181 F. 706 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Alabama | 1910
This is a suit instituted by Mr. Clabaugh against the Southern Wholesale Grocers’ Association, a corporation, for damages to his business, alleged to have been caused by interference with it by the Southern Wholesale Grocers’ Association by preventing the manufacturers from selling goods to him, by him to be gold to retailers. The action was brought under what is known as the “Sherman Anti-Trust Law,” enacted by the Congress of the United States. Act July 2, 1890, c. 647, 26 Stat. 209 (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3200). Whether there has been a violation of that act by the Southern Wholesale Grocers’ Association is not necessary, in my judgment, to' be determined in this case, for the reason that the defendant has pleaded that, conceding that there was any violation of the act which entitles the plaintiff to damages, the plaintiff in this case has, before the trial, settled for those damages with another party, who is jointly liable with this defendant.
Before I enter on the facts, I might say that it is a well-recognized principle of law that where two parties are jointly responsible to a
In this case the plaintiff, Mr. Clabaugh, sued in the state court Mr. James A. Van Hoose, who was president of the association, which is now defendant in this court, alleging that these same acts of interference which broke up his business, as he claims, were done by Mr. Van Hoose as president of this same association. Of course, if the president did them, he would be liable personally, because he could not do wrong for his principal, and not be responsible for that wrong him»self. Therefore he would be responsible, and he would also make his principal responsible, if he acted within the scope of his authority as president. Therefore it may be sa-id, for the sake of argument, that both of them were responsible for the wrongs that have been charged in the state court in the suit against Mr. Van Hoose, which, as I construe it, are the same exactly as Mr. Clabaugh here sues for, and for which he asks damages against the Southern Wholesale Grocers’ Association.
Now, after the suit had been brought in the state court, and after there had been a trial, which resulted in a disagreement of the jury, Mr. Clabaugh and Mr. Van Hoose came to an agreement which is represented by the documents which have been presented here to settle that case. This agreement provided for the payment of $10,000 by Mr. Van Hoose, stipulating that, if all the money was not paid by a certain date, a judgment should be entered for that amount in the circuit court, a jury being waived. Had that judgment been rendered according to agreement, it would have been a full satisfaction of the wrongs complained of in that case. The agreement providing for that method of remedy, I think it is a fair construction of the agreement that the parties intended, in settling the case, to settle Mr. Clabaugh’s full damages against Mr. Van Hoose—the full damages for the injuries alleged in the complaint against Mr. Van Hoose.
Giving the agreement that construction, Mr. Clabaugh had no right to sue anybody else, even though he attempted to reserve that right in his agreement with Mr. Van Hoose, because, having once been paid in full for his damages, he had not the legal right to make any agreement which would give him a right to sue any other person for the same damages, upon the idea that a man cannot recover twice for the same damages, and that if one wrongdoer pays him in full he has no right to look to the other, even though he seeks to reserve that right in the agreement with the party who pays. In this case the agreement of settlement was in writing, and it is the duty of the court to construe it. The court construes it as constituting an accord and satisfaction of the damages Mr. Clabaugh claimed in the Van Hoose suit in the circuit court. That being true, the law makes the same agreement and its full performance by Mr. Van Hoose a full accord and satisfaction of the cause of action sued on by Mr. Clabaugh against
_ It is true Mr. Clabaugh said he did not agree that the costs paid him by Mr. Van Hoose were the full costs; but I think he cannot be heard to say this after he took the check and paid the clerk, and the clerk received it without objection, and he made no further demand until after this trial was entered upon. I think he is to be treated as having accepted that as performance of the agreement, whether it was full performance or not. So the verdict in this case should be for the defendant, on the idea that the cause of action, conceding it existed, has been settled by Mr. Clabaugh’s receipt of $10,000 from Mr. Van Hoose, which I construe to have been received by him in full satisfaction of the damages he claimed in the suit against Mr. Van Hoose, and which are the same damages he claims in this suit.
There .is one other thing which I should have said. The act of Congress under which this suit is brought provides for. the recovery, not of single damages, but threefold damages; but the construction of that act by the Supreme Court in the case of Montague & Co. v. Lowry, 193 U. S. 38, -24 Sup. Ct. 307, 48 L. Ed. 608, is to the effect that threefold damages are only recoverable when the plaintiff has a cause of action that would entitle the jury to award single damages. In other ■ words, the function of the jury is to only render a judgment for actual damages, and the court then triples them; but if there is nothing to go to the jury for single damages, then, the court has no jurisdiction to render any judgment for triple damages. And the same is true as to the attorney’s fees. I think they are merely an incident to a judgment for the plaintiff. If no such judgment is obtained, then there can be no allowance for attorney’s fees, though the settlement was made after this suit was commenced.