Cleaveland v. Richardson

132 U.S. 318, 10 S. Ct. 100, 33 L. Ed. 384, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1879
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 9, 1889
Docket125
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 132 U.S. 318 (Cleaveland v. Richardson) 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
Cleaveland v. Richardson, 132 U.S. 318, 10 S. Ct. 100, 33 L. Ed. 384, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1879 (1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blatchford,

after stating the case as above reported, delivered, the opinion of £he court.

It is contended for the plaintiffs that their assignment to Knickerbocker was not binding upon them, because the defendants did not disclose to them the financial standing of Libbey, nor the fact of his liability as a general partner in the •firm of Cleaveland, Cummings & Woodruff, nor the liability in regard to the debts of that firm assumed by him by the paper set forth in the fifth finding.

But the ninth finding sets forth fully what took place between Knickerbocker and the plaintiffs, on the visit of the former to the latter, at New York, to propose to them to accept from the defendants sixty cents on the dollar. That finding states that Knickerbocker explained the situation of the assets of Cleaveland, Cummings & Woodruff, saying that the borrowed money was to be paid in full, which would not leave enough to pay quite sixty per cent of' the remaining indebtedness (a fact which was true, according to the seventh finding); that Libbey’s liability as a member of the firm was spoken of, when Knickerbocker stated to the plaintiffs that he *327 had not had opportunity to examine into the question and was not in possession of information to know whether Libbey could make a successful defence or not, but that it was a question they could investigate for themselves; and that one of. the plaintiffs said to Knickerbocker that they had sold no goods to the defendants “on the strength that Libbey was more than a special partner,” that no credit had been given to the firm on the faith that Libbey sustained any other relation to it, that Libbey had lost his special capital, and that they had no desire to make him pay more. The ninth finding does not state that Knickerbocker was in possession of any information such as that which he stated to the plaintiffs he was not in possession of.

The ninth finding further says that it does not appear from the evidence that the defendants or Knickerbocker communicated to the plaintiffs the fact that Libbey had signed the paper set forth in the fifth finding, or that-Knickerbocker made any statement as .to Libbey’s financial ability to pay the debts of the defendants’ firm. It is not shown that Knickerbocker made- a false answer to any inquiry put to him by the plaintiffs.

It thus appears that Libbey’s liability as a member of the defendants’, firm was spoken of between Knickerbocker and the plaintiffs; that Knickerbocker made to them no representation that Libbey was not-liable, but substantially stated to them that the question of Libbey’s liability was a matter to be examined into, and one which they could investigate for themselves; that the plaintiffs communicated to Knickerbocker at the time the idea -that, in their dealings with the defendants, they had always acted on the view that Libbey was only a special partner; and that Knickerbocker did not state to the plaintiffs that Libbey was not financially able to pay the debts of the defendants’ firm.

The exact date of this interview in New York, between Knickerbocker and the plaintiffs, does not appear, but it would seem, from the eighth and ninth findings, that an interval of between five and six weeks must have elapsed between the' time of that interview and the 29th of December, 1883, when the assignment to Knickerbocker was executed.

*328 It is not found by the court that it was known to the defendants’ firm or to Libbey that the latter was not merely a special, partner;- nor is it found' that the defendants were guilty of any fraudulent concealment.. The suggestion by Knickerbocker to the plaintiffs that there was a question as to the liability of Libbey as a general partner, was full enough to put them on inquiry, and to call upon them to investigate the question for themselves, during the five or- six weeks that elapsed before they made the assignment to Knickerbocker.

As to the statement in the ninth finding, that it does not appear that the defendants or Knickerbocker. communicated -to the plaintiffs the fact that Libbey had signed the paper set forth in the fifth finding, it is to be remarked that that paper sets forth that the liabilities of the defendants’ firm were to be paid by the proposed new firm of Cummings, Woodruff & Brown; and that the sixth finding states that it was contemplated, on the day that paper bears date, that a new firm would be formed, composed of Cornelius. B. Cummings, Charles W. Woodruff and Swan Brown, as general partners, and Washington Libbey as special partner, but that such new firm was never formed, although Cleaveland. supposed it was so formed when he sold- out to Libbey his interest in the firm of Cleave-land, Cummings & Woodruff, on the day that paper was signed. As the new firm was never formed, that paper had no effective force at the time of the interview between Knickerbocker and the plaintiffs, or at the time the assignment to Knickerbocker was made. Besides, Libbey was to be only a special partner in the new firm.

We are unable to see, in this case, any breach of good faith on the part of the defendants, or any misrepresentation as to. the assets of their firm, or any false answer by Knickerbocker to any question put to him by the plaintiffs.

It is found as a fact, by the court below, that Cleaveland, Cummings and Libbey, with one Shelley, in December, 1881, formed a limited copartnership under the statute of Illinois, under the name of “Cleaveland, Cummings & Shelley,” in which Libbey was a limited partner, having put in $50,000 of capital; that, about the 1st of May, 1883, Shelley went out of *329 the firm, and Woodruff came into it, the firm being then called “Cleaveland, Cummings & Woodruff;” and that that firm intended, as between its members, to do business as a.limited partnership, but did not take the steps required by law to make itself • a limited partnership under the statute of Illinois. It is not found that either Cleaveland, or Cummings, or Woodruff, or Libbey, supposed at any . time that the copartnership was other than, a limited one; and it distinctly appears, by the ninth finding, that the plaintiffs, in selling their goods to the defendants,, all the time regarded Libbey as only a special partner.

' In a case very like the one before us (Dambmann v. Schulting, 15 N. Y. 55) it was held that a party, can commit a legal fraud, in a business transaction with another, only by fraudulent-misrepresentations of fact, or by such conduct or artifice, for a fraudulent purpose, as will mislead the other party, or throw him off his guard, and cause him to omit inquiry or examination which he would otherwise make; that where there is no such relation of trust or confidence between the parties as imposes upon one an obligation to give full information to the other, the latter cannot proceed blindly, ’omitting all inquiry and examination, and then complain tl.-^ the other did not volunteer to give the information he had; that ignorance of a fact extrinsic and not essential to a contract, but which, if known, might have influenced the action of a party to-the contract, is not such a mistake as will authorize equitable relief; and that, as to such facts, the party must rely upon his own vigilance, and, if not imposed upon or defrauded, will be held to his contract.

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Bluebook (online)
132 U.S. 318, 10 S. Ct. 100, 33 L. Ed. 384, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleaveland-v-richardson-scotus-1889.