Baker v. Cummings

169 U.S. 189, 18 S. Ct. 367, 42 L. Ed. 711, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1482
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 21, 1898
Docket189
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 169 U.S. 189 (Baker v. Cummings) 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
Baker v. Cummings, 169 U.S. 189, 18 S. Ct. 367, 42 L. Ed. 711, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1482 (1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

Before approaching a discussion of the issues which we deem it necessary to pass upon in order to conclude the controversy which the record presents, it will subserve the purpose of clearness of statement to give a brief outline of the proof as to matters about which there is no substantial controversy arid to point to the controverted question, thus eliminating from view irrelevant contentions, and concentrating the attention on the material issues.

1. The existence of the partnership was established as alleged, and the fact that the claims of the inspectors had been unearthed by Baker, and had been mainly secured by him for the firm on a contingent fee of twenty-five per cení, ■ and had been almost exclusively prosecuted by him, was established beyond question. . That Cummings had not given any great attention to the business for several years, and that Baker was dissatisfied therewith and had threatened to dis *194 solve the partnership many months before September, 1S86, though not explicitly admitted by Cummings, was also conclusively established. ■ •

2. The sale of Cummings’s interest in the inspector fees, both earned and unearned, for a consideration which embraced a cash payment of $15,000, was also established beyond dispute. That in the negotiations which preceded the sale Cummings contemplated something besides a mere division between himself and Baker in equal proportions of the rights of each in and to the fees, was also indisputably proven. This is testified to by Cummings himself as follows:

“ I said, ‘ Mr. Baker, I make you this proposition: I will take one half fees in all the cases in which we have powers of attorney and contracts prior to the 1st of January, 1886, or I will take one third of all the fees in all the cases (leaving him two thirds), or I will take $15,000, as you offer, according to what you think is the best for me.’ ”

Undoubtedly, also, the proof establishes that when the.sale was made the fees for cases allowed and appropriated for, then undivided, amounted to about $32,000, and that the claims subsequently allowed and appropriated for largely exceeded $8.0,000. From these conceded facts there arises a grave contention; Cummings claiming that, as he was entitled to an equal share of the fees, he was led, by the misrepresentations of Baker, into making a seeming sale of his interest, receiving as a consideration virtually nothing but his own money; Baker, on the other hand, contending that the transaction between the parties did not contemplate a mere division of their interest, but a sale by Cummings of his rights on the basis of his being entitled only to a one-third interest in the fees, in order to obtain a continuance of the partnership as to other matters, and that the sum of $15,000 and the right of Cummings to retain the assignee’s fees before referred to, was fixed by Cummings, from his knowledge of the business and his investigations made at the time, as a fair equivalent for his agreed one-third right as above stated.

3. Nor does any real dispute exist as to the fact that when the active negotiations for the sale begun, papers were handed *195 Cummings by Baker, from, which an understanding of the state of the whole business could have been derived; that these papers were taken home by Cummings and retained for several weeks until just before the sale was-consummated. Whilst as to these facts there is no conflict in the proof, there is a controversy as to whether it was established that Cummings examined the papers carefully so as to put himself in possession of the information which might have been obtained from them; Cummings claiming that the papers were of such a confused nature that he could have arrived at an accurate knowledge only by inquiry, labor and investigation, which- he did not make, as he preferred to rely upon Baker’s special acquaintance with the status of the claims. Baker, on the other hand, claiming that he had no greater information than was accessible to Cummings, and that the latter dealt on the faith of his own knowledge and estimate, and not upon information derived from or representations made by Baker personally.

4. The proof also establishes, and there is no contention on the subject, that on the evening of the sale or the morning of the day following, Baker left the city of Washington for the State of New Hampshire; that he left Cummings in the office, and before going placed in his hands a document known in the record as Exhibit H. M. B., No. 3, to enable Cummings to look after any matters in the inspector cases which might require, attention during his (Baker’s) absence; that at the same time Baker left with Cummings the bank deposit book of Baker, with his check -book containing signed and unfilled checks to be used as occasion required in the making of remittances or payments in the inspector cases; that Cummings acted upon this authority and made deposits of drafts collected from the Government, drew checks for amounts due claimants, and made entries indicating these latter facts upon the schedule in question ; that at the time of Baker’s departure Cummings had not cashed the check given him by Baker as the consideration for the -sale, and that. Cummings cancelled it, and on different occasions filled up three of the signed checks left by Baker, for the sum of $5000 each, and collected *196 the same, thus acquiring the consideration referred to. The proof further established that Baker remained absent for nearly a month, and on his return found Cummings in the office as usual; that they continued thereafter to occupy the same office, and that no complaint was made by Cummings as to the fairness of the sale until nearly three years thereafter, at which time Baker was pressing a claim against Cummings, and had told him that he was going to dissolve the partnership.

The controverted issue arising from the foregoing unquestioned facts is this: Cummings claims that he did not derive knowledge of the fraud he complains of from the matters just stated ; whilst Baker asserts that if the fraud in the purchase complained of by Cummings had existed, full knowledge thereof was conveyed to Cummings by the facts above stated, and that the silence of the latter and his inaction for years, and until Baker had made claim for money- and stated his intention to dissolve partnership, not only establishes the want of foundation for Cummings’s assertion that there was misrepresentation and fraud in the sale, but also makes cleár the fact that the right to make such' claim was barred, both by limitations and laches, when the demand of Cummings was actually preferred.

It results from the foregoing that the facts as to the controverted matters are embraced in a narrow compass, and that the whole case really resolves itself into two issues: 1st. Does the proof establish that the purchase and sale in question was as claimed by Cummings,.or. as asserted by Baker? In that question is necessarily embraced the further one of whether Cummings, at the time of the sale, had actual knowledge of the fraudulent representations claimed to have been made by Baker.

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Bluebook (online)
169 U.S. 189, 18 S. Ct. 367, 42 L. Ed. 711, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-cummings-scotus-1898.