Court Opinion

ID: 7893665
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:51:10.942868+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:31:59.714771
License: Public Domain

Grason, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action of indebitatus assumpsit for money had and received to the plaintiff’s use, and is brought to recover the sum of forty-two thousand, three hundred and seventy-eight dollars and twenty-one cents, that sum being the difference between the sum charged and received from the plaintiff, for freights on its coal transported over the defendant’s road, from July 1st, 1864, to March 10th, 1871, and the amount the plaintiff would have had to pay had it been charged the lowest rate at which the defendant transported coal for any other person or company during the same time. The case was tried upon an agreed statement of facts, which is set out in the record, and at the trial the plaintiff offered six prayers, all of which were rejected, and the Court granted an instruction that upon the agreed state of facts, the plaintiff was not. entitled to recover, and the judgment being in favor of the defendant the plaintiff appealed.
One of the grounds relied upon by the appellee’s counsel for sustaining the rulings of the Court below is, that the payments'of the freights charged by the appellee were voluntarily made by the appellant, and therefore cannot be now recovered, even conceding that they were illegally charged.
This question has been clearly and definitively settled in this State by the cases of Mayor and City Council of Baltimore vs. Lefferman, 4 Gill, 431; John B. Morris vs. The Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, 5 Gill, 247, and *229Lester vs. The Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, 29 Md., 418.
In the first of these eases Lefferman had received a notice from the City authorities to build a stone wall upon his property, binding upon Jones’ Palls, and that, if he failed to build it by the time specified in the notice, they would build it and charge the cost to him. Lefferman accordingly built the wall and then brought suit to recover from the City the money ho had expended in its erection, on the ground that the Act of 1821, chap. 252, under authority of which the Mayor and City Council had acted, was unconstitutional and void. The case was very fully argued and the Court, in its opinion, says: “It is now established by an unbroken series of adjudications in the English and American Courts, that where money is voluntarily and fairly paid with a full knowledge of the facts and circumstances under which it is demanded, it cannot be recovered back in a Court of law upon the ground that the payment was made under a misapprehension of the legal rights and obligations of the party.”
And on page 436 of the same case, the Court further say: “We consider, therefore, the doctrine as established, that a payment is not to be regarded as compulsory, unless made to emancipate the person or property from an actual and existing duress, imposed upon it by the party to whom the money is paid.” In the case of Morris vs. The Mayor, die. of Baltimore, it appears that Mr. Morris paid taxes on his bank stock at a time to entitle him to a deduction of a certain per centage on the amount paid under an ordinance of the City, and that afterwards he brought suit to recover the taxes so paid, upon the ground that they had been illegally exacted. Judge Martin, in delivering the opinion of the Court of Appeals, says, “ After a careful review and examination of the authorities, the Court announced in the case of the Mayor and City Council against Lefferman, what they regarded as *230the true doctrine upon the subject of voluntary and compulsory payments, as far as it was applicable to the case before them ; and we certainly have not been able to perceive any reason for departing from the propositions there enunciated.”
“On the contrary, we desire to be understood as re-affirming the principles declared in the Mayor and City Council and Leffermau, and as that case cannot be distinguished from the one before us, we should have affirmed the judgment of the Court below, even if we had considered the tax as unconstitutional and void.”
In the case of Lester vs. The Mayor, &c. of Baltimore, Lester paid his taxes after his property had been advertised for sale by the collector of the taxes, yet this Court said, “No principle is better settled than that where a person, with full knowledge of the facts, voluntarily pays a demand unjustly made upon him, though attempted or threatened to be enforced by proceedings, as appears to have been the case in this instance, it will not be consid-r ered as paid by compulsion, and the party, thus paying, is not entitled to recover, th'ough he may' have protested against the unfounded claim at the time of payment made.
In the case now under consideration, it is not claimed by the appellant’s counsel, that the money sought to be recovered, was paid under a mistake of the facts, or under circumstances of duress, fraud or extortion. On the contrary, it appears from the agreed statement of facts that the appellee was carrying coal for the appellant for nearly seven years, during the whole of which time the latter was voluntarily paying the freights demanded. The case therefore is clearly -within the principle decided by this Court in the cases referred to, and as that principle is conclusive against the right of the appellant to recover, it is unnecessary, to decide the other points presented by the record.
*231(Decided 25th June, 1873.)
We concur in the rulings of the Circuit Court, and its judgment must be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.