Corporation of Washington v. Young, 23 U.S. 406 (1825)

Syllabus

U.S. Supreme Court

Corporation of Washington v. Young, 23 U.S. 10 Wheat. 406 406 (1825)

Corporation of Washington v. Young

23 U.S. (10 Wheat.) 406

Syllabus

Where the manager of a lottery drawn in pursuance of an ordinance of the Corporation of the City of Washington gave a bond to the corporation conditioned "truly and impartially to execute the duty and authority vested in him by the ordinance," held that the person entitled to a prize ticket had no right to bring a suit for the prize against the manager upon his bond in the name of the corporation without its consent.


Opinions

U.S. Supreme Court

Corporation of Washington v. Young, 23 U.S. 10 Wheat. 406 406 (1825) Corporation of Washington v. Young

23 U.S. (10 Wheat.) 406

Syllabus

Where the manager of a lottery drawn in pursuance of an ordinance of the Corporation of the City of Washington gave a bond to the corporation conditioned "truly and impartially to execute the duty and authority vested in him by the ordinance," held that the person entitled to a prize ticket had no right to bring a suit for the prize against the manager upon his bond in the name of the corporation without its consent.

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.

The defendant was the manager of a lottery drawn in pursuance of an ordinance of the Corporation of Washington, and gave his bond to the corporation in the penalty of $10,000 conditioned "truly and impartially to execute the duty and authority vested in him by the ordinance."

The declaration was on the penalty of the bond, after oyer of which and of the condition the defendant pleaded non damnificatus, upon which there was issue, with leave to give the special matter in evidence on both sides.

A jury was empanelled, which found the special verdict stated in the preceding case of Brent v. Davis,

Page 23 U. S. 407

with this additional circumstance, which, having no connection with that case, was not stated in it. The ticket No. 1,037, drew a prize of $10,000. It had been sold in quarter shares to several persons, but had remained in possession of the said Gideon Davis, who gave to each purchaser a certificate specifying the interest he held in the ticket. After the drawing was completed but before the institution of this suit, Gideon Davis delivered the said ticket, No. 1,037, to the managers, towards securing and paying of the moneys stipulated to be paid by him under his contract for the purchase of the lottery.

This suit is instituted for the benefit of the purchasers of the ticket No. 1,037, without the consent of the corporation.

The judgment of the court was in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiffs have sued out a writ of error to bring the cause into this Court.

The first inquiry is into the right of the proprietors of the ticket No. 1,037, to sue in the name of the corporation without its consent. Their counsel insists that the bond was taken for the benefit of the fortunate adventurers in the lottery, and that each has a right to use it. In support of this proposition he has cited the case of McMechen v. Baltimore, decided in the court of Appeals of Maryland in the year 1806. That was a writ of error to a judgment confessed in the general court in an action brought by the corporation on a bond given by Thomas Yates and Archibald

Page 23 U. S. 408

Campbell with their sureties conditioned for the performance of their duty as auctioneers. The court determined that the suit was to be considered as brought by authority of the corporation, although no warrant of attorney was shown, and that the confession was an admission of the right to recover the penalty of the bond, whether in their own right or for the use of another was immaterial.

The opinion was also expressed, as stated by the reporters in a note, that every person whose money was withheld by the auctioneers had a right to apply to the city council to direct a suit to be instituted on the bond, and the corporation could not, consistently with its duty under the ordinance, refuse such application, and might be enjoined by suit in chancery to allow the person to use its name to prosecute his claim.

Had this been the direct judgment of the court, it could not have sustained the pretensions of the proprietors of this ticket to maintain this suit under the circumstances which attend it. They had undoubtedly "a right to apply to the corporation to direct the suit, and the corporation could not, consistently with its duty, have refused such application" if the purpose of the bond was to secure the fortunate adventurers in the lottery, not to protect the corporation itself. But the propriety of bringing such suit was a subject on which the obligees has themselves a right to judge. If the proprietors of one prize ticket had an interest in this bond, the proprietors of every other prize ticket had the same interest,

Page 23 U. S. 409

and it could not be in the power of the first bold adventurer who should seize and sue upon it to appropriate it to his own use and to force the obligees to appear in court as plaintiffs against their own will. No person who is not the proprietor of an obligation can have a legal right to put it in suit unless such right be given by the legislature, and no person can be authorized to use the name of another without his assent given in fact or by legal intendment. The declaration of the judge in the case cited from Harris & Johnson that a court of chancery might enjoin the obligees to allow the injured person to use their names in that particular case is evidence of the opinion that he could not sue at his own will. We think, then, that this case is no authority for the power claimed by the proprietors of ticket No. 1,037, and we think upon general principles they had no right to institute this suit without the consent of the corporation.

But we think also that the corporation itself must be considered as the real plaintiff, and that its right to prosecute the suit cannot be affected by the allegation that it is brought for the benefit of others.

It has been determined in this Court that the warrant of attorney need not be spread on the record to enable counsel to appear for a corporation, and if the dismission of the suit be not ordered, the consent of the corporation will be presumed after verdict. If, in its progress, the

Page 23 U. S. 410

court shall perceive that it is brought without authority, the proper course would seem to be to dismiss it, not to render judgment for the defendant which might, where no special breach is assigned, bar any other action.

The proprietors of the ticket No. 1,037 have shown no right to sue on this bond. Their remedy is certainly directly against Gideon Davis, and in the event of his insolvency it may be against the managers. But if they have, without authority, put this bond in suit, the proper course is to turn them out of court, not to render a judgment which may bar any future suit brought by the plaintiffs whose names have been improperly used.

The judgment of the circuit court therefore, must be reversed, but as the pleadings are so incomplete as not to show what judgment ought to be entered, the proceedings are set aside up to the declaration and the cause remanded to the circuit court to be further proceeded in according to law.

Judgment reversed accordingly.