Cable v. Ellis

110 U.S. 389, 4 S. Ct. 85, 28 L. Ed. 186, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1706
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 4, 1884
Docket525
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 110 U.S. 389 (Cable v. Ellis) 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
Cable v. Ellis, 110 U.S. 389, 4 S. Ct. 85, 28 L. Ed. 186, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1706 (1884).

Opinion

*390 Me. Chief Justice Waite

delivered, the opinion of-the court.

This is an appeal from- an order of the Circuit Court remanding a suit removed from a State court. From the confused mass of pleadings, exhibits, proofs, orders, and decrees, making a volume of more than five hundred printed pages, sent here as a transcript of the record below, and the reports of the decisions of the Supreme Court of Illinois in Sumner v. Waugh, 56 Ill. 531, Cable v. Ellis, 86 Ill. 525, and Ellis v. Sisson, 96 Ill. 105, referred to on both sides as part of the case, we have, with the help of the briefs of counsel, extracted the following facts, which, in our opinion, are decisive of the present controversy:

On the 3d of June, 1858, Thomas B. Ellis bought of John M. Waugh and Henry B. Ellis certain lands and mill property in Illinois. 'Waugh and Henry B. Ellis were at the time indebted to Thomas B. Ellis to the amount of $8,000 or thereabouts, and the mill property was encumbered by a mortgage to Benjamin ■ T. Sisson for $9,280. Thomas B. Ellis paid for the property by releasing the debt due himself, assuming the mortgage to Sisson, and giving his own notes to Waugh and Henry B, Ellis, secured- by mortgage on the property for $14,984.54. On the 30th of September, 1858, Thomas B. Ellis entered into a written contract with Sisson and John B. Bath-bun for the sale, release, and conveyance of “ all his paid in' interest ” in the property, for which the purchasers were to pay as in the agreement specified, including with the rest such a sum to Thomas B. Ellis personally as from authenticated bills it should appear he had “ paid in.” To secure the payment of such sum as should be found to be due him a mortgage was to be given on the property. Under this contract possession was delivered to the purchasers.

Disputes having arisen as to the amount of the-' “ authenticated bills,” Thomas B.. Ellis, on the 21st of March, 1861, filed a bill in chancery in the Mercer County Circuit Court to enforce a specific performance of the contract. To this bill Waugh, Sisson, and Rathbun were made defendants, and the prayer was that the mortgages of Waugh and Henry B. Ellis to Sisson, and Thomas B. Ellis to Waugh and Henry B. Ellis *391 might be cancelled,' and that the amount of purchase money-due Thomas B. Ellis from Sisson and Bathbun might be ascertained and adjudged to be the paramount lien on the property in the hands of the purchasers. As to Waugh, the averments were, in substance, that he was “in fact and in equity a purchaser of the property "with Sisson and Bathbun, and that by the terms of the contract, the notes and mortgage of Thomas B. Ellis, then held by Waugh, and the mortgage to' Sisson, were to be cancelled and a first lien on the property given to Thomas B. Ellis as security for the purchase money to be paid to him.

In 1862 Sisson assigned his notes and mortgages to Austin, Sumner & Co., and in 1864 they began a suit for foreclosure in the Mercer County Circuit Court, making Waugh, Sisson, Thomas B. Ellis, and Henry B. Ellis defendants. Thomas B. Ellis answered, and also filed a cross-bill, in which he set up his sale of the property and a cancellation under that sale of the mortgage to Sisson before the transfer to Austin, Sumner & Co. The Circuit Court decreed against Austin, Sumner & Co., and dismissed their bill, but upon appeal to the Supreme Court, the decree dismissing the bill was reversed in 1869, but the lien of Austin, Sumner & Co. was postponed to that of Thomas B. Ellis for the purchase-money under his contract of sale. .As to the mortgage of Thomas B. Ellis to Waugh arid Henry B. Ellis, the language of the opinion is as follows:

This contract postponed also the mortgage in question to the mortgage executed by T. B. Ellis to Waugh and H. B. Ellis. They were not parties to it, and could not be bound by its provisions. Although the contract seems to contemplate that their .mortgage was also to be cancelled, it does not appear how or in what mode, and not being parties to the agreement, they cannot be affected by it. It is, therefore, the first lien on the property, and must be so held. The whole case, somewhat complicated, it is true,- shows a contest between equities. That the complainants have some which should have been regarded by the Circuit Court and decreed' to them, we cannot doubt. The bill should not, therefore, have been dismissed. In order that the equities of the complainants may be enforced, it seems necessary that there should be a foreclosure of the Waugh and Ellis mortgage. . . . *392 The pleadings are not' framed with' a view ,to any relief as to the Waugh and Ellis mortgage, or as to any substitution of the complainants to the rights of Waugh in the Waugh and Ellis mortgage. Leave will be given to amend the pleadings as the parties may be advised, and to take further proofs.” Sumner v. Waugh, 56 Ill. 541, 542.

The case was then remanded for further proceedings in conformity with the opinion, in which suggestions were made as to what should be done if the Waugh and Ellis mortgage should be found to be a valid and subsisting lien.

After this decision Philander L. Cable took from Waugh an assignment of the note and mortgage of Thomas B. Ellis to Waugh and Henry B. Ellis, anil in 1872 began a suit in the Mercer County Circuit Court for a foreclosure. To this suit Thomas B. Ellis, Sisson, and Austin, Sumner & Co. were made defendants. Thomas B. Ellis answered, setting up his contract of sale; and claiming a cancellation of the mortgage thereby.

On the 6th of May, 1873, an order was entered in the Circuit Court consolidating the three suits, tó wit, that of Thomas B. Ellis, that of Austin, Sumner & Go., and that of Philander L. Cable. Erom that time these three suits were proceeded in as one'and involving the same, general matter. On the 10th of June, 1875, the Circuit Court entered a decree establishing the claim of Thomas B. Ellis as against Cable. From this decree Cable appealed to the Supreme Court, where, in 1877, after holding that the Sisson mortgage could not be enforced as against Thomas B. Ellis, it was said in the opinion delivered:

“ It was doubtless the intention of the contract of September 30th that the latter mortgage also [that to Waugh and Ellis,] as well as the former [that of Sisson] should be cancelled, so as to give T. B. Ellis a superior lien upon the property for the security of the payment of his paid-in interest, and for the carrying out of such intention, and being, impressed with the justice of the claim of T. B. Ellis that he should have such security, we have anxiously sought for some satisfactory ground, upon which we might rest the support of such a"claim, but we have not been able to discover .any. . '. . "The written contract of September *393 30th, 1858, was not signed by Waugh, and we cannot hold him as bound by that contract to discharge and release his mortgage, although we may strongly suspect there was a secret understanding to that effect.” Cable v. Ellis, 86 Ill. 539, 540.

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Bluebook (online)
110 U.S. 389, 4 S. Ct. 85, 28 L. Ed. 186, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cable-v-ellis-scotus-1884.