negli[240]*240gence or inadvertence, bas placed in it the power of such third person to perpetrate the wrong which otherwise would not have been perpetrated, or the one who, without any negligence on his own part, has been misled by the wrongdoer into a situation into which otherwise he would not have entered. And in the light of modern equity, of the overwhelming mass of modern judicial decision, and of what seems to us to be the dicate of natural jus-ice, that question, in our opinion, can admit of but one.

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