51 W. Va. 474 | W. Va. | 1902
The Empire Coal and Coke Companj^ a corporation organized and doing business under the laws of the State of West Virginia brought its action of assumpsit in the circuit court of Mercer County against Hull Coal and Coke Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Kentucky and doing business in Said county of Mercer. The declaration filed by the plaintiff company contained the 'common counts including a count for the sum of two thousand six hundred and hfty dollars and forty-nine cents for money found to be due from the defendant to the plaintiff on account then and there stated between them. Plaintiff filed with its declaration an account of coke shipped by it on the order of defendant, showing a-balance due January 20, 1900, of two thousand six hundred and fifty dollars and forty-nine cents, and gave notice that upon the trial of same cause it would offer proof of said account. Common order was confirmed and writ of enquiry entered at the April Buies 1900. On the 16th of May, 1900, the parties appeared by their attorneys when Ií. D. Lafferty, vice-president of the defendant company, tendered and asked leave to file a plea in abatement and also tendered in connection with said plea in abatement the affidavit of W. II. II. Dornoy, said affidavit being annexed to a plea of non-assumpsit, but which plea of non-assumpsit was not tendered for the purpose of being-filed as a plea in the action, but to be allowed to remain, in addition to the affidavit only for the purpose of identifying the case referred in the affidavit, to the filing of which affidavit plaintiff’s counsel objected, not because it was attached to the plea of non-assumpsit j but upon the ground that it was insuf-ficent to entitle the defendant to have the office judgment set aside, and plaintiff also objected to the filing of the said plea in abatement. The court overruled plaintiff’s objection to the affidavit and permitted it to be filed, but sustained the objec
The plea in abatement avers that the defendant was a corporation chartered, created and organized under the laws of the State of Kentucky, and was at the institution of this suit, and still was a resident and citizen of said state, with its principal office, before the institution of this suit and still was in the city of Roanoke, in the State of Virginia; that at the time of the institution of this suit, and ever since the defendant had carried on its business at its chief office. At the institution of this suit George II. Hull, the president of the defendant company, was a resident of New York in the State of New York and still resided there, and that W. H. II. Dorncy, who was the secretary and treasurer of this defendant company, and the chief officers of the said company resided in the city of Roanoke, Virginia, and still reside there; that at the time of the institution of this suit the said defendant company did not do business in said Mercer County and the plaintiff’s alleged cause of action was based upon a contract which was made and entered into in the said city of Roanoke.- On the 16th day of August, 1900, a jury was empaneled to try the issue in the action. After the plaintiff’s evidence was in, the defendant moved the court to strike out all plaintiff’s evidence and direct a verdict for the defendant; which motion the court overruled, to which ruling the defendant excepted. No further evidence being introduced the jury retired and returned a verdict upon the issue in favor of plaintiff, against the defendant for two thousand seven hundred and forty-seven dollars and ten cents. The defendant then moved the court to arrest the judgment upon said verdict and set aside the verdict of the jury and grant it a new trial, for reasons thereafter to be assigned, of which the court took time to consider. On the 13th day' of February, 1901, the parties again appeared and the motion in arrest of judgment, and to set aside the verdict of the jury and grant a new trial upon the grounds stated in defendant’s bills of exceptions, Nos. 1 and 2, being considered was overruled by the court, to which ruling defendant excepted and tendered said
In Watterman v. Tuttle, 18 Ill. 292, the opinion of the court quotes with approval from Kenney v. Greer, 13 Ill. whore it is held, “It is mot necessary to give jurisdiction, that the declaration contains an averment of the facts authorizing the-plaintiff to sue in the county where the action may be brought; and that jurisdiction will be presumed unless questioned by plea in abatement, or motion interposed in proper time. The circuit courts are courts of superior or general jurisdiction, and where they take cognizance of causes, every intendment is in favor, of their jurisdiction and rightfully to exercise it.” The return of the officer of the service of the writ in case at bar shows that the process was served upon the agent of the coni-pany in its actual employment and who was in charge of the office of said corporation in the city of Bluefield, in Mercer
The second assignment of error is in refusing to grant the defendant a continuance of the case. Upon the motion for a continuance, as appears from bill of exceptions, number 1, it was proved that after the pendency of this suit the defendant had instituted an action against the plaintiff in the circuit court of the II. S. for the district of AVest Virginia, which was then pending, for damages in the sum of ten thousand dollars for breach of the same contract, upon which plaintiff relied in support of its claim asserted in this ease; and a short time after the institution of this action defendant had offered to institute its action for the recovery of said damages in the circuit court of Mercer County, provided plaintiff would accept sendee of process and submit to the jurisdiction of the court, there being no other means of obtaining service upon the plaintiff in Mercer County; the proposition being made in order that the whole controversy might be settled in the same court; but plaintiff declined and refused to accept the terms of said proposed agreement and declined to sumbit to the jurisdiction of the court; and that the defendant was compelled in order to recover against the plaintiff the entire amount of damages of which it had a bona fide claim to bring its action in the said U. S. circuit court; that the defendant intended to prosecute its said action in the circuit court of the U. S. to final judgment with all proper and due diligence. It was also proved that the plaintiff of-
Plaintiff in error cites Buster v. Holland, supra, in support of its said second assignment; an examination of which ease fails to disclose anything which supports the contention of plaintiff in error. Judge Giíeek there says: “But though an appellate court will in this State and Virginia, supervise the action of an inferior court on a motion for a continuance, it will not reverse a judgment or decree ón that ground unless such action was plainly erroneous, even if the case were a criminal case.” Hewitt’s Case, 17 Grat. 627. It appears from the proof as set out in the bill of exceptions on this point that the action at bar was instituted prior to that by the defendant in the United States Court against plaintiff in this case. The circuit court exercised a sound discretion in refusing the continuance. Since the submission of this case a decision was rendered on the fifth day of February, 1902, by the United States circuit court of appeals for the Fourth circuit, in the case of Hull Coal and Coke Company v. Empire Coal and Coke Company affirming the judgment of the circuit court of the United States for the District of West Virginia, rendered on the verdict of a jury, in favor of defendant. The 3, 4, 5 and 6 assignments are properly considered together as they relate to the propriety of the court’s rulings in permitting certain evidence to go to the jury and in refusing to strike out plaintiffs evidence and directing a verdict for the defendant and refusing to set aside the verdict of the
The plaintiff introduced as a witness Ií. D. Knecht, bookkeeper of the plaintiff company, who stated that he had been such bookkeeper something over eight years and kept an account or record of the coke shipped by plaintiff company during that time, and showed by said witness that the defendant company had made the payments due up to the 20th of December, 1899, for the coke shipped to it, at one dollar and sixteen cents per ton; paying on the 20th of each month for the shipments of the preceding month; that the agreed price for said coke was one dollar and sixteen cents per ton, when it appeared that the coke was furnished under a written contract. Defendant’s counsel moved the court to exclude all the evidence which the witness had given bearing upon or tending to show the terms of the contract, the writing itself being the best evidence and no foundation having been laid for secondary evidence; of which motion the court took time to consider. Plaintiff then proved by said witness the amount of coke shipped in the months of November and December, but the witness was not permitted to state the value of the coke so shipped. Witness was then shown the contract, which was a proposition made by the defendant company, to the plaintiff company, to purchase all the coke it could make at its ovens at Landgraf from January 21st, to December 31, 1899, at the price of one dollar and sixteen cents per net ton; and offered the same in evidence, to which defendant objected, which objection was overruled and the contract admitted in evidence. On cross examination witness was asked if the plaintiff had furnished twenty, thousand tons of coke as set forth in the said contract; to which plaintiff objected and the objection
The defendant introduced no testimony and moved the court to strike out all the evidence introduced on behalf of the plaintiff and direct the jury to return a verdict for the defendant upon the grounds that the evidence was wholly insufficient to entitle the plaintiff*to a verdict; that the evidence was not admissible under the pleadings in the case. It is insisted by plaintiff in error that an action could not be maintained in this case on the common counts, and cites Railroad Company v. Rathbone, 1 W. Va. 87, and also cites Carroll County v. Collier, 22 Grat 302. These were both cases where special contracts were declared upon. In case at bar the action is to recover a balance due for coke shipped under a contract which had been executed and was no longer executory. Under the provisions of the,, written contract, upon the failure on the part of the defendant company on the 20th of any month to have made payment for the amount of coke shipped in the preceding month, an action could have been maintained for such payment. Payment for the shipments made in December, 1899, was due on the 20th of January, 1900, and under the contract no further shipments were to be made after December. In section 104, 2 Greenleaf on Evidence, it is said: “So long as the contract continues executory the plaintiff must declare specially; but when it has been executed on his part, and nothing remains but
2. “Where the contract, though partly performed, has been abandoned by mutual consent, the plaintiff may resort to the common counts alone for remuneration for what he has done under thé special agreement.”
3. “Where it appears that what was done by the plaintiff was done under a special agreement, but not in the stipulated time or manner, and yet was beneficial to the defendant, and is or has been accepted and enjoyed by him, the plaintiff can not recover upon the contract from which he has departed, yet he may recover upon the common counts for the reasonable value of the benefit, which upon the whole, the defendant has derived from what he has done.”
The contract was admissible in evidence, although not specially declared upon, for the purpose of proving the measure of the recovery. The circuit court did not err in overruling the motion to exclude the evidence and enter up judgment upon the verdict of the jury.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.