Liability for the acts of others may be created either by a
direct authority given for their performance or it may flow from
their adoption, in some instances from acquiescence in those acts.
But presumptions can stand only whilst they are compatible with the
conduct of those to whom it may be sought to apply them, and must
still more give place when in conflict with clear, distinct, and
convincing proof.
The Circuit Court of the District of Columbia admitted as
evidence a statement by one witness of what had been testified by
another on the trial of a cause, to which the plaintiff in the
cause and against whom the evidence was to operate was not a party.
Held that this was error. Wherever the rights of a party,
founded upon a deed, are dependent on the terms and conditions of
that deed, the instrument thus creating and defining those rights
must be resorted to and must regulate, moreover, the modes by which
they are to be enforced at law. These identical rights cannot be
claimed as being derived from a different and inferior source. If
the deed be in force, all who claim by its provisions must resort
to it.
When the contract contained in a deed has been varied or
substituted by the subsequent acts or agreements of the parties,
thereby giving rise to new relations between them, the remedies
originally arising out of the deed may be varied in conformity with
them. An action upon the deed would not be insisted upon or
permitted, because the rights and obligations of the parties to the
suit would depend on a state of things by which the deed had been
put aside.
DANIEL, JUSTICE, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case arises under the attachment law of the State of
Maryland, passed in 1795, and comes before this Court upon a writ
of error to the Circuit Court of the District of Columbia, for
Washington county, within which the law of Maryland above mentioned
is in force. The proceedings instituted in this case, although
commencing by an attachment and upon what is termed a short note,
in lieu of a formal declaration, assume nevertheless the essential
character, and in some respects, the usual forms of the action of
assumpsit, and must be governed by the
Page 41 U. S. 328
rules applicable to such an action. The defendants dissolved the
attachment, by appearing and entering special bail, and pleading
"
nonassumpsit," and upon the issue made up on this plea
the cause was tried in the circuit court.
Upon the trial, exceptions were taken in five separate instances
to the rulings of the circuit court, and in each of them the
exception sealed by the judges is made a part of the record. To
test the accuracy both of the decisions thus pronounced and of the
objections alleged against them, it will be necessary to advert to
the facts adduced in proof.
It appears, that on 23 August 1832, the defendants in error
entered into a covenant with the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal
Company for certain rates and prices stipulated in a covenant
sealed between the defendant and the company by their president,
and in a specification appended to the said covenant to construct,
in a substantial and workmanlike manner, culvert No. 116, on the
150th section of the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal, and to prosecute
the work upon the said culvert, without intermission, with such
force as should, in the opinion of the resident engineer, secure
its completion by the first day of August, 1833. On 3 November,
1832, a covenant was entered into between the plaintiff in error
and the defendants, or rather with Riah Gilson, one of the
defendants, styling himself superintendent for Gilson &
Company, by which the construction of the culvert, No. 116, was let
to the plaintiff, at the contract prices to be paid by the company
for the work, with the exception that Fresh should pay to the
defendants, from whom he took this contract, the sum of $100, which
sum appears to have been a profit reserved to themselves by the
first contractors upon the transfer of their undertaking. In this
second covenant, the plaintiff in error bound himself "to be urgent
in the performance of the work, so that it might progress in
accordance with the specification and directions of the engineers."
And further that in the event of neglect or failure on his part,
the defendants should have authority to declare the work abandoned,
to assume the direction, and to complete it at the plaintiff's
expense. Having thus obtained a contract under the defendants, the
plaintiff, on 2 May, 1833, made an agreement with Elijah Barret,
for building of this culvert by the latter,
Page 41 U. S. 329
stipulating to pay Barret the price of one dollar, twelve and a
half cents for every perch of stone work of twenty-five cubic feet,
upon a certificate and approval of the engineer or superintendent
of masonry as to the fidelity of the work. The plaintiff, on the
trial, offered these several contracts in evidence; also an account
against the defendant, stated on 24 December, 1833, for masonry,
excavation, and paving performed, and for cement not supplied by
the plaintiff in the construction of culvert 116, on which account,
after allowing a credit of $1,142.73, a balance of $1,343.01 was
claimed. This was the account on which the warrant of attachment
issued. The plaintiff further proved the delivery of the letter,
dated December 25, 1833, addressed by him to Wells, the agent of
the defendant, in which he required a statement of his account with
them and expressly forbade the payment to Elijah Barret of any
amount whatever.
The defendants, to rebut the plaintiff's demand, offered the
account, exhibit C, commencing December 5, 1832, and terminating 21
December, 1833, amounting to the sum of $1,369.36, and proved by
their clerk, that the work on the said culvert was completed on 21
December, 1833, and that the account last mentioned was received by
the plaintiff, without objection, except as to the quantity of
cement charged therein. The defendants likewise offered in evidence
several orders, numbered from 1 to 7, drawn by Elijah Barret, by
himself and his agents, in favor of William Harris upon the
defendants, at different periods during the autumn and winter of
1833, and claimed the benefit of them, as payments to the
plaintiff. These orders purport to have been paid all on the same
day,
viz., April 29, 1835, rather more than two years
posterior to the date of the letter delivered to the defendant's
agent, positively forbidding any payment to be made to Barret, or
to his order, and nearly one month after the institution of this
suit. And it is admitted that the orders were never shown to the
plaintiff, nor expressly recognized by him at any time. The
defendant offered seven other papers, purporting to be orders and
due bills signed and certified by Elisha Barret, in November and
December, 1833; three of them
Page 41 U. S. 330
said to be for work done upon culvert No. 116, and amounting in
the whole to $273.50; these last orders and certificates, it is
also admitted, were never shown to the plaintiff, nor acknowledged
by him, and it does not appear that they have ever been paid. Oral
testimony was also introduced on the part of the defendants, in
order to show that the work had been abandoned by the plaintiff,
and its completion assumed and accomplished by the defendants, and
on the part of the plaintiff, like evidence was offered to prove
that he continued on the work and labored on it until it was
finished on 21 December, 1833.
Upon the foregoing state of facts, the counsel for the plaintiff
moved the court to exclude from the jury the orders drawn by Barret
in favor of Harris as well as the evidence offered to prove the
payment of those orders in April, 1835, more than two years after
their payment had been forbidden by the plaintiff; the court
admitted this evidence to go to the jury, and this produces the
question presented by the first bill of exceptions.
We are unable to perceive upon what correct legal principle this
question was ruled as it has been by the circuit court. There is no
express power apparent in the record, nor indeed, was any attempted
to be shown in the proofs, existing in Barret, to bind Fresh for
any amount, with any person. It is true that under the contract
between them, the former would have had a claim on his own behalf,
whenever he should have fulfilled his undertaking; but not even
then until he should have procured a certificate from the engineer
of the company. But the right or claim he would then have acquired,
differs essentially from the pretension sanctioned by the decision
of the court, which amounts to an evasion of the stipulated test of
his own conduct and his own rights, and to a claim, by that very
evasion, to bind his employer
ad libitum to any amount and
to any person. Nor is it perceived that the admission of these
orders was warranted by any presumption arising from the fact that
orders previously drawn by the same person were comprised in the
account proved to have been presented by Fresh, and not objected to
by him, except as to the quantity of cement charged therein,
Liability for the acts of others may be created, either by a direct
authority given for their performance, or it may flow from their
adoption, or, in some instances, from
Page 41 U. S. 331
acquiescence in those acts. But presumptions can stand only
whilst they are compatible with the conduct of those to whom it may
be sought to apply them, and still more must give place, when in
conflict with clear, distinct and convincing proof. 3 Bac.Abr.
318(H), Presumptive Proof; 4 Stark.Evid. 53. The letter of the
plaintiff, Fresh, delivered to the agent of the defendants, more
than two years anterior to the alleged payment of the orders drawn
by Barret, fully accords with the character of the proof just
described; it justified no presumption of right or authority in
Barret to make, nor of any obligation upon the defendants to pay,
those drafts, and the circuit court therefore erred in permitting
them to be given as evidence instead of excluding them wholly from
the jury.
The next question arises upon the admissibility of the second
series of orders and certificates or due bills signed by Barret,
amounting together to $372.50, embraced in the second bill of
exceptions. These orders are obnoxious to even stronger objections
than those existing against the former orders drawn by Barret; they
not only, like the former, were never (as is admitted) shown to or
acknowledged by the plaintiff, but they carry on their face no
receipt or other semblance of payment, nor is proof attempted
aliunde, that the defendants have given, or are bound to
give, any consideration for them. The circuit court should have
excluded these papers also.
It is next stated that in addition to the evidence previously
introduced by the defendants, they offered to prove by a competent
witness that at the trial of a cause brought by one Hammond against
two of the defendants, and to which the plaintiff was not a party,
certain facts were proved by a witness examined in that cause. The
plaintiff asked the exclusion of this testimony by the court, but
his motion was denied, and this denial presents the point upon the
third bill of exceptions. The evidence let in by this decision of
the circuit court was not the exhibition of a record, nor even of a
judgment, nor of process, but simply a statement by one witness, of
what had been testified by another, on the trial of a cause to
which the plaintiff was not a party, without an attempt to account
for the absence of the person whose testimony was thus given at
second hand. The principles,
Page 41 U. S. 332
that the best evidence the nature of the case admits of must
always be produced, and that a person shall not be affected by that
which is
res inter alios acta, are too familiar to require
authorities to support them. We will mention, however, as
applicable to these points, 3 Bac.Abr. 322, I; 3 East 192; 2 Wash.
287;
9 U. S. 5 Cranch
14; 1 Stark. Evid. 58-59. But familiar as these principles may be
as rudiments of the law, they are elements which enter essentially
into the security of life, character and property. The circuit
court, in conflicting with these principles, has further erred.
In the fourth bill of exceptions, it is stated that defendants
offered to prove that Riah Gilson and Christopher Midlar, two of
the defendants, superintended the performance of the work on the
culvert No. 116, and that their superintendence was worth $150.
That to the admissibility of this proof, the plaintiff objected,
but the court permitted it to be received. The questions here
raised, or rather the facts which make the basis of those
questions, are somewhat vaguely and imperfectly stated. Enough,
however, can be gathered from them, to justify the following
conclusions. 1st, that by the written contract between the
plaintiff and the defendant, or by any oral agreement attempted to
be shown between these parties, there is no condition established
authorizing or requiring the defendants to become the supervisors
of the plaintiff in the performance of his work. 2d, that if the
defendants have performed the work, either in fulfillment of their
original contract with the canal company, or in consequence of an
abandonment by the plaintiff, a charge for superintendence would
appear inconsistent with the position they would have occupied in
either view. Such a claim is therefore regarded irregular and
unauthorized, and should have been excluded.
Upon the fifth and final bill of exceptions, it is in substance
set forth that the plaintiff having given in evidence the contract
between the canal company and the defendants, and the contract
under the seals of the plaintiff and Riah Gilson, one of the
defendants; the latter offered their account against the plaintiff,
and proof that the culvert No. 116, was not completed until after
the 1st of August 1833, the period designated in the original
contract with the company. The plaintiff then offered evidence
to
Page 41 U. S. 333
show, that the work was carried on until 21 December, 1833, at
which date it was completed, and afterwards accepted, formally and
expressly, by the company. And the defendants offered oral evidence
to prove, that the work had been abandoned by the plaintiffs, and
was finished by the defendants. Then follow the instructions moved
for and granted, in the following terms. The defendant then prayed
the court to instruct the jury that
"If from the evidence, the jury shall find that there was an
agreement under seal between the said plaintiff and the defendant,
for the execution of the work and labor for which this action was
brought, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this
action,"
and further, that
"If from the evidence the jury shall find that the said
plaintiff performed the work and labor for which this action is
brought under a sealed agreement between the said plaintiff and
Riah Gilson, then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this
action,"
to the granting of which two "instructions, unless qualified,
the plaintiff objected, but the court overruled the objection and
gave the said instructions as prayed."
Had the ruling of the circuit court in this instance been
limited to an affirmance of the second proposition insisted on by
the defendants, this Court could not hesitate in sustaining the
decision, for we hold it as invariably true that wherever the
rights of a party founded upon a deed are dependent upon the terms
and conditions of that deed, the instrument thus creating and
defining those rights must be resorted to, and must regulate,
moreover, the modes by which they are to be enforced at law. These
identical rights cannot be claimed as being derived from a
different and an inferior source. If the deed be in force, all who
claim by its provisions must resort to it. This is regarded as a
canon of the law, and numerous authorities might be adduced to
sustain it, both from compilations and from the adjudged cases. 2
Bac.Abr. tit. Debt, G, citing 13 Hen. IV 1, and Roll.Abr. 604; 1
Chit.Plead. 75;
Atty v. Parish, 4 Bos. & Pul. 104; 12
East 585;
Clark v. Smith, 14 Johns. 326;
Munroe v.
Perkins, 9 Pick. 298. These authorities, to which many more
might added, are full and express to the point that where a deed is
the foundation of the claim, and can still be regarded as
subsisting and in full force between the parties, the action to
enforce its provisions must
Page 41 U. S. 334
be upon the instrument itself. In the case of
Tilson v.
Warwick Gaslight Company, 4 Barn. & Cres. 962, there are
some expressions of Bayley, Justice, which indicate an opinion by
that learned judge, in opposition to the doctrine above laid down,
and as counsel in the case of
Atty v. Parish, he had
maintained an opposite doctrine; but it should be borne in mind,
that in
Tilson v. Gaslight Company, the decision did not
turn upon the principle ruled in the several authorities above
cited, but entirely upon a state of the pleadings in which the
judges declared they would be justified, if necessary, in presuming
the existence of a deed. It should be remembered too that in
deciding the case of
Atty v. Parish, Chief Judge
Mansfield, after advisement and delivering the unanimous opinion of
the court, declared the doctrine contended for by Justice (then
Serjeant) Bayley, to be such as he did not understand or did not
feel the application of. With all the deference justly due to so
learned and able a jurist as Justice Bayley, his argument as
counsel, or his opinion, intimated, not upon the point adjudged,
should not overrule a current of authorities extending from the
Year Books to our own day.
There cannot be a doubt that where the contract contained in a
deed has been varied or substituted by the subsequent acts or
agreements of the parties, thereby giving rise to new relations
between them, the remedies originally arising out of the deed may
be varied in conformity with them. An action upon the deed would
not be insisted upon or permitted, because the rights and
obligations of the parties to the suit would depend upon a state of
things by which the deed had been put aside. Hence it has been
ruled that where a person who had covenanted to perform certain
work had failed or refused to fulfill his covenant, but had
afterwards, upon the parol engagement of the covenantee, or by his
acts, amounting in law to an engagement, gone on, in whole or in
part, to do the work, he might recover the value of the work in
assumpsit upon a
quantum meruit. So too, between partners,
though articles of co-partnership have been sealed between them,
yet upon an account stated and a balance struck, assumpsit will
lie. This principle is illustrated in several of the authorities
already quoted, and in none of them more forcibly then in those of
White v. Parkin, 12 East 585;
Monroe v. Perkins,
9 Pick, 289, to which may be added the cases of
Marine
Insurance
Page 41 U. S. 335
Company v. Young, 1 Cranch 332;
Baird v.
Blaigrove, 1 Wash. 170; and
Latimore v. Harsen, 14
Johns. 330; and in the case of
Fletcher v. Gillespie, 3
Bing. 635, although a charter party had been entered into, yet
expenses incurred by the master in loading the ship were recovered
in assumpsit; for, said the court in that case,
"this claim does not rest upon the charter party, it is for
money paid
dehors the contract, for the ease and benefit
of the defendants, and from which they have derived advantage."
Numerous cases applicable to the point here considered will be
found collected by Saunders in his Treatise on Pleading and
Evidence vol. i. 110. It is upon this well settled distinction,
that the court, whilst it recognizes the principle affirmed by the
second instruction contained in the fifth bill of exceptions, feel
bound to disapprove and overrule the first instruction in that
bill. It is manifest that at the trial, testimony was introduced
tending to show that the contract between the defendants and the
canal company, as well as that entered into between the same
defendants and the plaintiff, had been modified or substituted by
other and new contracts, tending too to show acts of performance by
the parties to these new and modified engagements. It was certainly
competent for the parties to use such evidence, and to rely upon
its effect before the jury. The first instruction of the circuit
court, contained in the last bill of exception, cuts off from the
plaintiff, at least, all benefit of such evidence, however, strong
it might have been. In this we consider that instruction as having
deprived the plaintiff of an undoubted legal right. We regard it,
therefore, as erroneous, and for this cause, and for the reasons
assigned for disapproving the rulings of the circuit court upon the
other instructions given in this case, the judgment of that court
is hereby reversed and the cause is remanded to be again tried by a
jury in conformity with the principles of this decision.
Judgment reversed.