Gass v. Stinson

10 F. Cas. 64, 2 Sumn. 453
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 F. Cas. 64 (Gass v. Stinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gass v. Stinson, 10 F. Cas. 64, 2 Sumn. 453 (circtdma 1836).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

The present bill is brought by Gass to be relieved from his suretyship and liability under the bond given to Stinson, upon several grounds. In the first place, he insists, that the nature and character of the suretyship were essentially changed after the execution of the bond, without his consent, by a contract (commonly called a contract of sale and return), by which in effect James, instead of a mere agent, became a conditional purchaser of the granite, liable, if he sold it for certain stipulated prices, and for all the bad debts contracted under his own sales, however faithful might be nis conduct, in the course of his agency. In the next place he insists, that he did give notice of his dissatisfaction at remaining surety to Stinson, who waived any formal nofice; and he was thereupon entitled to be discharged from all liability for the future agency of James. In the third place he insists, that a bond with new sureties was accepted from James with the avowed understanding of its being a substitute for that originally given by Gass. In the fourth place, he insists that a certain contract, called the New Orleans contract, by which James and another engaged to furnish granite for building a bank at New Orleans. which was made known to and acted upon by Stinson, and for which the granite, charged in the account against James, was furnished by Stinson, is in no sense a contract or proceeding appertaining to the agency, for which Gass is liable under his bond. All these various matters are insisted upon in some form or other in the charges in the bill, and in the argument at the- bar on behalf of Gass, and they are all denied in the answer and in the argumént on the other side.

Before -proceeding to a consideration of these matters, thus put directly in contestation by the parties, it is necessary to dispose of one or two preliminary points, which grow out of the collateral agreement stated in the case, as to the obligation and construction of that paper. It is contended by Stinson that he never gave any authority to the deputy warden to sign any such paper; and, that it was not a part of the original contract with Gass at the time of executing it, but was a subsequent unauthorized proceeding. And it is further contended, that the true interpretation of the agreement, if valid, is, that the settling of the accounts of the agency, paying the balance, and delivering over the property of the prison in the hands of James, constitute a condition precedent to the right of Gass to avail himself of the written notice. It appears to me, that the true and reasonable interpretation of the instrument is, that Gass upon giving the ten days notice was entitled to be discharged from his liability, or, as the instrument phrases it, “to discontinue his liability” for the future proceedings of James, remaining, however, liable for the balance-then due to Stinson, and for the delivering over of the other property then in his hands. Upon any other construction, Stinson and James, by any arrangement between themselves, as to continuing the agency, or as to not settling the accounts, or not requiring such balance or property to be paid or delivered, would have it in their power to defeat the whole intent of the instrument, and to hold Gass to an indefinite responsibility as surety. It seems to me, therefore, that the natural interpretation of the terms of the agreement is, that the proviso is not a condition precedent to the right of Gass to liberate himself from future suretyship, but is a qualification of the effect of the notice, as to his discharge from liability for antecedent proceedings under the agency.

The other point involves considerations of a very different nature; and in- one aspect would be decisive of the case against Stin-son. If, as Stinson in his answer, solemnly affirms, he gave no authority to the deputy warden to enter into this collateral agreement with Gass, and it was a stipulation on the part of Gass at the time of executing the bond, that it should be entered into, thus forming the substratum of his suretyship, it is very clear, that the bond and agreement must, as to Gass, be treated as nullities; for neither instrument in such a case could operate unless both did, the one being the motive for the other. But I am abundantly satisfied, that the collateral agreement, though executed after the bond, on the same day, was understood by all parties to be a part of the res gestae, and the very condition of Gass’s assuming the suretyship. And I am also as well satisfied, that as Stinson accepted and acted upon the bond with a full’ knowledge of the nature and effect of the collateral agreement without objection; and, indeed, as some of the evidence shows, with a positive adoption of the latter; it must be taken to be a final ratification of the whole-transaction on his part, and binding upon him. In the whole course of the subsequent: [66]*66negotiations and proceedings there is not a tittle of evidence establishing his disapproval of it.

We may now proceed to the examination of the other questions in the case. In respect to the first, viz. the change of the relation between Stinson and James, from that of a mex-e agency in the sale of granite to third persons, to that of a conditional purchase, or sale and return, I entirely agi-ee with the argument at the bar, that, if made out in point of fact, it is so total a departure from the trae nature of the original agency, and involves so much more responsibility and risk, that it will amount to a discharge of Gass; or rather, the transactions will fall without the condition of the bond. The difficulty is in coming to the conclusion, that the fact is precisely made out Stinson explicitly denies it in his answer. James as explicitly affirms it in his deposition. His competency as a witness in this case has beeix objected to; but I cannot perceive, what interest he has in the present suit, to which he is not a party, and by the event of which he can neither gain nor lose. If the plaintiff succeeds in the suit, James is not discharged from his liability; if he fails, the ■costs must be exclusively borne by the plaintiff. The case of Riddle v. Moss, 7 Cranch [11 U. S.] 206, is distinguishable. There the ■surety was sued at law on the bond; and his principal, who was offered as a witness, had made over his property to the surety to indemnify him for the event of that very suit The court on this account, as well as that his liability would be increased to the extent of the costs of the suit, if the judgment was for the plaintiff, held the principal an incompetent witness. It appears to me, however, as the result of the subsequent correspondence and acts of the parties, that the proposal contained in the letter of the T2th of February, 1831, by which Stinson proposed to change the former agreement, under which James was to receive a commission of five per cent upon his sales of granite, and to substitute a low price of the granite, so as to give James the full benefit of the extra price of the sales, was never definitely acted upon by either party. No account is shown, in which it was ever adopted as the basis of any settlement; and thex-e is a subsequent letter of James (8th of April, 1831,) in which he says “I. must have pay for trucking and cominissions on all I sell; unless, I cannot live.” go that it appears to me, that the denials of the answer ought under all the circumstances to prevail over the positive assertions of James on this point.

But this leads me to the consideration of the New Orleans contract, and whether it can be treated as a transaction within the scope of the agency. The nature of this transaction was as follows: On the 15th of August.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 64, 2 Sumn. 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gass-v-stinson-circtdma-1836.