Flanders v. Seelye

105 U.S. 718, 26 L. Ed. 1217, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2182
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 18, 1882
Docket258
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 105 U.S. 718 (Flanders v. Seelye) 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
Flanders v. Seelye, 105 U.S. 718, 26 L. Ed. 1217, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2182 (1882).

Opinion

*719 Mr. 'Justice Blatchford

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought- in the Sixth District Court for the Parish of Orleans, in. the State of Louisiana, by Seelye, the defendant in error, against'Flanders, the plaintiff in'error, in November,' 18.71, and was removed by certiorari, before issue joined, into the Circuit Court of the -United States, for the • District of Louisiana, In .his petition-filed in the State court, Seelye 'claimed to recover from Flanders the sum of $6,233.61, with legal interest from judicial demand'. The .grounds of the claim, as set forth in the petition, were, that, in March, 1866, 178 bales of cotton were delivered at the pickery of the firm' of Seelye & Atwood, in New' Orleans, of which firm Seelye was a member, under the instructions of Flanders, who was at' that time acting supervisor and .special agent of the Treasury Department of the United States; that, the firm received from Flanders, at the same time, a written order ..tb pay the charges on the cotton, amounting'to $5,907.45; that the firm, in obedience to those instructions^ received the cotton and paid the charges ; that, in April, 1866, the firm receive^ an order • from one Burbridge, supervisor and special agent •qf the Treasury Department of the United States, directing them to • deliver said cotton to one Harrison, but to retain the charges and expenses on said cotton;. that, in obedience to said order, the, firm delivered the cotton to'Harrisón, and received , from him the amount of charges originally paid by them, and their own charges for storage of the cotton, being in all $6,063.81; that the amount was paid by Harrison under, protest, and he sub-, sequently sued Seelye, and another person, as composing' the firm, and recovered a judgment against them in the Circuit Court of the United States, for $4,661.45, with interest from June,, 1866, to July, 1871, and costs, making in all $5,891.44; that that sum was paid by Seelye to Harrison :in satisfaction of that judgment; that he. also paid, as costs of" court in that suit, $92, and for counsel fees in defending the suit $250; and that these sums, with the amount of the judgment, make the $6,233.61. The petition' alleges that all-that Seelye so did in the premises, and all that he was so finally compelled to pay, was the direct result of the written-orders received by the firm *720 from Flanders, and claims that Flanders is bound to reimburse to him the entire amount so paid, either in direct obedience to his orders or as the nécessary result of that obedience. In January, 1872, Flanders filed exceptions in the Circuit Court to the petition, which were overruled by the court in April, 1872. These exceptions raised the questions that Seelye had no .right of action alone, and that the court had no jurisdiction. After the overruling of these exceptions, Flanders filed a pleading combining exceptions with an answer.' The exceptions related to the defences of prescription and want of jurisdiction. The answer set up that when Seelye received the cotton from Flanders and paid the charges, he knew that Flanders had taken the cotton in his said official capacity acting under the act of Congress ot March 12, 1863, c. 20 (12 Stat. 820); that the charges directed by Flanders to be paid were a legal charge on the cotton under the provisions of said act; that they were refunded by Harrison to the firm as an admitted claim; that Harrison then brought the said suit to recover back the amount he had so allowed and paid; that the defendants in said suit set’ up ‘*in their answer therein that they received the cotton from Flanders, acting as such special agent, and paid by his orders the charges thereon, and the same were lawful charges thereon, and were acquiesced in by Harrison and reimbursed to them; that after judgment in the suit the defendants in it sued out a writ of error to this court, which writ they failed to prosecute, and it was, therefore, dismissed by this court in December, 1870 ; that in July, 1871, they voluntarily paid the judgment; that the defence set up in the suit was, if founded in fact, a good and valid one, and their neglect to prosecute it cannot be allowed to operate to the prejudice of Flanders ; that the Circuit Court had no jurisdiction in the" suit; that Seelye lost all recourse against Flanders, if any he ever had, by reason of his failure to plead to the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court in the suit, and because of his failure to prosecute said writ of error; and that Flanders is not responsible for the costs incurred by Seelye in the suit, or for his counsel fees therein. The answer concluded with these words: “.And for all such matters and' things in plaintiff’s petition contained as are not herein replied to, respondent for answer pleads the general *721 issue, and prays to be hence dismissed with costs.” The suit was tried by a jury in the Circuit Court in April, 1873. On the 19th of March, 1874, the court set aside the verdict and granted a new trial. • On the 27th of March, 1874, an exception was filed, alleging, as a peremptory exception to the petition and the action, that the allegations in the petition, if true, as pleaded, are insufficient in law to entitle the plaintiff to any recovery against the defendant, “for the same do not disclose any cause of action in behalf of said plaintiff against said defendant.” The suit remained in this condition for nearly five years, when, .in January, 1879, the defendant pleaded all applicable prescriptions as a peremptory exception. Then the parties filed a written stipulation agreeing to waive the intervention of a jury, and submitting the cause to the court “ upon the issues of fact as well as of law. The findings 'and the judgment of the Circuit Court are embraced in one paper. It states that the court, “having heard the evidence' and the arguments of. counsel, overrules all the exceptions taken by defendant to the plaintiff’s petition.” It then specially finds the facts, and awards judgment to the plaintiff for $6,233.61, with interest and costs. It also grants a certificate of probable cause .for the seizure of the cotton, and for all the doings of Flanders in the premises, as deputy general agent of the Treasury Department of the United States, and directs that no execution shall issue oh the judgment. There is no bill of exceptions in the record. As the findings are special, the review by this court may extend to the determination of the sufficiency of the facts found to support the judgment.

The following facts were found by the Circuit Court, only those being stated here which are material in the view we take of the case, although some others were found: The 178 bales of cotton while in the possession of Harrison were, under color of the above-cited act, seized by an assistant special agent of the Treasury Department of the United States. They were shipped from Shreveport, consigned to one Burbridge, supervising special agent of the Treasury Department at New Orleans, subject to charges and freight amounting to $5,907.45. Seelye’s firm received the cotton from a steamboat and gave a receipt for it, which stated that they held it subject to the *722 order of the collector of the port of New Orleans. The firm paid the amount of freight and charges to the steamboat, on an order signed by Flankers, as deputy general agent, reading thus: “ Seelye &

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 U.S. 718, 26 L. Ed. 1217, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flanders-v-seelye-scotus-1882.