2 Johns. Ch. 130 | New York Court of Chancery | 1816
Though the present application be by nature a by one against another, for contribution, or to have the damages in the execution equally apportioned and levied.
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By. the decree in the original suit against these parties, as co-defendants, they were made jointly responsible for the damages assessed for cutting timber, and the'decree on that point appears to have been taken as of course, without objection. There was no question raised as to the joint responsibility of the defendants. The petition is, therefore, to be considered as presented in a case in which the defendants were equally and justly chargeable, as it respected the plaintiff, with the damages for taking his property wrongfully and under fraudulent pretences, without title. It is always immaterial, in such cases, as it regards the rights of the plaintiff, which of the defendants appropriated *to himself the greater part, or the whole of the emoluments of the trespass. Each is answerable for the entire damage.
The application proceeds upon the admission of this principle, and of the correctness of the decree, and it is made for an apportionment of the damages, between the defendants, in respect to each other, and on the ground that the timber was, in fact, taken and enjoyed exclusively by Rowland.
But it appears to me, that as well on the special circumstances of this case, as on general principles, the motion ought not to be granted.
2. These are grounds peculiar to this case, and they are very much strengthened by general considerations applicable to every case of this kind; for the defendants are charged with the value of the timber in the character of joint trespassers taking the mesne profits.
Caleb Ellis purchased the land of James Ellis fraudulently, and with intent to defeat the prior equitable title of Peck. When he sold the land to Rowland, he was conscious of the fraud, and yet he assured Rowland, that the claim of Peck was unfounded and abandoned. Rowland was no party to the original fraud, and might not have believed it. Ellis was guilty of fraud, both as it respected Peck and Rowland. If both defendants were chargeable with fraud, as they undoubtedly were, yet there was all possible difference in the demerit of each, and in the nature and degree of the fraud imputable to both. The fraud in Rowland was legal, or constructive fraud; but in Ellis it was actual fraud, in the first
The principle of contribution is equality in bearing a common burden; but equality is not equity between two defendants who stand on such different ground. They must stand in cequali jure, or the rule does not apply. A Court of law will now sustain an action for contribution between two debtors or sureties, under an implied assumpsit arising from the knowledge and operation of the general principle that equality is equity. But a Court of law will not sustain an action between two joint trespassers. In Merryweather v. Nixan, (8 Term Rep. 186.) it was held, that if A. recover in tort against B. and C., and levy the whole damages on one, that defendant cannot sue the other for contribution. I am not apprized of any decision in chancery to the contrary, In Philips v. Biggs, (Hard. 164.) a bill was filed by one of the sheriffs of Middlesex against the other, for contribution, in a case where the damages had been levied on one for an escape suffered by both, and the Court of Exchequer considered it a case of the first impression, and doubted, and no decision appears to have been made. But in the late case of Lingard v. Bromley, (1 Ves. & Beame, 117.) the master of the rolls observed, that where entire damages are recovered against *several defendants for a tort, a Court of justice will not interfere to enforce contribution among the wrong-doers. In Deering v. Earl of Winchelsea, in the exchequer, (2 B. & Puller, 270.) Lord Ch. B. Eyre gave a very able opinion on this subject. He seemed to admit, that if one defendant was the author of the loss for which contribution was claimed, he was not entitled to any, because it was the maxim that a man must come into equity, in respect to such a demand, “ with clean hands.” He placed the whole doctrine of contribution on the ground that the parties were in equal right, and had equality of equity in respect to the burthen. But the present case is not within the reach of this doctrine; for the original purchase of the 200 trees, and the subsequent
The civil law, like the decision in the K. B. which I have cited, would not allow any action for contribution between defendants condemned in damages for a joint offence, or cause of action arising ex delicto. The defendant on whom the whole was levied had no remedy over. The law would not recognize any of the rights or obligations of copartnership in an association for mischief. Si ex dolo communi conventus prasstiterit tutor, ñeque mandandce sunt actiones, ñeque utilis competit: quia proprii delicti pcenam subit: quce res inr dignum eum fecit, ut a cceteris quid consequatur doli particibus: nec enim ulla societ'as malefciorum, vel communicatio justa damni ex maleficio. (Dig. 27. 3. 1. 14.) Nec societas, aut mandatum flagitiosce rei, ullas vires habet. (Dig. 18. 1. 35. 2.) But Pothier *(Trait. des Obi. No. 282.) considers these as rather scrupulous principles of the Roman lawyers, and says, that the French law is more indulgent, and gives an action to one co-trespasser who has paid the whole debt, and he puts it on the same principle as a contribution between co-sureties. I doubt much of the wisdom of this indulgence. ' Public policy speaks loudly against it. There would be no safety to property if a large combination of trespassers were entitled to the assistance of Courts of justice in the apportionment of the damage. The knowledge that each individual is responsible for the whole, constitutes the great check,
In every view, therefore, which I have taken of this case, I am of opinion that the motion ought to be denied.
Petition refused.
Evans, in his notes to a translation of the treatise of Pothier, gives a preference to the French law on this point, and considers the Roman jurists as over scrupulous; but he seems not to advert to the policy of the rule of the Roman and English law. (2 Evans’s Poth. 80.)