Bramhall v. United States

4 Ct. Cl. 51
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 15, 1868
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ct. Cl. 51 (Bramhall v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bramhall v. United States, 4 Ct. Cl. 51 (cc 1868).

Opinion

Pece, J.,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court:

Moses B. Bramhall claims of tbe United States sixty-four thousand two hundred and sixty dollars, wbicb be alleges is justly due from tbe defendants, and for cause of claim states, “that on and for a long time prior to tbe 1st day of April, A. D. 1865, be claimed to be tbe owner of a large number, to wit, seventy-two bales of cotton, wbicb were stored in various places in tbe city of Savannah; that said seventy-two bales were seized, captured, and taken possession of by, or under direction of, one H. 0. Bansom, an officer of tbe United States army, acting under and by authority of tbe United States. This cotton be alleges was seized on or soon after the capture of Savannah, [55]*55and was turned over to tlie agents of tlie treasury and sold, and that tlie proceeds were paid over to that department.

Claimant, who states himself to be a citizen of the State of New York, seeks to recover the amount of the proceeds of the cotton .under the act of Congress of 12th March, 1863.

The loyalty of claimant is alleged and proved.

Claimant was examined as a witness, but under the direction of the act of Congress entitled “An act to provide for appeals from the Cotirtof Claims, and for other purposes,” approved June 25,1868, liis testimony cannotbeused. (15 Stat.L,, c.75, § 4.)

The deposition of tlie claimant being out of the record, the principal evidence in support of the demand is to be found in the deposition of Hill Gowdy. On the hearing, claimant rested liis case mainly upon the facts stated by this witness. It becomes our duty, therefore, to examine carefully into his statement.

Hill Gowdy was three times examined as a witness by the claimant, viz: on the 24th of May, on the 24th of September, and on the 9th of October, in the year 1867 — an unusual practice.

The claimant insists that Gowdy was acting as his agent in the purchase of the cotton in question; and Gowdy, nothing loth, is willing to co-operate in creating this belief. In this respect his testimony is somewhat confused and inconsistent. On his first examination Gowdy states circumstantially as follows: “Before the breaking out of the war, and for three years previous thereto, I was irarcliasing cotton at Savannah and shipping it to Liverpool on joint account with him, (claimant,) and drawing upon him for funds to pay for it.” This, if it proves anything, proves a partnership in such transactions, not an agency.

In the same deposition, if not in the same connection, he says: “In the drafts drawn by me on the claimant for the payment of cotton, I failed to place him in possession of the cotton in consequence of the breaking out of the war and blockade, which prevented me from shipping, and therefore I had his money in my hands.” This created the relation of debtor and creditor, which has continued to tlie present time.

Elsewhere Gowdy states another reason for not placing claimant in possession of the cotton, viz: “the general breaking up of all commercial transactions,” and that it was well understood [56]*56among tlie commercial men of Savannah, where he resided, “that he had suspended on the news of Mr. Lincoln’s election;” in other words, had become insolvent.

On his first examination he says that “before the breaking out of the war, and for three years previous thereto, I was purchasing cotton in Savannah and shipping it to Liverpool on joint account with him, (claimant,) and drawing upon him for funds to pay for it;” this also establishes a partnership rather than an agenejn In the same deposition he says, “ in the drafts drawn by me on the claimant for the payment of cotton I failed to place him in possession of the cotton, in consequence of the breaking out of the war and blockade,” and therefore he had claimant’s money in his hands; a different reason than that previously given, but the relation of debtor and creditor was not changed.

In continuation dowdy says, “ with these funds I purchased cotton in my own name for his (claimant’s) account. I purchased 72 bales of cotton, I thinlc, for his account.” After thus thinking without knowledge, he proceeds to give the names of the venders of 66 bales; and adds, “ all this cotton was purchased on account of the claimant by Ms money, and it was his property.” dowdy says he could not have kept tMs cotton in the southern confederacy as the property of the claimant, because, it would have been sequestered; it had been purchased only four or five days before Savannah was captured; “for that reason I (dowdy) had to keep it in my own name,” acting as his (claimant’s) agent.” “ After I ■ jmrchased this cotton, it was stored in different places in Savannah, deeming that the safest deposit for it, and there it remained until the place was taken by Sherman’s forces.”

If it was not the intention of dowdy to create the impression that the cotton claimed had been purchased by him for the claimant long before the capture of Savannah; he has used a large and useless number of words to express a very brief and simple'fact. In the same deposition dowdy says, “ the cotton had been kept, the most of it, in close werehouses.” Kept by whom? The inference is that dowdy had so kept it for some considerable period of time, inasmuch as he has throughout used such expressions in connection with the cotton as “always kept,” “laid aside,” “been kept,” “stored,” &c., and all about a period of time of one week or less.

[57]*57On cross-examination Gowdy says tlie 72 bales were reported by bim to Colonel Hansom “ as secretly held by him in his character as agent.” Agent for whom ! and why conceal the name of his principal, especially if that principal was a loyal citizen of the city of New York ? Gowdy had been the agent of others than claimant, and none but himself could say to whom the cotton belonged. Although he and the claimant had transacted business together for three years before the war, yet Gowdy says “ each special case, that is, of business between them, rested upon its own merits,* many of his purchases being on joint account with claimant, and many otherwise;” leaving the fact of agency or partnership in just that convenient state of doubt that Gowdy might or might not be agent, as would best serve the occasion. If the rebellion should become a success, he could be sole or part owner of the cotton; if the rebellion should not succeed, he could then be metamorphosed into an agent, and so avail himself, directly or in directly, of whatever benefits events or policy might devekrp. By keeping himself in this dubious condition, vibrating between the characters of principal and agent, in uncertain relations to this cotton, if Gowdy should not serve himself, he might at least aid his creditors, and so do good by stealth.

In his second deposition Gowdy says he had been acting as agent for the claimant from the 4th of December, 1858, until September, 1807, but that his books of account do not show any entries between them after November 1, I860 — a long hiatus; and thattlieonlytransactionbetween themsinceNovember, 1860, is that of the purchase of these 72 bales of cotton.

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4 Ct. Cl. 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bramhall-v-united-states-cc-1868.