Foster v. Goddard

66 U.S. 506, 17 L. Ed. 228, 1 Black 506, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 508
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 24, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 66 U.S. 506 (Foster v. Goddard) 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
Foster v. Goddard, 66 U.S. 506, 17 L. Ed. 228, 1 Black 506, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 508 (1862).

Opinion

Mr. Justice SWAYNE.

These are cross appeals of the same cause in equity. Foster is the complainant, and Goddard the respondent. The record is voluminous. The questions presented for our consideration are questions of fact. No legal question arises in the case, with the exception of a single point touching the form and effect of exceptions to a master’s report. The case involves .nothing else that can be of- interest in any other case. We have considered it with all the care which the magnitude of the amounts involved, and the fulness of preparation and ability with ¡which it has been presented, demand a.t oúr hands.

Upon some of the points pressed in the argument at bar, we have found difficulty in reaching conclusions satisfactory to ourselves, and such as we could all unite in. In the end, we have been able to do so. ■

We adopt the analysis of the case presented in the opening brief of the counsel of the complainants. It has the double merit of brevity and extreme clearness:

“ The bill alleges the execution by the parties of two several contracts, .bearing date, respectively, June 24, 1843, and May 7, 184.9..

“By the first of these complainant was to proceed to Valparaiso, remain there five years, and devote himself exclusively to the transaction of respondent’s business, for which he was to receive, at the -end of -said five years, a portion of the net profits. By the second contract the co'mplainabt was to proceed to the west coast of South America, and devote his time to the management of respondent’s business in those, parts, and also in Mexico and California, for which he was to receive, on his return, a portion of the profits of the business* in the trade which complainant should have conducted to completion. This agreement also provided that complainant might terminate the contract at any time, by giving so riiueh notice that any voyage respondent might have commenced previous to the *508 receipt of such notice should receive the benefit of complainant’s services to its final accomplishment. The prayer was that an account might be taken, and respondent decreed to pay complainant what was due.

“On the 3d of-August, 1857, the respondent filed his answer, in which he admits the execution of said contracts, the rendition of the services by said Poster, and the possession of books of account-, from which the amount, if any,-due said Poster can be ascertained; alleges reasons for his delay in making up said accounts, and avers that the last mentioned contract determined on 31st of December, 1850.

1 “ On the 13th of August the complainant filed an amended bill, setting forth more particularly the mode in which the business was conducted, and the accounts kept and rendered to respondent, through the house of Alsop & Co.

“ To this respondent filed an answer on the 4th of September, 1857. To this the general replication was filed, and the eause, by consent, was sent to a master to take an account,, with special instructions. On the 8th May, 1858, the complainant, by leave of the court, withdrew his replication, and filed another amendment, alleging an agreement between the parties, that the second voyage of the ship Crusader should be taken and deemed within the said first agreement. To this the respondent filed an answer denying the allegation: The general replication was' then filed, and the cause was then committed to the same master, with instructions similar to those formerly given, ■

“The master made his report June 2d, 1858, to which’the respondent alleged ten exceptions.

“The cause came on for hearing before the Circuit Court, for the first circuit, at the October term, 1858. The learned' judge, by his decree, sustained the first and tenth of the exceptions, and overruled the rest, and ordered the master’s report to be reformed accordingly, which was done.

“Prom.this decree the complainant and the respondent severally appealed.”

We have considered all th,ese exceptions with care. The argument at bar-was confined chiefly to the first, second, third, *509 and tenth. The complainant objects to the action of the court touching the first and tenth, which were sustained: The defendant objects, because the second and third were overruled. In regard to the fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth exceptions, it is sufficient to remark, that we see no reason to doubt the correctness of the master’s findings to which they relate. In this we concur with the court below. They were not pressed by the defendant’s counsel in the argument at bar. We deem it unnecessary to discuss the evidence, or the legal views by which the master’s conclusions’are sustained.

Before proceeding to consider the four remaining exceptions, we deem it proper to advert to an objection made to their form by the. counsel for the complainant. It is said that such an exception is in the nature of a special demurrer, and that these are not so full and specific that the court can consider them.

Such is not the rulé of this court. All that is necessary is, that the exception should distinctly point out the finding and conclusion of the master which it seeks to reverse. Having done so, it brings up for examination all questions of fact and of law arising upon the report of the master relative to that subject. The exceptions in this ease are sufficiently full. They are in accordance with the experience of each member of the court in the administration of equity jurisprudence elsewhere.

We come now to the consideration of the exceptions which have been specially named.

“Second exception: For that the said master has erroneously charged this respondent with the sum of seventeen hundred and eighty-nine dollars and eighty-nine cents, the amount of a loss made in the prosecution of the business aforesaid, by a sale of goods to the New England Worsted Company,'for which they have not paid, but refuse to pay.” ■ ■

The master’s report, touching this subject, is as follows:

“The company were charged, on the ..hooks of Goddard, with the sum of $2,173 04, on the balance of an account due for wool; but the amount due was in dispute between them In 1850 or 1851 the company tendered in payment about *510 $1,500, which Goddard, declined to receive. Nothing further was done'by either party until January, 1857, after the claim had been outlawed three years, when the company offered the sum of $1,789 89, but Mr. Goddard refused to receive.it, and also declined to permit Poster to receive his proportion of that sum.

“It. is contended by the respondent that he had a right to conduct his.own business in his own way, being responsible to Poster only for any want of good faith, and that he was neither' bound to accept a sum less than what he believed to be due, nbr to institute a' suit to recover what he claimed; and that if any loss has thereby occurred, it is properly chargeable to the business. . . '

“The management of the business, including the collectipn of the accounts, was under the absolute control of Goddard, and in conducting it he was responsible, I think, only for the exercise of good faith and ordinary diligence.

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Bluebook (online)
66 U.S. 506, 17 L. Ed. 228, 1 Black 506, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-goddard-scotus-1862.