Cartwright v. Gardner

59 Allen 273
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 59 Allen 273 (Cartwright v. Gardner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cartwright v. Gardner, 59 Allen 273 (Mass. 1850).

Opinion

Fletcher, J.

This action was referred to a very able and competent arbitrator, before whom the parties were fully heard, [275]*275Out who, without making any final award, has reported a mass of pamphlets, documents, and writings, for the court to examine, in order to ascertain the facts, and settle the rights of the.parties, and then the decision of the court is to be made the report of the arbitrator. There are some questions of a preliminary nature, which may perhaps be most properly considered, before considering the main grounds of defence.

The plaintiffs were the trustees of a land company, having the title of the land in themselves in trust for the.stockholders, and the notes in question in this suit were given to the plaintiffs, as such trustees, for land, which the plaintiffs gave ai obligation to the defendant to convey to him on payment of the notes. It was maintained, on the part of the defendant, that one of the trustees had relinquished his trust, and had made a conveyance of all his right in the land to the other trustees, and that by reason of such resignation, the suit could not be maintained in his name. Whether or not there had been such an effectual conveyance by the trustee did not clearly appear, but assuming it to be as clear as it is supposed to.be by the defendant, the action may well be maintained; there being nothing to show that the plaintiffs are not able to make the defendant a good title to the land, according to their obligation, upon payment of the notes. The plaintiffs being parties to the notes, a suit may be maintained in their names, for the benefit of those who are really in interest, and for whose benefit the notes were taken. This case is entirely different in principle from that of Adams v. Leland, 7 Pick. 62, which was referred to by the defendant’s counsel.

The defendant also relies upon two letters, one written by one of the plaintiffs, and the other by another of the plaintiffs, each in his letter expressing an opinion that the defendant is under no legal obligation to pay these notes. Various objections were taken before the arbitrator to the admissibility of these letters, which it is not necessary to consider. They do not contain the admission of any material fact, but merely an expression of opinion as to the law. But an expression of the opinion of one of the parties as to the law cannot surely affect the legal rights of either party, or relieve the court of any [276]*276portion of their duty, to consider and adjudicate upon those rights.

But it is said that the plaintiffs, by the expression of such opinions, have encouraged the defendant to incur expense in setting up and maintaining his defence, and that therefore the plaintiffs are estopped now to maintain those legal rights. But surely these opinions do not come within the class of admissions, which are conclusive against a party; even if these plaintiffs were the real parties in interest. Such admissions are admissions of facts ; these are opinions ; and opinions not of facts but of law. Nor can we yield to the force of the argument, as to the weight to be given to these opinions, from a consideration of the better means, which the persons expressing them had of knowing the intention and meaning of the parties, from the surrounding circumstances. The court must form its own opinion óf the intention and meaning of the parties, from the evidence before them in the case.

To understand the other grounds of defence, it is necessarj to present a summary of the facts of the case.

It appears, that in the year 1837, a voluntary association of persons was formed, called the Brunswick Land company, who were the proprietors of a quantity of land at Brunswick, in Georgia, the title to which was vested in these plaintiffs, as trustees, who held the same in trust for the stockholders. It appears, further, that there was at the same time a company incorporated by the legislature of the state of Georgia, called the Brunswick Canal and Railroad company, for the purpose of constructing a canal to conduct the waters of the Altamaha river into the harbor of Brunswick ; thus opening a communication between the harbor of Brunswick and the interior of the state. It was calculated that "the opening of this canal would make Brunswick a great commercial depot, and that of course the lands owned by the land company would become of great value, and give vast gains to the proprietors. There was thus a very intimate connection between these two companies, and the stockholders in truth were nearly though not precisely the same persons. There was a mutual coopeation, though a separate organization, of the two companies. [277]*277The defendant was an active member of both, and for some time a director of the land company.

It was well understood, by all parties, that the enterprise of establishing a commercial depot and building a great city at Brunswick, and of course the value of these lands, depended on the completion of the canal. But all parties, the land company and the canal company, had full faith and the most sanguine and confident expectations, that the canal would be speedily completed; and in pamphlets and otherwise, this faith and confidence were expressed in strong terms. All this was done honestly and in perfect good faith, and apparently on good and solid grounds. Under these circumstances, when to the view of the defendant and his associates, the waters of the Altamaha were soon to be conducted into the harbor of Brunswick, upon which event, it was most confidently believed by all parties, that the Brunswick Land company’s land would at once acquire a new and greatly enhanced value, — on the 25th of May, 1837, the land company offered some of its lands for sale by public auction.

At this sale, the defendant, an active member of both companies, and possessing all the knowledge and means of knowledge, which were possessed by any one, in regard to the affairs and prospects of both companies, became the purchaser of several lots. Agreeably to the terms of sale, he paid a part of the purchase-money, and gave his notes for the remainder; and the plaintiffs gave him their obligation to convey the lands upon payment of the notes, according to the terms of sale. The defendant paid one note and some interest on the others ; and this suit is instituted to recover payment of the three remaining notes, which have never been paid, and which the defendant refuses to pay.

Unexpected obstacles were encountered in the construction of the canal; and in 1840 the enterprise was abandoned; and, with it, of course, ended the project of making Brunswick a great city and commercial depot; and the lands thus purchased by the defendant consequently became and have since remained of little or no value. In short, the high expectations of both the land company and the canal company have [278]*278been entirely and completely disappointed, and their hopes blasted.

xThe defendant now refuses to pay his notes on various grounds : — that they are without consideration ; that the consideration has failed ; that the notes were given upon assurances that the canal would be made, which have not been fulfilled ; that there was mutual error and mistake, and the expectations of the parties have failed; that the plaintiffs’ agent declared that the canal would be finished in one year. These several grounds of defence have been very ably and fully argued by the defendant’s counsel, but it is not necessary to go into a minute and separate consideration of them.

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Bluebook (online)
59 Allen 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cartwright-v-gardner-mass-1850.