City of Memphis v. Brown

87 U.S. 289, 22 L. Ed. 264, 20 Wall. 289, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1506
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 18, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 87 U.S. 289 (City of Memphis v. Brown) 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
City of Memphis v. Brown, 87 U.S. 289, 22 L. Ed. 264, 20 Wall. 289, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1506 (1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice HUNT,

having stated the general nature of the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

I. The first’ three assignments of error are based.-‘upon a •single idea, to wit, that there was error in decreeing that Brown & Co. could discharge themselves from theiiiobligation to return the bonds loaned to them by paying their market value; that the same error existed in.regar^ io the bonds overpaid them on the bond' contracts, and alsp.au relation to the bonds paid to them on the cash contracts,.

As to each class it is insisted that the bonds ip Specie should have been returned or their nominal fapfeTvalue allowed to the city. , The'loan was of 240 bonds of $1000 each. At the time of making thé loan there was due to. Brown .& Co. on the paving contracts several hundred thousand dollars.- This indebtedness the city did not wish to pay, or was linable to pay. To meet the emergency the’city loaned its bonds to "Brown & Co., to be return „d in eighteen months with interest...

The argument is that by their contract Brown & Co. *304 agreed to return the bonds to the city, and that a specific performance of this agreement is necessary to do justice to the city.

Conceding the power of the court to compel the specific performance of a contract relating to personal property, this does.not appear to be a ease justifying its exercise. Specific performance is never decreed where the party can be otherwise fully compensated. *

If Brown & Co. have received bonds of the city, which they are bound to return, and do not return, what damage does the city suffer? The face of the bonds and interest, it is said, as if they run to maturity, the city will then be liable, for the. payment of the whole amount. Not so. We are not to inquire what may be the damage' to the city eighteen years heuce, but what it suffers at the present time by the default of Brown & Co. If Brown & Co. should now be. decreed to pay the face of the bonds, instead of an indemnity, the city would make an actual profit. Suppose' the amount of bonds in. question to be $200,000. With the sum of $100,000 the city could now purchase the whole amount of .bonds supposed to be in issue, and retain as a premium or .profit the remaining $100,000. In his brief the appellant’s counsel says that it is not niaterial that the very bonds loaned shall be returned, so that an equal'amount, with corresponding coupons, are returned. That this equal amount may now be purchased by the city at fifty cents on the dollar-would seem to be conclusive, that when Brown & Co. are charged with the bonds at.fifty cents on the dollar, and the. city is credited with that sum, that the damage of the city for the item in question is properly assessed.

But it is said that the city has not the money at command to buy these bonds; that it cannot thus indemnify itself, and, therefore, its loss is' the face of the bonds. This considera-. tion can have -no legitimate influence. A rule of law is based upon principle, upon sound considerations of justice and' public policy, and usually as manifested by the precedents *305 and authorities. It is the same for all classes and conditions. None are so high as to .be above its claims, none so low as to be beneath its protection. ' It will be a sad era in the history of any country when the application of a rule of law shall depend upon the wealth or the poverty of a party to a suit; upon his wealth; which would thus enable him to’ increase that wealth, or his poverty; which would be thereby aggravated.

No court and no government can protect against the misfortunes of poverty. The unfortunate mortgagor who sees his farm sold by his rigid creditor for half its value, for the want of money to redeem it,.receives our sympathy, but the rules of law cannot be altered or suspended to aid him.1 So, in the case before us, the law is the same, whether the city of Memphis is in funds or whether it has no funds. The value of its bonds in the market is fifty cents on the dollar. With that amount of money it can now place in its treasury the bonds which Brown & Co. fail to return. It is difficult to see that the damage sustained can he beyond that amount.

Whether the city .had the legal right to loan its Donds does not seem to be a practical-question. It did loan them, and the contractors received them. If not a loan, the transaction was a gift, which will not be pretended,; or it was a loan of so much money as was realized by their sale. The defence of usury is not set up in the pleadings, or. apparently claimed on the trial, and it cannot now be urged. We . assume the issue of the bonds to have béeii a legal transaction, and think the rule of damages for their uou-retürn ivas properly fixed by the master.

In Dana v. Fiedler, * the court say: “ Complete indemnity requires that the vendee shall receive that sum which, with the price he had agreed to pay, would enable him to buy the-article which the vendor had. failed to deliver.”

In Griffith v. Burden, being a suit, for the conversion of a State bond, the court say;- “ Another rule, equally well *306 grounded and more frequently applied, is that the damages ought to be such as will compensate the party for his loss. In this case the plaintiff has lost his bond. Another like bond of precisely equal value to, the plaintiff can be purchased in the market for the amount of the verdict in this case, .the market value. . Hence the verdict compensates him for his loss, and is the precise measure of damages.”

[This resolution, and the contract of November 20th reciting it, are set forth, supra, p. 295. — Rep.]

These are the general rules upon the subject, and that they control thé question in the case before us, sufficiently appears from numerous authorities. *

. II. It is insisted, secondly, by the appellants that Brown & Co. cannot maintain a^ suit, on the paving contracts, for the reason that by the resolution and contract of November 20th, 1868, Brown & Co. released the city from all liabilities upon the paving contract, uuless it should be decided by the courts of last resort that the property-holders are not liable to pay for the same.

In deciding upon the effect of this contract the situation and condition of the parties are to be considered. Brown & Co., the contractors, had embarked in' an enterprise involving the expenditure of nearly a million of dollars. The propertv-owners refused to pay the assessments made upon them. The city was not able or was not willing to meet its gua- inty of payment, and was indebted to the contractors' in the amount of'several hundred thousand dollars. The contractors must have relief or go to the‘wall, as their predecessors had done. They applied to the city for that relief, and instead of making payments, the city'-undertook to .make á loan of its bonds. ' .It imposed harsh and severe con-, ditions which, nothing except.-the financial desperation of the contractors'could justify them in accepting.

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Bluebook (online)
87 U.S. 289, 22 L. Ed. 264, 20 Wall. 289, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-memphis-v-brown-scotus-1874.