Heywood v. Tillson

Appleton, C. J.

This is an action on the case. The plaintiff' in his Avrit alleges that on December 19, 1875 he was seized of a dAvelling house on Hurricane Island of great value, yielding an annual rent of one hundred dollars which he should be receiving, Avere it not for the Avrongful act of the defendant, and ought lo-receive from one Charles H. Sanborn and other tenants; that he leased the dwelling house and premises to said Sanborn for the-term of one year, Avhich sum said Sanborn Avas Avillingto pay; that the defendant was the occupant and oAvner of said Hurricane Island, and engaged in quarrying, cutting and working granite, and shipping the same to market; that there was no opportunity^ to lease any building, except to those in the defendant’s employ; yet the defendant knoAving this and to deprive the plaintiff of the rents and profits arising therefrom, did on December 29, 1875, order and direct the said Sanborn to pay him only twenty *228dollars a year, instead of ninety-six dollars, and threatened to ■discharge said Sanborn if he did not comply with his order; by :means, whereof, the plaintiff received but one dollar and sixty- . seven cents per month, instead of eight dollars ; that afterwards on -August 1, 1876, said Tillson ordered and directed said Sanborn to 'leave said dwelling house and refused to allow him to remain therein, and threatened to discharge him from his employment, unless he should leave said dwelling house; and that the said Tillson threatened to discharge any and all persons from his employment, and expel them from the island, who should occupy said premises and become tenants of the plaintiff,' — -by means of which orders, 'threats and directions, the said Sanborn was induced to and did leave the premises, and refused to pay for the use of the same, :and to occupy the same, — whereby the plaintiff has been unable to rent, lease or sell said dwelling house, and has lost all benefit .from the same.

The second count is in trover for the conversion of the plaintiff’s dwelling house. '

The evidence in support of the plaintiff’s claim, comes entirely from him, and witnesses called by him.

The defendant is the owner of Hurricane Island, has extensive • quarries there, doing a large business, having important contracts with the government, and six hundred men in his employ.

The plaintiff went into the defendant’s employ as a stone cutter in 1873, and purchased the house referred to in the declaration, in the fall of 1874, for two hundred and fifty dollars, and was discharged in October, 1875. He testified that he "made no .attempt to injure General Tillson, previous to his (my) discharge that- he " had been taking notes in regard to the management of the job,” and was, "going to keep the notes in case the job was •ever investigatedthat he " furnished information to the newspapers in regard to the management of the government works wrote articles in the Boston Herald and The Rockland Opinion; that when the latter paper was indicted for a libel'growing out of the articles, he was here two weeks in procuring witnesses for the publisher; that he said he considered the defendant a damned *229scoundrel, that he so testified, on the trial of the indictment, and that he " so considers him now.”

The house was built on defendant’s land, by verbal permission of his clerk.

Such is the relation of the parties.

The plaintiff claims to recover in trover, but he testifies that General Tillson told him, "that he would not interfere with making a disposition of the property,” "that he has never directly assumed to him (me) any control over that house,” "that he wanted me to dispose of my property there and go off the island; he said ho should not interfere with m37 disposing of it,” " that any man that rented my house should not work for him.” Here is no conversion of the property. The plaintiff might live there. He might sell or lease his estate. He had full control of his property, leaving the defendant at liberty in fixing the terms and conditions on which he would employ those laboring for him. Whatever the37 might do, here is no conversion of the house of the plaintiff. '

The first ground of complaint in the second countin the declaration is, that lie " had leased the said dwelling house and premises to the said Charles H. Sanborn for the term of one year from the said da3T hereinbefore specified (December 29, 1875), for the sum of eight dollars per month, which sum the said Charles H. Sanborn was then and there ready and willing to pay.” "Yet the said defendant, well knowing the premises, . . did on the said December29, A. D. 1875, order and direct the said Charles H. Sanborn to pay the plaintiff only twentj7 dollars a year, instead of the ninety-six dollars per year, and threatened to discharge said Sanborn from his employment if he did not compty with such order; by moans whereof the said Sanborn was prevented from payment to the plaintiff any more than one dollar and sixty-seven cents, instead of eight dollars per month.”

The plaintiff’s evidence disproves every material allegation as there set forth, and the above is the most tangible ground of' complaint to be found in the whole declaration.

The house was not leased for the year. It was personal property. The plaintiff ivas not seized of it. Sanborn testifies. *230that the plaintiff rented the house to him " for eight dollars a month, so long as he (I) saw fit to occupy it,” that he went into the house in October, 1875, and left in August, 1876, and that the amount he "paid Hey wood was in the neighborhood of eighty dollars.” The plaintiff novvhere alleges that he did not receive the rent as stipulated from Sanborn. The only evidence of ordering out is, what is testified to by Sanborn; that " he said he did not wish to injure me (Sanborn), but the man that lived in Hey wood’s house could not work for him.” But this constitutes no ordering. It was what he had a right to say. It did not interfere with letting to others. •

As the house was rented to Sanborn by the month, as "long as he saw fit to occupy it,” the contract was terminable at the option of Sanborn. He could terminate it Avhen and for what reason he suav fit. The plaintiff could not complain of its termination, no matter hoiv unreasonable it might be. He had no contract with Sanborn that he should remain. He might remain or not. In Hutchins v. Hutchins, 7 Hill, 104, the defendants, after a Avill was made, devising certain real estate to A, conspired to induce the testator to revoke it, and effected their object by means of false and fraudulent representations : Held, that A, could not maintain an action, as the revocation of the Avill merely deprived him of an expected gratuity, Avithout interfering with any of his rights. So, here, no rights were interfered Avith. There Avas no obligation on the tenant to remain. None on the landlord to permit him to remain. All there is, the tenant did not renew his conti’act. Why he did not is no concern of the landlord. The tenancy was at Avill. The exercise of that will was the exercise of a perfect right. The motive Avhich induced that exercise, can be no ground of complaint, whether it aves the chance of bettering his condition, to gratify a A\7him of his oavii or the ill Avill of another. The landlord cannot complain that a tenant declines to renew his lease. If Sanborn violated any contract, he is liable to the plaintiff in damages.

Besides, an employer has a vital interest in the Avelfare of his .men. He has a right to see that they are not plundered. ItAvas ¡a perfectly proper motive for the defendant to interpose to *231prevent can extortionate rent, as that of one hundred dollars a year for a shanty costing but two hundred and fifty dollars. His own interest and his interest in the success of his employees, without the imputation of anything sinister on his part, afford good and sufficient reasons for his intervention.

The question raised is, whether the defendant is liable in damages to a landlord for a tenant’s leaving, or for one or many declining to become or not becoming tenants in consequence of his threats that he would employ no one who should become such landlord’s tenants, or being his tenants should continue to remain such.

The defendant was doing a large business, having five or six hundred men in his employ. It was of the utmost importance to his success that his employees should be of good habits, friendly to his enterprise and interested in his- prosperity. As between the employer and the employee, each may fix the terms and conditions on which the one will emph>3r and the other bo employed. "It is well settled,” observes Shaw, C. J., in Com. v. Hunt, 4 Met. 133, "every free man, whether skilled laborer, mechanic, farmer, or domestic servant, may work or not work, work or refuse to work, with any company or individual at his own option, except so far as he is bound by contract.” The employer has equal and reciprocal rights to fix the terms and conditions upon which alone he will contract for employment. He is restricted to no color or race. The conditions upon -which he insists may be silty or absurd. If acceded to, they are binding on the employee. 'Whether wise or not, if legal, it is no concern of others. In Carew v. Rutherford, 106 Mass. 14, Chapman, C. J., uses this language: "Every man has a right to determine what branch of business he will pursue, and to make his contracts with whom he pleases and on what terms he can. . . He may refuse to deal with any men or class of men. And it is no crime for any number of persons, without an unlawful object in view to associate themselves together and agree that they will not -work for or deal.with certain men or classes of men, or work under a certain price or without certain conditions.” The employer has the same right of imposing conditions and limitations as those he may employ.

*232The workmen may agree that they will not work for an employer, " who should after notice, employ a journeyman, who habitually used it” (liquor), Com. v. Hunt. A laborer would not be liable to a journeyman who lost employment by reason of such agreement, and the refusal of the employer any longer to hire him. So the master may equally impose as a condition, that his servants shall not board at a house where liquors are kept for sale, and the seller cannot maintain an action against him for the loss of profits on liquors he might, have sold his boarders had they remained Avith him. He may impose as a condition of employment, that certain associates and associations shall be avoided. Good habits are not all that is desirable. An interest in the success of an enterprise is required. The master may impose as a condition of employment, that he shall not associate Avith one Avhois inimical to him — Avhois seeking to injure him — Avho is acting as a spy upon his proceedings, and’who is libelling him in the newspapers.

So, the employer, as' he may by contract stipulate Avith his men Avhere they shall not board, may equally determine where and of whom they may rent the houses they may occupy, and Avhere they may not. The house may be in an unhealthy part of the city, or a disreputable neighborhood. But Avhatever the reason, good, bad or indifferent, no one has a right to complain.

The owner has no cause of complaint when one says he will not occupy his house, nor when another saj^s he will refrain from doing an act if it be occupied. The defendant Avas under no obligation — owed no duty to the plaintiff that he should permit his men to occupy his house any more than to a boarding house keeper, that he should permit his men to board Avith him. The idea of a boarding house keeper suing a man because he declines or refuses to employ his boarders, or the owner of a house, because he Avill not employ his tenants, is utterly at variance Avith the right of individuals to make their oivn contracts. A landlord has no right of action against an employer of men, because he refuses to employ his tenants or boarders. Nor are his rights enlarged because the reason of such refusal is, that they are his. tenants or boarders.

*233Neither is the employer liable if having the tenants or boarders of a landlord in his employ, he discharges them from his service because they choose to remain such tenants or boarders, having the right by his contract with them to terminate their services. If he has not that right he may bo liable to those so discharged. If he has, no one else has an}7 right to complain, because an employer having a right to discharge a servant, does discliai’go him. The contract is between the master and servant, and tho master is not obliged to retain his servant in his employ in such case, and no one else can bring a suit against him because ho does not.

The defendant has broken no contract. He has made nono with the plaintiff. If the plaintiff has none with any one no contract is broken. If there he one, and the tenant has broken it, preferring to continue in the defendant’s service, the tenant is liable for such breach. He is the one by whom the contract is broken. He is the principal in its breach. The defendant has. done nothing.

It must be remembered that the interference complained of, is not with the general rights of the plaintiff. The threat is not general. It is only as to his employees. The plaintiff may rent to all the rest of humanity. The defendant owes no duty to the plaintiff. He has done him no wrong by declining to employ his tenants, unless ho ivas under some legal obligation to employ them, and ivas guilty of some wrong in not employing them. This very action is brought upon the assumption that the defendant was in some way under an obligation to employ the plaintiff's tenants ; that ho was guilty of a dereliction of duty, of a violation of tiro plaintiff’s right, in not employing his tenants, or in threatening not to employ such as should become or were his tenants.

If the defendant had advised a tenant to leave, because the house was in a disorderly neighborhood or too distant from the place of labor, and ho had loft, it will not be pretended that an action could have been maintained. If be advises and urges him to leave, but fails, however malicious his motive, his malice affords no ground of action. If he procures him to leave with*234out notice he is not responsible. There is no cause of action against him. But if the act, not actionable in itself, is accompanied by a bad motive— affords a ground of action — then it follows, that if an act be in itself lawful, if a bad motive becomes the basis of a suit, that is a man is sued for his motives, irrespective of his conduct.

The defendant had an absolute right to employ or not to employ, a tenant of the plaintiff', and no action would be maintained against him if he chose not to do it.

Threatening not to employ such tenant affords no ground of action on the part of the landlord. A threat to commit an injury is "not an actionable private wrong.” Cooley on Torts, 29. It is only the promise of doing something which in the future may be injurious. It may never be carried into effect. It cannot be foreknown that it will be.

The belief on the part of the defendant that the plaintiff had injured and would injure him existing, that from ill will thus arising, he said he would neither employ nor retain in his employ a tenant of the plaintiff, affords no ground of action. Having a right to make that a rule of action, he is not liable for so doing, still less for merely threatening.

The act legal, he cannot be sued for mere ill will or personal animosity, especially when he has cause. " The exercise by one man of a legal right cannot be a legal wrong to another.” Cooley on Torts, 685. In Stevenson v. Newnham, 76 E. C. L. 281, it was held that an act which did not amount to a legal injury could not be actionable because done with a bad intent. The insertion of the word‘maliciously when the act complained of is not unlawful per se, will not make a count good which would be bad without it. Ootterell v. Jones, 73 E. C. L. 713. Evidence that an act legal inits character was done wantonly and withintentto injure washeld inadmissible in Benjamin v. Wheeler, 8 Gray, 409. In Randall v. Hazelton, 12 Allen, 415, Colt, J., says "damages can never be recovered where they result from a lawful act of the defendant.” The law will not inquire into the motives of the party exercisiug such right however unfriendly or selfish. " It is generally held that no action will lie against one for acts done *235upon his own land in the exercise of his rights of ownership, whatever the motive, if they merely deprive another of advan-J tage or cause a loss to him, without violating any legal right; that is,” remarks Wells, J., in Walker v. Cronan, 107 Mass. 564, " the motive in such case is immaterial. Frazier v. Brown, 12 Ohio St. 294; Chatfield v. Wilson, 28 Vt. 49; Mahan v. Brown, 13 Wend. 261; Delhi v. Youmans, 50 Barb. 316.” A similar decision was made in Wheatley v. Baugh, 25 Penn. St. 528. If a wrongful act would suffice, one would think that fraudulent representations by which one was prevented from securing his debt by an attachment would suffice, but it was held otherwise in Bradley v. Fuller, 118 Mass. 239. "Malicious motives make a bad act worse; but,” observes Black, J., in Jenkins v. Fowler, 24 Penn. 308, " they cannot make that wrong, which in its own essence, is lawful, . . . any transaction which would be lawful and proper if the parties are friends, cannot be made the foundation of an action merely because the}7-happened to be enemies. As long as a man keeps himself within the law, by doing no act which violates it, we must leave his motives to Him who searches the heart.” In Fowler v. Jenkins, 28 Penn. 176, the preceding case is cited with approval, Woodward, J., remarking that, "even a malicious exercise of this right would give the plaintiff no cause of action.” In Glendon v. Uhler, 75 Penn. 467, the same doctrine was reaffirmed. In Phelps v. Nowlen, 72 N. Y. 45, Miller, J., says "that the maxim sic utere Luout non alienum laedas, applies only to cases when the act complained of violates some right, and an act legal in itself; violating no right, cannot be made actionable upon the ground of the motive which induced it.” "But motives,” say the court in Pickard v. Collins, 23 Barb. 444, " in doing an act which violates no legal right of another, cannot make that act a ground of action.” In South Royalton Bank v. Suffolk Bank, 27 Vt. 505, it was decided that an act lawful and right in itself, is not actionable on acount of its being performed from an improper or bad motive. "Motive alone,” remarks Bennet, J.," is not enough to render the defendants liable for doing those acts which they had a right to do.” This doctrine was re*236affirmed in Chatfield v. Wilson, 28 Vt. 49. There is nothing conflicting with these decisions to be found in Harwood v. Jones, 32 Vt. 724. In Hunt v. Simonds, 19 Missouri, 583, it is held that an action does not lie for conspiring to do a lawful act, however malicious the motive, for the very obvious reason that the act was lawful. Those views are fully sustained in the textbooks. Cooley on Torts, 688; Smith v. Bowler, 2 Disney, (Ohio,) 153; Kiff v. Youmans, 86 N. Y. 324.

In most of the cases where reference is had to the motive as malicious, it will be found that the act done ivas wrongful, as in Bowen v. Hall, 20 Am. Law Reg. 578, where a contract was broken. The breaking the contract was an unlawful act and the inducing it ivas held to make the person liable — as in the case of enticing a servant from his master, but if there be no contract, one is not liable for inducing a person to leave, though the master wished to further employ him. Boston Glass Manufactory v. Binney, 4 Pick. 425. In other cases, malice is shown to enhance damages. But if the act bo legal, one is not liable for doing it. If doing it from a bad motive, he be made liable, then his liability arises from his motive and not from his act. A different rule would encourage litigation. "Malice,” observes Miller, J., in Phelps v. Nowlen, might be easily inferred from idle and loose declarations, and a wide door be opened by such evidence, to deprive an owner of what the law regards as well defined rights.” This same act under the samé circumstances would be a wrong, if done with intent to injure by one man, and if done by another without such.intent, would be regarded as fitting and proper. A tort implies a wrongful act done. But mutual ill will between parties antagonistic to each, affords no basis for mutual suits for such ill will. "So in reference to the term damage, the law is,” remarks Colt, J., in Randall v. Hazelton, 12 Allen, 415, "thatit must be a loss brought upon the party complaining by a violation of some legal right, or it will be considered as merely damnum absque injuria.” But a refusal to hire or to continue to retain one in his employ because he boards with one inimical to the employer, does not give a right of action *237for such refusal, unless there is some rule of law restricting the employer in the terms and conditions of his employment.

To entitle a plaintiff to recover, there must be a wrong done. " No one is a wrong doer but he who does what the law does- not allow.”1 He who does what the law allows, cannot be a wrong!' doer whatever his motive. " So no one is guilt}' of a fraud," because he exerts his rights.” 2 The motive which may induce such exertion is immaterial.

So far as relates to the case of Sanborn, who was a tenant by the month, the stipulated rent was fully paid, and the tenant loft as he had a right to do. He left because defendant would not employ one of the plaintiff’s tenants. The defendant had a right to impose that condition. The tenant had a right to his preference.

As to the rest of the world, except the defendant’s employees, there was full liberty of sale or rent. As to these, there Avas liberty, if they chose to risk the chance of employment. The defendant threatened. He might cease to threat. He might neA'or carry his threats in execution. He might never intend to. There is no proof that a single one of his employees Avas influenced by his threats — wanted to hire plaintiff’s house, or Avould have hired it; or hiring it, Avoukl have remained; or remaining, hoAV-long any tenant would have remained.

There is no proof of any Arrong done — of any legal damage — or of any facts for or on account of AA'hich any damages could be assessed — unless threatening to do AA'hat a man has a perfect right to do, Avill constitute a sufficient foundation for an action. If any Avrong was done, it was by the tenant in leaving; and if he has broken any contract, or violated any 'rights of the plaintiff, he alone is responsible for his misfeasance.

Plaintiff nonsuit.

"Scmo damnum facit nisi quid id fecit quod facerc jus non liabei.- — Dig. xii, (5, 53.

Xulhis videtur dolo facerc qui suo jure utilur.