Bridges v. Sheldon

7 F. 17, 18 Blatchf. 507, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2721
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 7 F. 17 (Bridges v. Sheldon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bridges v. Sheldon, 7 F. 17, 18 Blatchf. 507, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2721 (uscirct 1880).

Opinion

Wheeler, D. J.

This cause has been heard on the report of the master, evidence returned therewith, exceptions by the orator and the defendants respectively, and arguments of counsel. The exceptions, especially those of the defendants, are too numerous to be conveniently treated and understood by their several numbers or in numerical order. The items to which they apply, so far as separate reference to them is either necessary or deemed to be proper, are taken up somewhat in the order in which they are presented by the report.

1. As to the item of $3,520.32 for indorsing paper and meeting liabilities, presented for allowance by the defendants. This item is made up of three sums, severally offered in writing by the orator to the defendants, for indorsing some and guarantying other of his paper, and furnishing him stone [23]*23upon credit, to be retained out of the avails of his contracts with the government received into their hands. Each sum was offered in connection with the furnishing stone by the defendants, or by others, at stipulated prices, for filling his contracts, and was accepted in that connection. Afterwards a new contract was made between them, by which the defendants were to receive a larger sum for the stone furnished by them, and a commission on the stone furnished by others in the same connection, and by which an appropriation was made of the avails so received by the defendants from the government. This advance in price exceeded one of the sums, and the advance and commission probably nearly equalled and perhaps exceeded, each of the others, although exactly how the others would compare is not easily ascertainable. However they might compare, the parties took several of the subjects of the former contract and embraced them in the latter upon new terms, without expressly providing what the effect upon the subjects of the former not embraced in the latter should be. The latter must stand because it is the later act of the parties. With the latter contract standing, the former cannot be carried out as it was made in respect to those sums composing this item. So the new contract superseded the old to that extent. The defendants could not, consistently with the new contract, retain those sums out of the money received from the government, and they are not now entitled to have it allowed to them out of the balance of that or other money of the orator in their hands. The exceptions to the disallowance of this item are overruled.

2. As to item of Morgan notes, $20,000, admitted $13,000. Morgan held four of the orator’s notes, of $5,000 each. They were given upon good consideration, negotiable, and, so far as appears, just. Before they were matured the defendants purchased them, and they were indorsed to the defendants. The defendants paid $13,000 for them. They are brought into this accounting without objection, and the only question is whether the defendants shall be allowed their face or only what was paid for them. As they were valid and negotiable, [24]*24the defendants, or any one, had good right to purchase them, on any terms they could agree upon with Morgan, and to hold them for their full amount against the orator, and by so doing they would infringe upon no right of his. He owed them, and all the right he had was the right to pay them according to their terms when due, so long as they should be outstanding. He could purchase them himself, or procure any one else to do it for him, upon any terms he could make. He did not purchase them himself for himself: the defendants purchased and took them. If the defendants purchased them for him, he has the right to stand upon their purchase according to its terms, as if he had done it himself. If they purchased them for themselves they had the same right to-hold the notes for their full face after the purchase that Morgan had before. And if they had it then they have it yet, for there is no pretence that the notes have been paid since, otherwise than by being charged in this account. So the question is whether the defendants purchased them for themselves or for the orator. The defendants became interested to purchase them because they wished to avoid the consequences of the efforts Morgan would make to collect them; but their interest to get control of them has no tendency to show that they did not buy for themselves. It would rather show the contrary. They did not hold out to the orator that they were purchasing to hold for themselves at their full face, and it was not necessary that they should. There was no duty resting upon them, nor would there be upon any purchaser, to consult or inform him at all. Nor were the intentions of the defendants, or of the member of their firm doing the business, of importance, unless made known to the orator, and in some way acted upon to his detriment, if not carried out.

The master finds that the orator supposed that the purchase was made in the service of their mutual and respective-interests; that what was paid for them would be charged as an advance under the contract, and that he was warranted and justified in so supposing from the circumstances, and the [25]*25course and consummation of the transaction. If this should mean that he was given to so understand by the defendants, then they would be bound by the representation so far as it would bind them; but the master does not say that, nor that they were responsible for the circumstances, course, and consummation from which he so understood. What they gave him to understand is afterwards expressly stated in the report to have been, that they were buying the notes to aid and favor him, and that lie would'realize a pecuniary saving as the result. This, apparently, was true. The notes in the hands of Morgan were a great embarrassment to the orator, and to have them transferred to the defendants, who would be interested not to embarrass him with them, was doubtless a favor to him, and a saving from pecuniary loss. The language of the report is careful and exact, and it nowhere goes so far as to say that' the defendants undertook to buy theso notes for the orator. But, even if they had expressly said to the orator that they would buy the notes and let him have them for what they cost, it is difficult to see where there is any consideration to bind them to do it. He gave them nothing for buying the notes. He exerted himself to bring about the result, but he was at work for himself, and not for them. He gave liis own note for §2,000 to Morgan to induce him to sell to the defendants, but he did not do it at the request or by the procurement of the defendants. He did that to procure Morgan to sell. Nor was he deceived into giving this note by the conduct of the defendants. He deceived them by keeping that fact from them, not they him.

It is argued that the orator has a right to the notes for what they cost, because, it is said, that the defendants paid them with his money. But this is not true in fact. The defendants paid for the notes with their notes, and paid their notes with their own money. They had no money of the orator’s then, nor have they had since, to apply on payment for these notes, except that now in controversy. The very question here is about how that money shall be applied, because it has not been applied before. Considerable stress [26]*26is laid upon the method of keeping the books, as the payment of the note of the defendants first due, given for these, was entered as an advance. But the others were not entered so, and, when further entries were made, the amounts of the orator’s notes were entered as advances. These entries were all apparently irregular.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. 17, 18 Blatchf. 507, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridges-v-sheldon-uscirct-1880.