Gordon v. Butler

105 U.S. 553, 26 L. Ed. 1166, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2156
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 18, 1882
Docket254
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 105 U.S. 553 (Gordon v. Butler) 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
Gordon v. Butler, 105 U.S. 553, 26 L. Ed. 1166, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2156 (1882).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Field

delivered the opinion of the court., .

This was an action for alleged fraud upon Butler, the plainr tiff, below, in obtaining from him a loan of $10,000 upon insufficient security. The facts of the cáse, so far as necessary to present .the questions involved for our consideration, are briefly as follows: —

Near the town of Potsdam, in New York, there are sandstone quarries,: situated on the west bank of Racket River. The land containing them, when the loan was made, was divided into lots, varying in size from seven to thirty-six acres. Previously to 1873 the quarries, although generally supposed to consist of stone valuable for building and other purposes, had not been opened sufficiently to show their .extent and value. A quarry similar in external appearance, situated on the river below and adjoining them, called the Parmeter quarry, had been worked for thirty or forty years, and fur *554 nisHed stone of a valuable quality in large quantities. , For some years prior toT872 the defendant, Gordon, a resident of Potsdam, had been assiduously trying to get possession of the quarries, in the belief that on development they would prove valuable, like the Parmeter quarry. • His letters to Butler,, the plaintiff, written at the time, indicated a confident belief that a fortune was to be made out of them; and he invested in them whatever means he could raise.

The plaintiff, prior to 1872, ,had frequently visited Potsdam, where he became acquainted with Gordon, a lawyer _ in practice there, and often employed him professionally.' During these visits he learned something of the quarries, and that .Gordon desired to obtain possession of and develop them. In that year there was much correspondence between them on the subject. Gordon expressed a strong convictiop that the stone would be- very valuable, and find a ready market, and stated what he had heard of the buildings on which it'had been used, and of those for which it would probably be wanted. He desired to organize a stock company to work the quarries, and to have the plaintiff join in the enterprise. .Failing to secure his co-operation, and -being advised by him that he had better work the quarries himself, Gordon applied for a leían for that purpose. After much correspondence .and negotiation, the plaintiff promised to loan-him f10,000, to: be .secured by ■mortgage on some of the lots, and advised him against, investing a larger sum in them.. The plaintiff, as is manifest from the correspondence, was fully aware at the time off the slightly developed condition pf the propertybut* an estimate of its probable value was furnished by the following certificate obtained-by Gordon from the defendants "Watkins and Foster, well-known gentlemen of the place, and sent to him:—

“Each of the undersigned hereby certifies that he is and has beeiffór more than twenty years last past a resident of Potsdam, St. Tiawrence Co., New York, and' acquainted with the sandstore quarries south of Potsdam village; that he is acquainted with the .quarty .lots there, owned by S. B. Gordon, and situate on the westerly shore of Racket River; that said lots are roughly represented on the annexed diagram; have on them the buildings* and in his *555 best judgment contain the quantity of land, and are worth the sums severally below cited, to wit:
“No, 1 — Falls Lot .......about 8 acres, worth $8,000
“ 2 — Orchard Lot..... “ .4 & 5.000
“ 8 — Cox “..... “ 16 “ U- 8,000.
“ 4 — Hicks “..... “ 15 “ (( 5.000
“ 5 — Meacham “ house and barn .' ■..... “ 7 “ 5.000
“ 6 — Hale Lot...... “ 10 “ 1.000
“ 7 — Parmeter Lot . 2 houses and barns..... “17 8,000
“ 8 — Train Lot...... “26 8,000
Total, 8 lots. 103 $48,000
“Dated Potsdam, Dec. 12, 1872.
“H. Watkins.
“E. W. Foster.”

No oral representations on the subject were made to the plaintiff by' Watkins or Foster. Their connection with the loan consisted merely in furnishing this certifícate at the re quest of Gordon. The loan was made on the first of the following January, and a mortgage taken as security for it upon.y four of the* lots mentioned in the certificate, the aggregate value of which, as there stated, being $26,000. Watkins and Foster were at the time interested in the proposed enterprise; and their estimate of value was placed upon the lots, not as agricultural lands, but as lands containing sandstone quarries udfi vet opened.

After receiving the loan Gordon proceeded to open the quarries, and his operations had not progressed far when the financial crisis of 1873 came, and in it his enterprise was engulphed. The work on the quarries was stopped, and the value of the property rapidly depreciated. The mortgage to the plaintiff contained a clause declaring that the whole amount of the loan should at once become due if the interest was not punctually paid. Taking advantage of this clause, he commenced proceedings to foreclose the mortgage, and pressed them to a decree under-which the premises were sold and bid in by him for the sum of $1,500. He then commenced the present action against *556 •Gordon, who had obtained the loan, and Watkins and Foster, ■who had given the «ertificate as to the value of the property, to recovery-damages for the loss sustained by him. In his complaint he alleges that these parties conspired to defraud him by. obtaining the loan upon a false and fraudulent certificate as to the value .of the property..

The defendants pleaded the general issue. On the- trial the plaintiff produced the correspondence between him and Gordon, which resulted in the loan. .He also offered the testimony of geologists, experts, and laborers as. to the probable character and value of -the material in the quarries. . The whole, including the correspondence, covers many pages of the record, but its substance and purport, so far as it is at all material, we have stated. When it was closed, the defendants requested the court to direct the jury 'to find for them on several grounds, and, among others, that, upon the whole proof, no cause of action had been established against them. . The court refused to give this 'direction, and an exception was taken., Testimony was then produced by the- defendants; and, after instructions from the court, the case was submitted to the jury, who found .for the plaintiff.

•We do not deem it important to comment upon this.testimony, or to notice the rulings of the court upon matters 'which were objected to, nor upon its instructions to the jury. „ It is enough to observe that if. the testimony did not weaken, it did not strengthen; the case against the defendants. The question then is whether, upon the proof furnished by the plaintiff, a cause of action was .established against the defendants; for, if not, the motion- to direct the jury to find in their favor should. have been granted. Upon this question we have no doubt.

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Bluebook (online)
105 U.S. 553, 26 L. Ed. 1166, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-butler-scotus-1882.