Garrow v. Davis

10 F. Cas. 54, 10 N.Y. Leg. Obs. 225
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine
DecidedSeptember 15, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 10 F. Cas. 54 (Garrow v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garrow v. Davis, 10 F. Cas. 54, 10 N.Y. Leg. Obs. 225 (circtdme 1851).

Opinion

WARE, District Judge.

In February, 1S35, John Black, as the agent of the dev-isees of William Bingham, entered into two contracts with one Ramsdell to sell to him a township of land, No. 14, in the county of Hancock, with a strip adjoining it, amounting in the whole to 28,804 acres, at three dollars per acre, the whole amount of the purchase being $86,412, to be paid in five equal installments, the first in sixty days, and the others in one, two, three, and four years, with interest, for which notes were given. The contract contained a proviso that if the notes were not paid according to their tenor, at the election of the vendor the contracts might be declared void, and the money paid should be forfeited. On the 1st of April, 1835, Ramsdell assigned [55]*55all his interest in both contracts to Nathaniel Norton and Junius Keith, and by several mesne assignments, two-thirds of the interest in the contracts came to the plaintiffs by purchase at different times between 1837 and 1841. The first notes for one-fifth of the purchase money were paid at maturity or within a few days after, and Black received at different times afterwards from the different assignees, on account of the contracts, including the first payment, $34,-000.24. He also received for timber taken from the land, $6,006.46, amounting, with the cash payments, to $40,071.70, leaving $40,341.30 due on the contracts, inclusive of interest. In 1830, there was some negotiations with Black for an arrangement by some of the parties interested in the bonds by which they might obtain the means of paying for the land by a .sale of the timber, but the negotiation failed, and nothing further was done till 1844, when Black, July 22, wrote to Miller, one of the plaintiffs, saying that he had heard nothing for several years from the parties, and informing him that he had applications for the purchase of the land, and inquiring what the holders of the bonds intended to do in regard to their interests in them. The plaintiffs wishing to save something for themselves, and not being in a condition, or not desirous of purchasing the land, employed Paulk, one of the defendants, to sell their rights and interest in the contract All their legal rights had become forfeited, or were liable at the election of the vendor to be forfeited, under the proviso, by the non-payment of the purchase money, but as Black had given them no notice of his intention to insist on the forfeiture, it was supposed that their rights in equity were not entirely foreclosed.^ These were a right to complete the purchase by paying what was due on the notes. But since the original contract, the market value of timber lands had so fallen that this tract, which was bargained for in 1835 at three dollars an acre, was now considered to be worth but about one, and the balance remaining due on the contract, inclusive of the accumulation of interest, was more than the present market value of the land. All that Paulk had for sale was, therefore, the good will of the contract; that is, the hope or expectation that the vendor would be willing to sell to them, as the assignees of Ramsdell, in consideration of what they had already paid, at a lower price than he would demand of strangers. It appears from the deposition of Black that though he held the bonds to be entirely forfeited and of no value, he was unwilling to. sell to others until the bonds were surrendered and canceled, and it was evidently considered by others as well as the plaintiffs, that the possession of the contract was worth something in making a bargain with him. Miller first applied to Paulk by letters, on the 11th and 13th of September, requesting him to make inquiries and ascertain whether anything could be saved to the parties interested in the contracts by a sale of them, and expressing a faint hope that the land might be worth something more than the balance remaining due. Paulk in his answer communicated the information that he had obtained, and expressed his opinion that the land was not worth in the market more than one dollar per acre, which was considerably less than the balance due on the note without interest, and that there was little prospect of the holders of the bonds saving anything, unless Black could be induced to make in their favor a considerable abatement of the price. In the last of October, Paulk was regularly authorized by Miller and Norton, two of the plaintiffs, to transfer their interest, and furnished with the original contract to be surrendered to Black. Under this authority he sold the interest of Miller ana Norton to Davis, one of the defendants, for $1,050, November 16th. There was a stipulation in the contract, of sale that the purchaser should have the benefit of the vendor’s communication with Black in regard to the price of the land, and that Paulk should continue the negotiation with him for Davis’ benefit. Davis soon after sold portions of his purchase to the other defendants. It is also alleged in the bill that it was understood that Paulk should act on the behalf of all the parties interested in the bonds, although he was formally authorized only by two of them. The plaintiffs complain and charge in their bill that Paulk entered into a corrupt and fraudulent agreement with the other defendants, to procure for their'common advantage an assignment of these contracts from the plaintiffs for an inadequate and trifling consideration, and then to continue to negotiate in their names with r>iaclc, so that he might be made to believe that whatever abatement he might make in the price would enure to the benefit of the plaintiffs; and it alleged that it was well known that Black, from considerations of equity and favor, was willing to sell to them, and did actually sell under the belief that it was for their benefit, for a much less sum than he could have obtained from other persons. The prayer of the bill is that the defendants may be held as trustees and decreed to assign to the plaintiffs all the right and interest they obtained by virtue of the sale by Black on the payment of such sum as they have paid, and to account for whatever they have received from the sale of timber or otherwise from the land.

Such in substance is the case presented by the plaintiffs’ bill. It is not pretended that they were desirous of becoming purchasers .of the land at the time when Paulk made his contract with Davis, and all that they can equitably demand is to have the benefit of any abatement of the price which from any consideration he might be willing to make, and did actually make, from what he would have demanded and might have ob-[56]*56tamed from strangers, or whatever other value the bonds might have. There is a variety of matter introduced into the bill in giving a history of the transaction relative to the land from the first contract with Itams-dell to the final'sale to Davis, sharing the hardships and losses to which the plaintiffs have been subjected, constituting a strong appeal to the sympathy and favor of Black, if from his position of an agent, and not an owner, he could be supposed to be accessible to any consideration of this kind, and there are various charges against Paulk with regard to his management of the business, which have an application more or less direct and stringent on the question of his good faith in the conduct of his negotiations; but the gravamen of the bill is that which I have stated.

A material question arises, then, whether Black was willing to sell, and actually did sell, under a belief that he was doing a favor to the holders of the bonds, for a less sum than he would have demanded of other persons. The answers of Col. Black to this point are perfectly conclusive.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 54, 10 N.Y. Leg. Obs. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrow-v-davis-circtdme-1851.