Ankeny v. Clark

148 U.S. 345, 13 S. Ct. 617, 37 L. Ed. 475, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2235
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 27, 1893
Docket64
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 148 U.S. 345 (Ankeny v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ankeny v. Clark, 148 U.S. 345, 13 S. Ct. 617, 37 L. Ed. 475, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2235 (1893).

Opinion

Me. Justice Shteas,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

Numerous errors have been assigned to the rulings of the court below. The first has to do with a question of pleading. The plaintiff declares in assumpsit for the value of a certain amount of wheat by the plaintiff sold and delivered to the defendant. To this the defendant answered, setting up 'the execution of a so-called wheat note and a chattel mortgage to secure it, and alleging that “ all the wheat delivered to defendant by plaintiff was delivered and received as payment on said note and not otherwise.” In this answer no mention was made of any contract for the sale of land. The plaintiff, by way of replication, made a full statement of the contract for the sale of the land, alleging performance pn his part, and default on the part of the defendant. He averred that- after he, the plaintiff, had so performed said contract by the delivery of the wheat to the defendant, he duly demanded that defendant should convey the land to the plaintiff, as by''•his bond he had undertaken to do; that the defendant neglected and refused so to do, and still neglected and refused to grant and convey said land to the plaintiff by any good and sufficient deed, and that said defendant had no title to one parcel of the land described in the bond, and that since the making of the contract defendant was not the owner or seized in fee or *352 at. all of said land. He further alleged that the wheat mentioned in his complaint or declaration, except .an excess thereof over the requirements of said bond, was the purchase price of the land; and that, by reason of defendant’s neglect and refusal and inability to perform the said contract, the defendant became and was indebted to plaintiff for the reasonable value of said wheat, and that such demand constituted the cause o f action in the complaint pleaded.

In disposing of the contention of the plaintiff in error that the pleadings disclose a departure by the plaintiff below from the cause of action set forth in his complaint, and a resort to a new and different cause of action in his replication, we are, of course, entitled to regard the allegations of- fact contained in the complaint and replication as true.

It would, therefore, appear that there was a contract whereby the defendant below was' to grant and convey unto the plaintiff certain tracts of land by a good and sufficient deed of conveyance, in consideration whereof the plaintiff was to deliver to the defendant twelve thousand bush els, of wheat; that the plaintiff performed his part of the contract by delivering the said wheat, which was-received by the defendant; that the plaintiff thereupon demanded of the defendant a conveyance of the land ; that defendant neglected and refused to grant and convey said tracts of land by any good or sufficient deed; and that, as to one of the tracts, the defendant had no title to convey.

Upon such a state of facts it seems plain that the plaintiff had a right to treat the contract as at an end,-and to bring an action to recover the value of the wheat he had delivered to the defendant, and such other damages as he might Have suffered by reason of that failure of the latter to perform his part of the contract; and, a fortiori, that he might waive any demand for consequential damages, and confine his claim to a demand for the value of the wheat. - In the latter event he might well assert his claim by a count alleging the delivery and receipt of the wheat, a consequent duty on the defendant to pay its value, and a demand for the same.

Under the ordinary system of pleadings, an action of *353 assumpsit would lie to recover back purchase money paid upon a contract of sale which has been rescinded.

Smith expresses the.doctrine, in his note to Cutter v. Powell, (2 Leading Cases, 30, 7th American edition,) thus:

“ It is an invariably true proposition that whenever one of the parties to a special contract not under seal has, in an unqualified manner, refused to perform his side of the contract, or has disabled himself from performing it by his own act, the other party has thereupon a right to elect to rescind it, and may, on doing- so, immediately sue on a quantum meruit for anything he had done under it previously to the rescission.”

The learned author sustains his proposition by citing Withers v. Reynolds, 2 B. & Ad. 882; Planché v. Colburn, 8 Bing. 14; Palmer v. Temple, 9 Ad. & El. 508.

Well-considered American cases are to the same effect. Eames v. Savage, 14 Mass. 425; McCrelish v. Churchman, 4 Rawle, 26; Boston v. Clifford, 68 Illinois, 64; Stahelin v. Sowle, 87 Michigan, 124.

It is, however, contended that, under the code of Washington, a different rule prevails, and the case of Distler v. Dabney, 23 N. W. Rep. 335, decided by the Supreme Court of that State, is cited. That decision was made after the trial of the present case, and while the appeal from the Supreme Court of the Territory of Washington was pending in this court; but it is claimed that, under the doctrine of Stutsman County v. Wallace, 142 U. S. 293, when, pending an appeal from a territorial court to the Supreme Court of the United States upon a question of local law, the Territory is admitted as a State, and the Supreme Court of the new State reaches an opposite conclusion upon the same question, the later decision will be followed by the Supreme Court of the United States.

It does, indeed, appear that, in the case of Distler v. Dabney, the Supreme Court of the State of Washington has construéd the code of that State as meaning that the plaintiff’s complaint must contain his real cause of action, and that he cannot be permitted to meet matter set up in the answer by resorting, in his replication, to a new cause of action inconsist *354 ent with the statement made in the complaint. The facts of that case were not dissimilar to those of the case in hand, and it must be conceded that, if we are bound to adopt the construction put by the Supreme Court of the State on the code of the State as applicable to the code of the Territory, notwith-. standing an opposite view of the Supreme Court of the Territory, it would lead to a reversal of the judgment in this case, unless, indeed, the- objection was waived by the subsequent conduct of the defendant.

It would seem to be altogether unreasonable that the judgments of territorial courts, in mere matters of procedure, should be subject to reversal, because of decisions made by the courts of the State in subsequent cases, while the former cases were pending on appeal in this court. Nor do we understand the case of Stutsman County v. Wallace to so hold.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 U.S. 345, 13 S. Ct. 617, 37 L. Ed. 475, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ankeny-v-clark-scotus-1893.