Bell v. Cunningham

28 U.S. 69, 7 L. Ed. 606, 3 Pet. 69, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 530
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 11, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 28 U.S. 69 (Bell v. Cunningham) 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
Bell v. Cunningham, 28 U.S. 69, 7 L. Ed. 606, 3 Pet. 69, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 530 (1830).

Opinion

Mr Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a writ of error* to a judgment rendered in the court, of the United States, for the' first circuit and district of Massachusetts, in a suit brought by Cunningham & Co. against Bell, De Yough & Co., on a special contract.

Cunningham & Co., merchants of Boston, had let their vessel,, the Halcyon, to Messrs Atkinson and Rollins, of the same place, to carry a cargo of sugars from the Havana to Leghorn. The cargo was consigned to Messrs Bell, De Yough & Co., merchants of Leghorn ; and Cunningham & Co. addressed a letter to the same house, instructing them to invest thé freight, which was estimated at four thousand six hundred petsos, two thousand two hundred in marble tiles, and the residue after paying disbursements in wrapping *75 paper. Messrs Bell, De Yough &. Co. undertook to execute these orders. Instead however of investing the sum of two thousand two hundred petsos in marble tiles, they invested the whole amount of freight which came to their hands, amounting to three thousand four hundred and forty-nine petsos, and seven-thirds, instead of four thousand six hundred, in wrapping paper, which was received by the captain of the Halcyon, shipped to the Havana, arid sold on account of Messrs Cunningham & Co.. One of the partners of Messrs Bell, De Yough & Co. having visited Boston on business, this suit was instituted against the company. At the trial, all the correspondence between the parties was exhibited, from which it appeared that Cunningham & Co. as soon as information.was received that their orders had been broken, addressed a letter to Messrs Bell, De Yough & Co., expressing in strong terms their disapprobation of this, departure from orders, but did not signify their determination to disavow the transaction entirely, and consider the wrapping paper as sold on account of the house in Leghorn.

In addition to the correspondence, several depositions were read to the jury, which proved that the orders respecting the marble tiles might have been executed without-difficulty, but that the house in Leghorn, expecting to receive more money on account of freight than actually came to their hands, had contracted for so much wrapping paper as to leave so inconsiderable a sum for the tiles, that they de- . termined to invest that small sum also in wrapping paper.

At the trial, the counsel for the defendants in the court below, prayed the court to instruct the jury on several points which arose in the cause.- Exceptions were, taken to the rejection of these prayers, and also to instructions which were actually given by the court, and the cause is now heard on these exceptions.

The defendants’ counsel prayed the court to instruct the jury, that the letter of the 9th of December 1824, from the defendants to the plaintiffs, was notice to them of the ex-.eroise of the aforesaid authority in contracting for five thousand reams of paper, to be paid for out of the freight money of the Halcyon, and was admitted by the plaintiffs in their *76 letter of the 7th of March 1825, to be a rightful exercise of such authority; and that the freight money of the Halcyon was pledged for payment of the said quantity of paper.

But the court so refused to instruct the jury, because it did not appear, on the face of the. said letter, at what price the said wrapping paper was purchased, so as to put the plaintiffs.in possession of the whole facts, that there had been a purchase of paper to an extent, and at a price which would amount to a deviation from the orders of the plaintiffs, or that defendants had deviated from such orders, without which there could arise no presumption of notice of any deviation from such orders, or of any ratification of any such deviation from such orders. ' But the court did instruct the jury, that if, from the whole evidence in the cáse, the jury were satisfied that the letter of the 9th of December, connected with the letter of the 14th of January, did sufficiently put the plaintiffs in possession of all the facts relative to such purchase, and the - price thereof, ¡and of such deviation, and that the letter of the 7th of March, in answer thereto, was written with a full knowledge and notice of all the facts, and that the plaintiffs did thereupon express their approbation of all the proceedings and acts of the defendants relative to such purchase, then, in point of law, it amounted to a ratification thereof, even though there had been a deviation from the orders in this behalf.

This first exception is very clearly not supported by the fact, and was very properly overruled foi the reasons assigned by the judge. The plaintiffs in that court, when the letter of the 7th of March 1825 was written, had no reason to presume thaftheir orders had been violated, and consequently could not be intended to mean by that letter to sanction such violation.

The said defendants’ counsel further’ prayed the court to instruct the jury, that¿ if they believed, from the evidence submitted to them, that the required quantity of tiles could be had in season for the return cargo of the Halcyon, without any previous contract therefor, and that the five thousand reams of paper could not be had in season for said vessel, without a previous contract therefor, that, inasmuch as the *77 plaintiffs admit, in their declaration, that they did not furnish the defendants with-freight money enough to purchase twenty-two hundred petsos worth of tiles, and pay the disbursements, and pay for the .said five' thousand reams of wrapping paper, but only with three thousand four hundred and forty-nine petsos, 7.3, (as in their declaration is expressed), and which latter sum was only sufficient for the .payment of said disbursements, and for the performance of the defendants? own contract in paying for said wrapping paper, the defendants were riot holden to purchase any tiles, but were holden'to ship the said five thousand reams of paper on board the Halcyon, as the property of the plaintiffs.

But the court refused so to instruct the jury; and the court did instruct the jury, that if the defendants undertook to comply with the original written orders of the plaintiffs, and no deviation therefrom was authorised by the plaintiffs, the defendants were bound, if funds to the amount came into their hands, in the first instance to apply two thousand two hundred petsos of the funds which should come into their hands and be applied to this purpose, to the purchase of tiles, and in the next place, to deduct and apply as much as was necessary to pay the disbursements, and then to apply the residue to the purchase of paper: that if it were necessary or proper under the circumstances to make a purchase* of the paper, before the arrival of the vessel,'the defendants were authorised to act upon the presumption that four thousand six hundred petsos would come into their hands, and therefore the plaintiffs would have been bound by any purchase of paper made by the defendants, to the amount of the balance remaining of the said- four thousatíd six hundred petsos, after deducting the two thousand two hundred petsos for tiles, and tñe' probable amount of such disbursements.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 U.S. 69, 7 L. Ed. 606, 3 Pet. 69, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-cunningham-scotus-1830.