Garrow v. Davis

56 U.S. 272, 14 L. Ed. 692, 15 How. 272, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 284
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 27, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 56 U.S. 272 (Garrow v. Davis) 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
Garrow v. Davis, 56 U.S. 272, 14 L. Ed. 692, 15 How. 272, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 284 (1854).

Opinion

*276 Mr. Justice CURTIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a- decree of the Circuit Court of the United States, for the District of Maine, dismissing the complainants’ bill. The substance of the bill is, that John Black, as agent for the trustees under the -will of William Bingham, • on the 17th of February, 1835, contracted, in writing, with Charles Ramsdale to sell to him a township and adjacent tracts of land in that State, containing twenty thousand eight hundred and four acres, for the price of three dollars, per acre, payable one fifth in sixty days, and the residue in four equal annual payments — the contract of sale expressly providing that, in case of failure to make either of these payments, the contract was to be void. That, on the 1st day of April, 1835, Ramsdale assigned these contracts to Nathaniel Norton and Jairas Keith, in consideration of their agreement to pay to him the sum of two dollars for each acre of the said lands; and that, at a still further advance of one dollar on an acre, the contracts of Black came to the complainants and one Herman Norton, by assignment, in November, 1835.

That Ramsdale made the first, and the complainants some. other payments, amounting in the whole to about forty thousand dollars, but failed to pay the residue. That subsequent to the year 1840, nothing was done by them concerning the lands until after July, 1844, when one of the complainants received from Black a letter stating that, though all their rights were terminated many years since, he desired to know whether they wished to do any thing respecting the payments for the lands. That, thereupon, Miller, one of the complainants, employed Ephraim Paulk, one of the defendants, to negotiate with Black, and finally instructed him, to ascertain from Black the lowest price at which he would let the complainants have the land, and then to sell the complainants’ rights and interests under the contracts for the highest price he could obtain — the supposition of the complainants being, that Black would sell the lands to them for much less than he could obtain from others, by reason of their having already paid a large sum towards the purchase-money, under the contracts above mentioned. The bill further states, that Paulk sold and assigned the contracts to Davis for the sum of $1,050; and it charges that, before doing so, he entered into a fraudulent combination with Davis and the other defendants to obtain from the complainants an assignment of these contracts for a trifling sum, and then to negotiate with Black as if for the complainants, and thus defraud the complainants of what Black should be willing to discount from the fair value of the lands, on account of their peculiar equities; that he, in combination *277 with the other defendants, actually executed this scheme, and obtained the lands from Black for a much less price than could have been got from others, by reason of Black’s belief that he was abating the price for the benefit of the complainants. And the bill .prays that the defendants may be treated as trustees of the complainants, in respect to these lands, and for an account, and- for other relief.

So far as respects the title to these lands, or any claim of the complainants to have them charged with a trust in their favor, we think the complainants, upon the statements in their bill, and upon the proofs, have made no case. They had no legal- or equitable title under their contracts with Black. ' Being in default for more than sé^en years, and about four years having elapsed since any thing i.ad been done by them under these expired contracts, they were not in a condition to insist on any rights or claims to the land;' and, as will be presently more fully stated, Black did not treat with' them or their agent upon the basis of any legal or equitable right, nor is it alleged that they had any intention or took any measures to acquire the lands. In consequence chiefly of Black’s letter, of the 22d of July, 1844, inquiring what they wished to do about the payments, they conceived that Black might be willing to sell the lands to them for less than he would sell them to others, and that this good will might be a valuable subject of sale. To dispose of it, they employed the defendant, Paulk. If they have been defrauded, in its. sale, by the defendants, they are entitled to relief; but in the lands themselves they had no interest, and did not intend) by Paulk’s agency, to acquire any; and if-all the fraud charged in the bill was perpetrated, it affected not any title of theirs to the land, or any negotiation for its acquisition, but solely the compensation which they might otherwise have obtained' for Black’s good will towards them, as the holders of the expired contracts. This was the only subject-matter upon which the alleged fraud could operate.

To this subject-matter our inquiries must be limited. To entitle themselves to relief, the complainants must prove fraud and damage; or, to state the principle less abstractly, they must • show that their agent disposed of what he was employed to sell, for less than its value, and that he did this, fraudulently.

The value of the complainants’ interest is alleged by the bill to have consisted in the intention of Black to sell the lands to the complainants for less than their fair value; and this intention is alleged to have been actually executed by Black, by a sale to the defendants at a price far less than he could have obtained from others, under the belief that this abatement of price was for the benefit of the complainants. If this were so, *278 it could not be doubted that the complainants’ interest was a valuable one, and that its value was capable of being precisely ascertained; for it would then amount to the sum which Black thus abated from the market price of the lands.

But the proofs not only fail to show that' Black intended to abate any thing from the price, but they leave no doubt that he actually sold the lands for their fair market value, without any abatement whatever. The complainants have taken his testimony, and he declares, that he did not consider the complainants had any legal or equitable claims originating from the contracts; that he never intended to make them any allowance or consideration on the renewal of the bonds or contracts, that when he sold the lands,,he did not consider that he had ¡nade any deduction on account of any claims of the complainants; that if any other person had offered him more for the lands than Paulk did, he should have sold them to such other person; and if' Paulk had not taken the lands at $30,000, he should have sold at that price to any one who offered it. So far, therefore, as respects the motives of Black, and his own views of the nature of the transaction, his testimony is in direct conflict with the allegations in the bill. And so far as it tends to prove that he did not sell the lands for less than he could have obtained from others, but demanded and received the fair market price for them, it is corroborated by every witness who has been examined concerning its value. Dwinal and George N.

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Bluebook (online)
56 U.S. 272, 14 L. Ed. 692, 15 How. 272, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrow-v-davis-scotus-1854.