108 La. 83 | La. | 1902
The Opinion of the court was delivered by
Mrs. Flora B. Cameron and others, as executors of the will of William Cameron, filed suit alleging that the Orleans and Jefferson Railway Company, limited (which will he called the Orleans
The Orleans Company, by wsty of defense, denies that it made any contract with the plaintiff or that it bound itself to pay for any material which the plaintiff might deliver to the Construction Company and alleges that the Construction Company was to build the road and was to be paid upon estimates to be furnished, from time to time, for work done, and material delivered. It further alleges that the ties in question had been delivered to, and paid for by, it, in accordance with this contract and without notice of plaintiffs’ claim, and it prays that plaintiffs’ suit be dismissed, and that it recover damages, in reconvention, for the seizure of its property.
By way of intervention, said company alleges that the rails were bought by the Construction Company at the suggestion of one of its (The 'Orleans Company’s) officers for the purposes of the road in
The Orleans Company also filed a separate suit, entitled Orleans & Jefferson Railway Company, Limited, vs. International Construction Company (which appears in this court under the number 13,809), after the attachment had been levied, setting up its claim to the rails and praying that the Construction Company be perpetually enjoined from removing them beyond the jurisdiction of the court, and, as the issues in the two cases are identical up to a certain point, and the transcript in this case is used for the purposes of the other, the cases have been argued together and will be so dealt with in this opinion.
The Construction Company denies that it is a commercial firm composed of the parties named in the petition. It admits that it made a written contract with the plaintiffs for ties, etc., which were to be paid for when delivered, but it denies that the same have been delivered, and alleges that this action is premature, and it prays for damages in reconvention, with reservation of its rights against the Orleans Company, wEch, it alleges, has failed to comply with its contract.
E. M. Costello and M. D. Burke, for ■ answer to the demand made against them, individually, and as members of the Construction Company, deny that they were members of said company, or were ever connected therewith except as employees, and, assuming the character of plaintiffs in reeonvention, they allege that the rails in question were shipped to New Orleans hy the Illinois Central Railroad Company to be delivered to the Construction Company when paid for, but that the Construction Company failed to pay for them and delivery was refused; that thereafter appearers bought said rails, and that
These parties, that is to say, Costello and Burke, also appear as intervenors and reiterate, generally, the statements made in their answer and demand in reconvention, and further allege, in explanation of their connection with the Construction Company, that, in 1898, they became acquainted with C. IT. Lawrence, of Detroit, “who stated that he was the representative and general manager of the International Construction Company” and that he desired to secure their services in carrying out a contract for the construction of a railroad near Cincinnati, but, that said road was not built and they had nothing more to do with Lawrence ¡or his company “until about March 15, 1899,” when they received a letter from him in consequence of which they went to Detroit and that he there exhibited to them a contract which had been entered into between the Orleans Company and the Construction Company and informed them that he desired to secure their services in executing the same; that, as a result of their interview, Costello came to New Orleans, about March 19th, for the purpose of investigating, and that, on his return, intervenors agreed to give their services in the contemplated work for one-half of the profits, which were to be paid as a salary, and a further allowance of $25 per week which was to be paid to Costello. That they, thereupon, came to New Orleans and began to work for the Construction Company, and that the plaintiffs and the public generally had full knowledge of the fact that they were employees “by the letter heads and stationery of said company;” that, about June 22nd, they received a letter from Lawrence stating that he had bought some rails from the Illinois Central Railroad Company for which he was unable to pay, and requesting them to pay for the same, and that they, thereupon, “wired” the Orleans Company asking if they would be allowed a lien for the amount which they might advance for that purpose; that the Orleans Company gave an affirmative answer subject to the conditoin
The Illinois Central Railroad Company intervenes claiming $638.00 for the use of twenty-two cars for twenty-nine days during which they were held loaded with the rails.
The Atlas National Bank intervenes claiming to ,be pledgee of the rails for the sum of $5,200.00 with interest.
The writ of sequestration was dissolved by thé district court, in an interlocutory proceeding, and there was judgment on the merits, rejecting the claim of the plaintiffs as against the Orleans Company and as against Costello and Burke, recognizing the latter as owner of the rails, subject to the claim of the Illinois Central Railroad Company and the Atlas National Bank,, and dissolving the attachment, with damages, also condemning the plaintiffs in damages upon the
I.
The International Construction Company has no corporate existence but is merely the name under which C. IT. Lawrence transacts business, either alone or in connection with other persons, one of the issues in the case being whether Costello and Burke were associated with him ¡as partners in the business out of which this suit arises. Lawrence, in the name of the Construction Company, contracted to build and equip, for the Orleans Company, the road contemplated by its charter, and it was part of his contract that he should borrow the money necessary for that purpose, with the exception of $7,377.00, upon the mortgage bonds of the Orleans Company, a certain proportion of which were to be “underwritten” by several of the officers of the Orleans Company, acting individually. The $7,377.00 mentioned was to be furnished by the Orleans Company, in cash, and, of that -amount, $1,000.00 was to be paid at once to the Construction Company and $6,377.00 was to be deposited in bank, together with the money to be ¡borrowed by Lawrence, subject to the joint order of the contracting parties, ¡and paid to the Construction Company, for material delivered and work done upon presentation of bills of lading and engineers estimates. It may as well be stated here that Lawrence did not succeed in borrowing any money, but that some of the members of the Orleans Company advanced $10,000.00, in addition to. the cash called for by the original contract, and that the fund so created, together with certain ¡amounts advanced by Oostello and Burke, constituted the only fund that was available until the enterprise failed. One Conroy, and T. Gordon Reddy, Jr., representing the plaintiffs, were endeavoring, whilst the negotiations between the Orleans Company and the Construction Company were in progress, to obtain the contract to supply the ties and other lumber needed for the building of the road. Conroy was called off elsewhere and Reddy, the manager of the Cameron Mills, took charge of the matter and had some conversations with the president of the Orleans Company, with Zell,
II.
There was judgment in the district court in favor of the plaintiffs and against the International Construction Company for the amount claimed in the petition, but it was held that Costello and Burke were not members of the company, and, as Lawrence was not condemned individually, and as the property which was seized was released, as belonging, either to the Orleans Company, or to Costello and Burke, the judgment, as rendered, can be of no great value to the plaintiffs, and the Construction Company took no appeal therefrom.
III.
Probably the most serious question presented is whether Costello and Burke were partners of Lawrence for the purposes of the business out of which this litigation has arisen.
The evidence shows that, prior to 1899, O. H. Lawrence, who lived in Detroit, was operating under the name of the International Construction Company, save, when, for the purposes of particular transactions, he associated other persons with him. It also appears that E. M. Costello, of Cincinnati, was operating in the same way under the name of the Queen City Construction Company, and that he, at times, associated M. D. Burke with him, either under that name or under the firm name of Costello & Burke. During the year 1898, .these parties, Lawrence, Costello and Burke, using the name of their so-called companies, or otherwise, entered into an arrangement for the building of a railroad^ near Cincinnati, known as the Mill Creek Valley Road, but, by reason of the failure to obtain some necessary franchise, the scheme was abandoned. A similar arrangement appears to have been entered into for the building of a road near Erie, Pennsylvania, and, as we understand the testimony, they were engaged upon that work whilst operat
“If the foregoing proposition is satisfactory to the Queen City Construction Company, a copy of this communication shall-be made by the Queen City Construction Company and indorse across its face “Accepted and approved, Queen City Construction Company, by E. M. Costello and M. D. Burke,” and this shall constitute the contract for the Orleans and Jefferson Eailway job between the International Construction Company and the Queen City Construction Company.”
Judging from this language, and from the subsequent conduct of the parties, we understand the idea to have been that the contract with the Orleans Company should be submitted to Costello and Burke as soon as it was signed, and, if it met with their approval, that they should close the contract of partnership with Lawrence by writing the words “Accepted and approved” across the face of the written proposition which the latter had submitted, or a copy thereof, and affixing their signatures. The contract with the Orleans Company, having been signed upon March 11th, was forwarded to Costello on March 13th, and was, presumably, found satisfactory, since there appears in evidence Lawrence’s proposition, in which some slight changes had’
“Home Office,
New Orleans,
“Detroit, Mich.
508 Hennen Building.
E. M. Costello,
Manager.
“C. H. Lawrence,
M. D. Burke,
“General Contracting Agent.
Chief Engineer.
‘‘INTERNATIONAL CONSTRUCTION COMPANY. “CONTRACTING ENGINEERS.”
It is true that Costello and Burke deny, in their testimony, that they made the representations attributed to them, Or that they were introduced and held out as has been stated, but their denials are absolutely unsupported by that of any other witness and are overwhelmed by evidence from every direction. One circumstance, among many, which has attracted our attention, is the following: Burke was charged with the ordering of some two carloads of “special work,” consisting, as we understand it, of iron, or steel, for switches, curves, frogs, etc., and he placed the order with the “Weir Frog Company,”
“404 Pike Building, Cincinnati, Ohio.
"~C. H. Lawrence,
“The International Construction Company,
“Chamber of Commerce Building,
“Detroit, Michigan.
“Dear Sir—
“Costello left for New Orleans yesterday afternoon, and, allowing for a stop .over in Birmingham, he will reach New Orleans on Friday morning. A little money was wired to Hall yesterday, to pay laborers and other pressing demands and to signify something more than a mere promise that he was coming. The draft for rails is here paid. It was a close call for us, but we made it. * * * Regarding the agreement between us, there was so much to do before Costello left that it was thought best that I should write you a letter stating the general terms .and that you should keep the letter in place of the formal agreement until that should be executed. It is this; that E. M. Costello and M. D, Burke having advanced their money and pledged their credit to secure the rails, special work, car barn, and other property necessary for the building of the Orleans and Jefferson Rail*98 way Company * * * that, in consideration .of such advances, C. II. Lawrence, for himself and for the International Construction Company, does, on June 24th, 1899, assign all his, or its, interests in said contract to said Costello and Burke, yet, notwithstanding said assignment, said three individuals agree to act unitedly in carrying to completion the original agreement with the Orleans and Jefferson Railway-Company, said Costello and. Burke agreeing to relieve said Lawrence of so much of the work at New Orleans as they can, and neither individual being empowered, after said date, to pledge any of the securities to be received for the said work or to obligate either of the persons, all to work for the best interests of the three, and, at the completion of the work, the net profit, if any, arising from said contract, to be divided equally between E. PE. Costello, PL D. Burke and O. H. Lawrence. This agreement between said three individuals to be kept strictly private, each agreeing with the other two not to use it in any business way without the knowledge and consent of the .other two parties to this agreement,” etc.
Of course, Lawrence must have known whether Costello and Burke had advanced “their money and pledged their credit to secure the rails, special work, ear barn, and other property necessary for the building” .of the road. And the statement that they had done so would hardly have been made to him as a reason why he should, ostensibly, assign the contract to them and, really, reduce his interest in the prospective, profits from one-half to one-third, unless that statement was true. We must assume, therefore, that it was true, and that the testimony of the witnesses, who swear that the same statement, in substance, was made to them, or in their presence, was equally true.
There is a great deal more testimony and there are a great many more circumstances disclosed by the record bearing upon the point at issue leading to the same conclusion, but which it would unnecessarily lengthen this opinion to consider or even to recapitulate. No one doubts that partnership is a matter of intention, or that a share of profits may be given, in lieu of salary or wages, without making the recipient a partner, or liable as a partner. This latter doctrine was recognized, not only before the decision in Cox vs. Hickman (in 1860), but before, and after, the decisions in Grace vs. Smith and Waugh vs. Carver, which had been rendered nearly a century before,
“It was said, and said with considerable force, by Mr. Ohitty and Mr. Mathew, that they never intended to be partners. What they did not intend to do was to incur the liabilities of partners. If intending to be a partner is intending to take the profits, then they intended to be partners. If intending to take the profits and have the business carried on for their benefit was intending to be partners, they did intend to be partners. If intending to see that the money was applied for that purpose, and for no other, and to exercise an efficient control over it, so that they might have brought an action to restrain it from being otherwise ¡applied, and so forth; was intending to he partners, then they did intend to be partners. * * * It is an elaborate device, an ingenuous contrivance, for giving these contributors the whole of the advantages’ of partnership, without subjecting them, as they thought, to any liabilities. I think the device fails; and that, looking at the law as it stands, I must hold that they are partners and liable fdr the consequences of being partners, and to the whole of the engagements of the partnership, and consequently liable for the whole of its debts.”
Pooley vs. Driver, 5 Ch. Div. 458.
The contract upon which the plaintiffs sue resulted from a written proposition addressed by Reddy, the manager of the Cameron Mills, to the International Construction Company, dated March 24, 1899, and accepted in writing upon the 29th of the same month. The proposition contained the following stipulation, “Settlement to be made as soon as ■ shipment is completed, on terms as follows; one-half of the entire amount in cash, and balance (less freight as per expense bills) to be paid in first mortgage bonds of said railroad at market value or price of said bonds at time of settlement.” The contract called for 100,000 feet of “pecky” cypress, 25,000 ties, and a number of pieces of timber for bridges and other work, and the evidence shows that the whole of it has been delivered, with the exception of '695 ties, the price of which is not claimed. It is shown, however, that six carloads of ties had been shipped prior to the bringing of this suit, and that the defendants had failed to take them, and that Costello had notified Reddy to temporarily discontinue shipments. And it was at this juncture that Reddy, upon making inquiries at the office of the Orleans Company, learned that the ties previously shipped had been estimated for and that the money to pay for them had been turned over to the Construction Company and used for some other purposes. The efforts of Lawrence, io borrow money upon the bonds of the Orleans Company, as he had undertaken to do, had, in the meanwhile, proved unsuccessful; the work of building the road had’been suspended, and the evidence justifies the conclusion that the scheme was a failure. Whether it would have been successful under any circumstance is a question. But its chances of success appear to have been effectually destroyed by a blunder for which, though Lawrence was perhaps mainly responsible, the Orleans Company was ^ not altogether blameless. It appears that there had been a previous issue of bonds secured by first mortgage, and, although most of them were under the control, or within reach, of the company, they had not been called in when the attempt was made by Lawrence to float the second issue upon the New York market as first mortgage bonds. The president of the Orleans Company went to New York as soon as he was informed of it and explained the situation as best he could, but it was a mistake that ought not io have occurred; and it had the effect of shaking the confidence of the capitalists, from whom it was hoped that the money might be obtained,
It appears that the president of the Orleans Company informed Lawrence that the Illinois Central Railroad Company had the rails in question for sale, but if the Orleans Company had any contract, or option, giving it a preference in the matter of the purchase of the rails;
Upon June 21st, 1899, Lawrence -wrote, from Detroit, to Costello, at Cincinnati, in part, as follows: “I am very feaful of the Ill. Cent. R. R. Co. pulling the rails away * * * unless we can meet this draft of $12,100 which I had Cliff to draw on us here in order to hold the rails there as long as possible. What I want to know is, whether there is not some way that you can arrange, in Cincinnati, to borrow this sum of money for a short time, and to take the rails as security. We could sell the rails to-day in New Orleans for two or three dollars more a ton than we paid for them. If these rails get away, we cannot replace them short of $22.00 or $23.00 per ton, and then it will take quite a time to get them down there. The idea is simply this: the security is worth a great deal more than the loan which we have to have and everything can be smoothed out if you arrange the matter. * * * I wish you would telegraph me upon receipt of this, and after conference with Major Burke, and see if there is not some way we can whip the devil around the stump and save these rails. We accepted the draft and it lays at the American Express Co.’s office here awaiting payment next Monday. Kindly consider this letter addressed to Major Burke as well as yourself and let me hear from you.”
In response to this appeal, made to him, not as an employe, but, as a member, of the Construction Company, Costello raised $7000.00, which was deposited in the Atlas National Bank, and he and Burke borrowed from that bank, upon a note signed by them and by Mrs. Costello, the further sum of $5200.00, which was needed to make up the amount necessary to pay for the rails, and which was similarly deposited. The draft for the price of the rails, amounting, with interest and charges, to $12,180.44, was then paid by the bank, and the bills of lading for the rails, which, with the rails themselves, were in New Orleans, were turned over to Costello and Burke, who retained possession of them until September 13th, following, more than two months after the rails 'had been seized in this suit, and then delivered them to the bank in connection with a written act of pledge, which was then executed. There were various transactions between Lawrence'"and Costello and Burke at that time, which we consider it unnecessary to go into in
VI.
The Atlas National Bank alleges, in its intervention, that the rails had been sold by the Illinois Central Railroad Company to the Construction Company and, the latter having failed to pay for them, that they were sold to Costello and Burke, and that, at their request, it, the bank, paid the price, to-wit: $12,180.44, .on condition that the bills of lading should be delivered to it, “to be held as security for the repayment of that sum,” and that the said bills were assigned, transferred and delivered to it by Costello and Burke to secure the repayment of said advances “whereof there is still due and owing” the sum of $5200.00 and interest. The allegations that the Illinois Central Railroad Company sold the rails to Costello and Burke, and that the bank paid for them on condition that the bills of lading shouldFe delivered to it to secure the whole of the purchase price must have been made in error. The president of the bank testifies that the $5200.00 were advanced to Oostello and Burke on condition that it should be used for the payment of the rails and on the further condition that the Illinois Central Railroad Company should turn over to it, or hold, subject to its order, the bills of lading for said rails, which bills of lading were
From the facts as presented, we are entirely unable to evolve any pledge in favor of the Atlas National Bank which will affect the rights of the plaintiffs under their attachment. When the $5200.00 was advanced neither the Construction Oompany nor Oostello and Burke were the owners of the rails, nor did they have the rails or the bills of lading in their possession. The rails belonged to the Illinois Central Railroad Oompany, and it held possession of them, subject to what may be called a past due option in favor of the Oonstruction Oompany to take them on paying the price. Assuming that Costello ¡and Burke represented the Oonstruction Oompany, the most that they could do was to promise that the rails should be pledged to the bank. But a promise to pledge gives no privilege on the thing promised. Succession of D’Meza, 26th
Nor did the delivery of the bills to the bank, in September, two months after the rails had been attached, or the written instrument which was then executed, constitute such a pledge, in so far as the attaching creditors were concerned, since the bank cannot be said, at that time, to have acquired the bills as an innocent third holder without notice. We think, however, that, inasmuch as the claim of the bank is not contested by the Construction Company or by Costello and Burke there is no reason, as to them, why it should not be recognized, and, as Costello testifies that the rails are now worth about $30.00 a ton, it may be that the.bank will get its money.
VII.
The Illinois Central Railroad Company claims for demurrage or storage, by reason of the fact that the rails remained on its cars for twenty-nine days after notice to remove them. This claim does not appear to be seriously disputed and is shown to be reasonable. The company is, however, charging for twenty-two cars, when, from the return on the writ of attachment, it seems that only twenty-one ears were Included in the seizure. The amount allowed by the district court should, therefore, be reduced from $638.00 to $609.00.
VIII.
We are unable to find any sufficient legal .foundation for the claim of the Orleans and Jefferson Railway Company to the rails. They constituted part of the material that the Construction Company attempted to assemble for the purposes of its contract, but the Orleans Company never acquired any rights in, or to, them, and can no more control the disposition which the Construction Company may choose to make of them than it could have controlled the disposition of the working force of that company. The injunction which was issued at the instance of the Orleans Company, to restrain the Construction Company from
For these reasons, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from be affirmed in so far as it rejects the demand of the plaintiffs as against the Orleans and Jefferson Railway Company, Limited, and in so far as it rejects .the demands in reconvention, and by way of intervention, of said Orleans and Jefferson Railway Company, Limited, save as to the damages allowed, which are reduced to $250, and that it be affirmed in so far as it condemns the International Construction Company .and rejects its demand in reconvention; that it be amended by reducing the amount allowed to the Illinois Central Railroad Company to $609.00, and by holding and decreeing that the Atlas National Bank, of Cincinnati, be paid the amount of its claim, if the fund proves sufficient, from the proceeds of the property attached, after payment of the amounts herein allowed in favor of the Illinois Central Railroad Company and the plaintiffs, respectively; and that said judgment be annulled, avoided and reversed in all other respects. And, proceeding to render such further judgment as should be rendered in the case, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that there now be judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, Flora B. Cameron, W. W. Cameron, R. H. Downman, and F. A. McDonald, testamentary executors of William Cameron, deceased, and against the defendants, Charles H. Lawrence, E. M. Costello and M. D. Burke, in sólido, in the full sum of $12,207.38, with legal interest from judicial demand until paid. It is further ordered and adjudged that the writ of .attachment herein issued be maintained and that the amount of this judgment, in favor of the plaintiffs, be paid from the proceeds of the property attached in preference to any other claims save that of the Illinois Central Railroad Company as herein recognized and allowed, subject, however, to the condition that the right is reserved to the defendants, or either -of them, to have the amount for which this judgment is rendered reduced by the amount that they, or the International Construction Company, m'ay; have paid as freight upon the ties and other material shipped by the plaintiffs to said company under the contract sued on. It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the demands set up by said E. M.
Rehearing refused.