Gunton v. Carroll

101 U.S. 426, 25 L. Ed. 985, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1936
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 18, 1880
Docket207
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 101 U.S. 426 (Gunton v. Carroll) 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
Gunton v. Carroll, 101 U.S. 426, 25 L. Ed. 985, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1936 (1880).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court. .

The appellants in their character of trustees of the Bank of Washington brought this suit against the executors and devisees of Daniel Carroll. The charter of that bank expired a great many years ago, and the trustees who conduct its affairs are acting under a statute of Congress. At the time of the expiration of the charter there was a large indebtedness on his part to the institution, a portion of which was secured.

There were several judgments against him in favor of the bank, and he had a suit in chancery for the adjustment of' disputed matters in regard to that indebtedness.

On the 8d day of November, 1846, an agreement under seal was entered into between him and the trustees by which all their disputes were settled. The sum due by him to the bank was ascertained, and the mode of payment and security agreed upon.

This agreement is the foundation of the present suit.' Among other things completed at the time was the .payment of part of his debt, the release of certain real estate from the lien of the complainants’ judgments, and his transfer of judgments held by him against other persons to the trustees, with an understanding that all moneys thereafter collected on them should be credited on the judgment of the bank against him. Certain property known as the Sligo estate, in which he had an undivided interest, was by him to be conveyed to the bank as soon as he could procure a partition with the other part-owners. He also covenanted that, after all this was done, he would give good security for any balance due by him to the bank. As the agreement with regard to the Sligo property is the matter of principal importance in this suit we give that part of it verbatim : “ The said Daniel Carroll shall forthwith cause, at his expense, the property known as the 'Sligo estate, of which he is the owner of an undivided share, to be legally or equitably divided between him and the other owner or owners thereof, and *428 shall immediately thereafter, by a valid deed, convey the share or portion of said property which may be allotted to him unto the trustees of the said bank, or as they may direct, in fee simple, at such price as three competent freeholders — to be selected, one by the said Daniel Carroll, another by the trustees of said bank, and the third by the other two appraisers — shall estimate and adjudge the same to be worth, as if sold on a credit of three equal payments at one, two, and three years, with interest thereon payable semi-annually; and the price, on the due execution of said conveyance to the trustees of said bank, or as they may direct, shall be credited against the said judgments, so as aforesaid held by the bank against said Daniel Carroll.”

Much of the agreement was performed on both sides. ' Money was paid and property released. The bill avers that all which the trustees agreed to do, or could do, was done, and that there is, including interest, over 140,000 of the original debt unpaid, and that no security has been given. In reference to the Sligo property it is alleged that no partition was made by Carroll in his lifetime— he died in May,.1849 — but that his devisees effected such partition in 1866, and have since sold some part of the property allotted to them in that partition and received the purchase-money. It also alleges that the trustees were not aware that any such partition had been made until 1872, this suit having been commenced in 1876. They also set up an attempt* in 1875, to bring these matters before the court in the original chancery suit, pending when the agreement was made, by an amended bill and revivor, which was overruled.

The defendants filed a general demurrer, setting up twenty grounds^ of demurrer. It was sustained by the court below and the bill dismissed.

The demurrer must be overruled, if there be any part of the bill which entitles the complainants to relief.

The main ground of the demurrer — the lapse of time since the cause of action accrued — is relied on in reference both to the Statute of Limitations and the general doctrine of laches. If the judgments against Carroll have never been revived by scire facias or otherwise, the debt which they represented is *429 barred by limitation, and its collection cannot be enforced by any proceeding at law. The bill is silent on that subject. It may admit of doubt whether in the mere absence of any such allegation the court will raise the presumption of payment on which the equitable -defence is founded. Without deciding this, we think there is another ground on which defendants' must be put to their answer, and in that answer they can plead or rely on the statute, or the lapse of time coupled with an averment that the judgments are no longer alive.

That matter concerns the Sligo property. No bill for specific performance could have been brought against Carroll or his devisees before the partition required by the agreement was made.., The delay in making it was that of Carroll and- of his devisees. For this the complainants were in no manner chargeable. with laches and should receive no detriment. .Frye on Specific Performance, sect. 740; Ridgway v. Wharton, 6 H. of L. Cas. 237.

The partition was made in 1866, and the knowledge of it did not come to the complainants until 1872. If they had known it as soon as it .occurred, six years, under all the circumstances, would not be considered as an unreasonable delay on their part, in view of the fact that the 'defendants had taken twenty years to perform one part of the contract, namely, to make partition.

In 1872, as soon as they learned that the partition had been made, the trustees attempted to assert their rights by an effort to revive the old chancery proceeding out of which the agreement arose. Being defeated in this, they commenced the present suit in March, 1876. We think that on the face of the bill they are not barred by lapse of time. If there are other matters not shown in the bill which would make that a bar, no injury can accrue by requiring them to be shown by way of answer or plea.

It is said, however, in regard to the Sligo property, that the original contract is one of which a court of equity cannot enforce specific performance, because the. price to be paid for it is not definitely fixed, and a court of equity cannot enforce the agreement to submit the question of price to the award of arbitrators.

*430 It cannot be successfully disputed that in the general terms thus stated this is the established equity doctrine. It would be applicable if this was a case iii which the complainants had agreed to buy and the defendants to sell, the conveyance of the propertyj and the actual payment of the. price resting in cove-'nants yet to be performed, the latter being the sole consideration of the former.

it is, however, quite otherwise in the matter before us. This particular clause was only one pf many which adjusted longstanding and complicated transactions and compromised a vexatious litigation. Moneys -were paid, liens released, sureties discharged, and suits settled by this agreement. Under it the complainants parted with rights and Carroll received value, the consideration of which was, at least in part, this stipulation about the Sligo estate.

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Bluebook (online)
101 U.S. 426, 25 L. Ed. 985, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1936, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunton-v-carroll-scotus-1880.