56 W. Va. 550 | W. Va. | 1904
The Sistersville, Middlebourne & McElroy Turnpike Company, E. J. Miller, Eobert McCormick, G. B. West, G. B. Slemaker and John II. McCoy, claim they are aggrieved by a final judgment of the circuit court of Tyler county in favor of the Stae of West Yirginia suing for the use and benefit of the county ofciurt of said county for the sum of $10,638.16 2-3 with interest and costs.
The suit in which such judgment was rendered was founded on a bond executed by the defendants to the State of West Virginia at the instance of the county court in the penalty of $40,000.00. The condition of the bond, among other things, was that if the defendant corporation should macadamize that portion of the Sistersville and Salem turnpike from the corporate limits of Sistersville to the iron bridge near J. C. McCoy’s, according to the plan, profile and' specifications now on file in the clerk’s office of said court, then the obligation was to-be void, otherwise to be in full force.
The county had given the company the use of this road with the right to collect tolls thereon, provided it should improve it as aforesaid, and also turned over to the company $20,000.00 in bonds of Lincoln District in said county for a certificate of stock to this amount. The county claims that the company failed to carry out its contract, and thereupon it brought this suit in the name of the State on the bond for its use and benefit.
The first claim of the defendants and seemingly their main reliance, which is raised by demurrer, motion to exclude the evidence and instruct the jury for the defendants, motion for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, is that the county court has no such interest as entitles it to maintain the suit.
It is said that recovery in this action will reduce the assets of the company, and will diminish the stockholders’ dividends. Such is the case with every creditor who is also a stockkholder, and because the pajunent of his debt will diminish his divi- ' dends is no legal reason why his debt should not be first satisfied. From all this, it is plain that the county court has two distinct causes of injury for which it could sue. One would be of its own right strictly for the forfeiture of the toll fran
If it sues for injury done to Lincoln district, it should so allege, so that the recovery may be credited to such district and ■expended as its voters directed. If it sues for an injury to itself, it should so allege for the same reason. If the county court had gone on and completed the road according to the plans and specifications and made good the company’s contract, it would be entitled to sue and be reimbursed for its outlay. The declaration fails to show whether the county is endeavoring to recover from the company and its sureties the amount of its ■default for the benefit of itself or of the district of Lincoln. If a recovery should be had on behalf of .the district, the company would be entitled to have the same expended in the improvement of the road or to have a proportionate number of the shares of stock held by the county for the benefit of such district returned to it and cancelled. The county court cannot 'both hold the stock and recover the money back unless it use» the money in completing the companjr’s contract. The defand-ant is interested to this extent in knowing in whose behalf and for what injury the recovery is 'demanded. The county, court has authority to sue for an injury suffered by Lincoln • district, but in doing so it should so allege. Its double capacity
To whom does the recovery in this case belong, to the county court or to the district of Lincoln? The defendants have the-right to know, and the declaration should inform them, for they are interested in the disposition of the proceeds, and the con-elusiveness thereof.
The declaration being insufficient, it becomes unnecessary to consider other errors presented, as the judgment mus-c be reversed, the demurrer to the declaration sustained, and the case be remanded, with leave to the plaintiff to amend its declaration,, if so advised.
Reversed.