.388
FEDERAL REPORTER.
WOODWARD V. GOULD.!
«(Jircuit (Jourt, E. D. Missouri. April 21, 1886.)
AaaUMPSIT-I'LEADINGS-CONTRACTS.
In a suit for breach of a contract the complete performance of which haa been abandoned by the plaintiff because of the defendant's refusal to proceed, the petition should show that some hing is due the plaintiff on account of what he did before such refusal and abandonment.
At Law. Krum et Jonas, for plaintiff. Bennett Pike, for defendant. TREAT, J., (orally.) When this case was presented to the court on the demurrer to the first amended petition an order was made that the then amended petition should be made more definite. The second amended petition is now to be considered under a demurrer filed. . The said second amended petition is, to a large extent, quite as vague and indefinite as the former amended petition, yet the demurrer must rest on the allegations as now presented. Applying the ordinary rules pertaining to pleadings, it seems that there was an arrangement between plaintiff and defendant fol' the organization of a corporation the benefits of which, when organized, were to be divided between the respective parties on the terms stated, the defendant paying certain preliminary costs and expenses. The petition avers that the plaintiff, on whom the duty devolved, had done some work looking to the organization of the proposed corporation, which corporation never was organized. The petition also avers that certain expenses for the survey and location of the proposed railroad had been incurred. It nowhere avers that said expenses had not been paid by the defennant. It does aver that while the plaintiff was ready and willing to perform the agreement on his part, the defcndant refused to proceed further under said agreement. 'What, under such statement, would be the cause of action? Damages actually incnrred by sl1ch breach, but not prospective 01' speculative damages. Nothing appears in the petition to show non-payment by the defendant of all costs and expenses incurred prior to the abandonment of the enterprise. On the face of the petition it appears the plaintiff did not complete the organization of the corporation as agreed, nor that the expenses for preliminary work had not been fully paid by defendant. Therefore, despite the general allegation in the petition that the plaintiff had performed all that was required of him to be performed, the specific allegation shows that he did not so- do. The legal consequence is that a contemplated enterprise having been abandoned, neither party proceeding therewith, the sole right of recovery under the most favor1 Reported
by Benj. F. Rex, Esq., of the St. Louis bar.
CLARK 'D. HAMMETT.
889
able circomstances would be a reimbursement to plaintiff of expenses incurred and unpaid by the defendant for which he was liable. In this latter respect the petition is devoid of essential allegations to make a cause of action. Demurrer sustained.
CLARK
v.
HAMMETT.
(Ot'l'cuit Oourt, D. Kansas. . April, 1886.) WRIT AND PROCESS-SERVICE BY PUBJ,ICATION-SUIT TO QUIET TITLE-SUBSEQUENT EJECTMENT.
·
A decree in a suit to quiet title in the circuit court against a defendant who is a citizen of another state, rendered on service of summons by publication, will not bar a subsequent action of ejectment by the defendant to recover the land involved. .
At Law. J. G. Slonecker, for plaintiff.
Fabius M. Clarke, for defendant. FOSTER, J. Action in ejectment by the plaintiff to recover certain real estate situate in Marshall countJ", Kansas. Defendant pleads in bar a decree of this court in the case of Charles L. Flint against Do.vid M. Clark, said plaintiff, and others, quieting the title of said Flint to the land in controversy, and decreeing Clark's title invalid, and barring him from asserting the same; that said defendant holds title to the land under said Flint, etc. To this plea the plaintiff files a' general demurrer. It appears from the record of Flint v. Clark that Flint held a tax deed on the land, and that he filed a bill in equity against said Clark and others to quiet his title, and to bar them from asserting any claim to the land. In his bill, after setting out his tax deed, he avers "that each of the said defendants claims some title, estate, interest in, or some lien or claim upon, the lands, by patent from the United States, or through grantors under such patents; and claiming that there are errors and irregularities connected with the issue of said tax deeds which render the same voidable. · · lit And plaintiff avers that the said estate of the defendants was divested by the said tax deeds, and the said claims and pretenses are unjust, inequitable, aud unfounded, and tend to the manifest injury of the plaintiff, and to disturb him in the enjoyment of his said estate, and to prevent an advantageous sale thereof." He therefore prays that his title may be established and quieted, and that defendants, and all persons claiming under them, be forever barred from asserting title, etc. Clark was and is So citizen of Massachusetts, and service of process was made on him by publication ina newspaper, under the act of congress of March 3, 1875. He made no appearance, and a decree was entered