Toledo Electric Street Railway Co. v. Toledo Consolidated Street Railway Co.

10 Ohio C.C. 597
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedSeptember 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio C.C. 597 (Toledo Electric Street Railway Co. v. Toledo Consolidated Street Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toledo Electric Street Railway Co. v. Toledo Consolidated Street Railway Co., 10 Ohio C.C. 597 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

Bentley, J.

(orally).

This is a petition to reverse the judgment of the court of common pleas which was rendered against the plaintiff below — the plaintiff in error here — the court finding that its petition was fatally defective; it being attacked, first, by a motion to strike out a large portion of the amended petition. That motion being allowed, and a part stricken out, the court found that there was not then sufficient facts averred in the ¡petition to constitute any cause of action; and the plaintiff not amending, final judgment was rendered in the action .against it.

[598]*598The qustion presented upon the record involves a matter of pleading, and consideration of the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s petition. Practically it is to be considered as if a demurrer had been filed to it. The petition seeks to charge in general terms a conspiracy entered into by the defendants to further their own interests in sustaining a monopoly of a street railroad business in this city, and to injure the plaintiff and its business in constructing, maintaining and operating a street railway in certain streets of this city. It is alleged that this conspiracy was entered into by the defendants for these purposes, and also that in furtherance of that conspiracy, in endeavoring to carry it out and execute it, the defendants maliciously did certain things mentioned in the petition,-which it is claimed were injurious to the plaintiff, detrimental to the plaintiff’s interests, and an injury to its particular rights; and it is said in general terms at the close of the petition: “Plaintiff says that by means of the interference with its business and property as herein set forth, by the malicious conspiracy carried out by defendants as aforesaid, it has been subjected to great loss and damage, to-wit: $250,000, for which it asks judgment against defendants.”

There are various objections urged to this petition, but the one of the most considerable importance is the question as to the allegation of damages, as we understand it; defendants claiming that there is no such allegation of damages in the petition, or of facts which would give rise, legally considered, to damages, as would sustain the action. The plaintiff, of course, contends that there is no such defect; that the pleading is sufficient in this regard, as in all others; and that in an action for conspiracy such as it is claimed this action is, there is no necessity for a more succinct statement of damages, or of facts constituting damage, than is embodied in this petition. It may be well, first, to state briefly what we consider is the correct view of the law as to conspiracy, and as fundamental to that [599]*599we call attention to a case decided by tlie Supreme Court of Minnesota, and reported in the last number of the Weekly Law Bulletin, of this state. Page 242 of the Bulletin, the fourth paragraph, contains this language:

"What one man may lawfully do singly, two or more may lawfully agree to do jointly. The number who unite to do the act can not change its character from lawful to unlawful. The gist of a private action for the wrongful act of many is not the combination or conspiracy, but the damage done or thereatened to the plaintiff by the acts of the defendants. If the act be unlawful, the combination of many to commit i^may aggravate the injury, but cannot change the character of the act. In a few cases there may be some loose remarks apparently to the contrary, but they evidently have their origin in a confused and inaccurate idea of the law of criminal conspiracy, and in failing to distinguish between an unlawful act and a criminal one.. It can never be a crime to combine to commit a lawful act, but it may be a crime for several to conspire to commit an unlawful act, which if done by one individual alone, although unlawful, would not be criminal. Hence, the fact that the defendants associated themselves together to do the act complained of is .wholly.inimaterial in this case. We have referred to this for the reason that counsel has laid great stress upon the fact of the combination of a large number of persons, as if that rendered their conduct actionable.”

The court cites in that paragraph, Bowen v. Matheson, 14 Allen, 499; Steamship Co. v. McGregor, 23 Q. B. Div, 598, 1892 App. Cas. 25; Parker v. Huntington, 2 Gray, 124; Wellington v. Small, 3 Cush. 145; Payne v. Ry. Co. 13 Lea. 507.

Quite-a number of text books were cited by counsel as bearing upon this general question, and among them was the chapter in Bishop on Non-Contract Law, beginning with sec. 353, and ending with 367 — being chap. 19 under the head of "Conspiracy.” I will read but a comparatively small portion of this.

[600]*600‘"Sec. 355. Is there a civil wrong properly termed conspiracy ? In the criminal law, there are wrongs against the public, whereof a part are as incorrectly called conspiracy, as are the civil ones just mentioned; but, at the same time, another part justly bear this name.”

And further down:

"So that there is a crime of conspiracy, consisting of the combining of will and endeavor, whereof one cannot be guilty unless his fellows are guilty also. And it is a principle of our civil jurisprudence that,whenever one suffers specially from a crime, he may have his civil action of tort against the wrong-doer,; or, as expressed in an English court, applj'iug the principle specifically to conspiracy, if the parties are liable to indictment for conspiracy, ‘then an action for conspiracy would lie. ’ Therefore, the conclusion seems inevitable that there are circumstances in which conspiracy proper is actionable; in other words, in which one commits a civil wrong when, and only when, another or others participate with him.
"'See. 350. The rule in civil jurisprudence, that one cannot maintain a suit for another’s wrong until lie had been injured thereby, greatly reduces the number of actions for what is truly conspiracy. The mere criminal combining is at the common law indictable, but no wrongful combination is actionable until the party complaining has suffered a damage; * * * in an action at law, therefore, the material thing is to show an injury, and it would at the first impression seem to be unimportant whether one defendant or more did it. Probably from this reason, but it is of little consequence from what, some text writers and judges have expressed the opinion that there is n<j such thing as conspiracy proper in our civil jurisprudence. The question could not be matter of judicial decision, for it would be impossible to make up a record involving it. Nor would it in any case be absolutely necessary that a verdict should be rendered against more than a single conspirator; for it is so even in the criminal law. But it is simple fact that there are actionable injuries which two or more can inflict on another, not within the power of one alone. Therefore, it is fact, however we may reason, that there is a civil wrong properly termed conspiracy.
[601]*601“Sec, 857. Conspiracy, in the proper restricted meaning of the word, and viewed as a tort, is a malicious combination of two or more persons to injure another, in person, or property, in a way not competent for one alone, resulting in actual damage to him.”

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