Bacon v. Rives

106 U.S. 99, 1 S. Ct. 3, 27 L. Ed. 69, 16 Otto 99, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1519
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 23, 1882
Docket29
StatusPublished
Cited by104 cases

This text of 106 U.S. 99 (Bacon v. Rives) 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
Bacon v. Rives, 106 U.S. 99, 1 S. Ct. 3, 27 L. Ed. 69, 16 Otto 99, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1519 (1882).

Opinion

*100 Mr. Justice Hablan

This is a suit in equity. The complainant's are John L. Bacon and H. E. C. Baskerville, partners as Bacon & Baskerville; John Stewart, Robert Ould, Robert H. Maury, and Isaac H. Carrington, trustees for the benefit of the creditors of William H. Macfarland, deceased,-by virtue of a deed dated Oct. 20, 1870; John W. Wright, sheriff of the city of Richmond, and, as such, administrator of said Macfarland, — all citizens of Virginia.

-. The defendants are George C. Rives, a citizen of Texas, in his own right and as administrator with the will annexed of George Rives, deceased ; J. Henry Rives, a citizen of Virginia, executor of George Rives, deceased; and Alfred L. Rives, a citizen, of Alabama, executor of William C. Rives, deceased.

The suit was commenced, on the 22d of July, 1875, in. the Circuit Court of Albemarle County, Virginia, and was thence removed into the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of Virginia, upon the petition of George C. Rives, in which the defendant, Alfred L. Rives, executor of Williams C. Rives, united. In the latter court, a demurrer to' the bill was interposed by George C. Rives, upon the ground that the suit was barred by the Statute of Limitations both of Texas and Virginia. - The demurrer was sustained, and the bill dismissed. .The complainants thereupon appealed.

; The case made by the bill is, substantially, as follows: —

. In the summer of the year 1863, Bacon & Baskerville, John Stewart, Robert H. Maury, William H. Macfarland, and Wil- - ■íiam C. Rives, uncle of the defendant George C. Rives, sent $131,000 in “Confederate States treasury notes” — the currency, at that time, of Virginia, Louisiana, and Texas — to » James H. Stevens, then in Monroe, La., with instructions-to invest or expend the same in the purchase of cotton on plantations in Louisiana and Texas, to remain thereon until the civil war was ended.' Of that sum Bacon & Baskerville owned .$48,000, Stewart' $48,000, Maury $10,000, Macfarland $5,000, and William C. Rives $20,000. Subsequently, however, Bacon & Baskerville became the owner of $80,000, and Stewart of $16,000, the interest of the other parties in the residue remaining the same as at the outset. -The funds were *101 sent to Stevens by Bacon & Baskérville, by whom all instructions were given and negotiations conducted. The proceeds of the investment, it was understood, were to’ be divided among the parties in. proportion to their respective interests.

About the 3d of September, 1863, Stevens died in Louisiana, en route to Texas, without having invested any of the funds. Shortly thereafter the complainants were notified by his widow that she held the $131,000 subject to their order. The defendant, George C. Rives, wrote to the same effect to his cousin', Alfred L. Rives, son and executor of William O. Rives. Moved by the advice and solicitation of William C. Rives, as well as by the encouraging character of certain letters written by George C. Rives to Alfred L. Rives, and exhibited to complainants, and influenced especially by the declaration of the former in his letter, that if the money was turned over to' him he would act for the parties under their instructions, and save it by ■ investing' it in city property in Austin, Texas, or in property which, he represented would pay well, and could be readily sold at any time, the complainants made and appointed George G. Rives their agent in the room and stead of •Stevens. They consequently ordered.and directed the funds in the hands of Mrs. Stevens to be paid to him, and towards the close of the year 1863, or early in 1864, he received them as ’ agent and for the benefit of the complainants, to be invested in conformity with specific instructions given by Bacon & Baskerville, the managers and business negotiators of the’ enterprise, with the concurrence of the joint owners of the funds, viz.: 1. To invest them in cotton on plantations in Texas, to remain thereon until the war ended, that being the first and chief object of the whole venture. 2. If that could not be done, then to invest them in ranch property, meaning lands in Texas with cattle and horses thereon. 3. If that could not be done, then to invest them in town lots in Austin.

Nothing was heard from George C. Rives upon the subject of the proposed investment until, in response to a letter from Bacon & Baskerville, under date of Jan. 27,1865, he wrote, under date of April 5, following, that he had invested the funds in the transportation of cotton under articles of partnership • to continue during the war, and- that the business was r *102 under the management of an active partner, who gave his whole time and attention to it; but he did not state who the active partner was, nor how much of the funds he had so invested, nor what property he; had purchased therewith, nor what proceeds, if any, had accrued from the investment. His departures from the instructions were not approved by the complainants, and they hoped, notwithstanding their orders had been disregarded, that a fair and honest return would be made by him. After the war ended, and after the expiration of eighteen months without any report or statement from him, Bacon & Baskerville, in November, 1866,. wrote to him at Austin, Texas, asking an account of his agency, to which letter no reply was made. On the 26th of January, 1867, they again wrote to him at Austin, asking such account; but no reply to that letter was received. ' Complainants, consequently, “almost-reached the conclusion that Rives had either died or left tlie country.” But in March, 1875, learning accidentally that he was not only living, but for several years then past had visited Virginia each summer, they again wrote to him asking an account of his agency. No reply came to that letter. At the same time they virote, as they had before done, to Alfred L. Rives, asking information as to George C. Rives; but no reply was received, nor were the letters written to the latter ever returned to the writers through the dead-letter office.

As soon as possible after learning the whereabouts of George C. Rives, the complainants instituted this suit, charging that his retention of the whole proceeds of the money intrusted to him, his silence for nearly ten years, and his failure to render any account, arose from an intention to defraud them out of it, or the proceeds of its investment.

The bill further shows that George Rives died in Virginia in 1874, possessed of a large estate, real and personal, in which, by his will, George C. Rives, his son, had a large interest, and that J. Henry Rives and Charles Edward Rives qualified as his executors. The complainants ask that the interest of George C. Rives in that estate, in whatever form, be attached in the hands of the executors to pay whatever may be shown to be due them. Attachments were served upon the executors, and levied upon that interest. It is also *103 averred that William C. Rives has died, and that Alfred L. Rives is his executor; that Macfarland died in 1873, having executed, on the 29th of October, 1870, a deed conveying all his property of every kind, in possession or in action, to Robert Ould and Isaac H:.

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Bluebook (online)
106 U.S. 99, 1 S. Ct. 3, 27 L. Ed. 69, 16 Otto 99, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bacon-v-rives-scotus-1882.