Hamilton v. Cummings

1 Johns. Ch. 517, 1815 N.Y. LEXIS 174, 1815 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 55
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedSeptember 27, 1815
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 1 Johns. Ch. 517 (Hamilton v. Cummings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamilton v. Cummings, 1 Johns. Ch. 517, 1815 N.Y. LEXIS 174, 1815 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 55 (N.Y. 1815).

Opinion

The Chancellor,

tjpon the answer and proofs in this cause, the relief sought and claimed is, that the two bonds acknowledged to be held by the defendant, should be decreed to be delivered up and cancelled. The question, whether such a remedy can, or ought to be applied, leads to an interesting inquiry.

.1. The defendant admits that he holds a bond, executed by the ancestor of the plaintiff, on the 22d of ■ September, 1788, for the payment of 996/. on the first of January following ; and that it was given upon a special trust, of a secret and delicate nature, which, he does not think proper to disclose ; and that it was to be in force only upon certain contingencies which have not yet happened, and, probably, never will; and that he paid no money or other consideration for it, and has no personal interest in it, nor has ever [520]*520pretended to put it in suit. After such a confession, it would be very unreasonable that the bond should be suffered , to continue a dead weight upon the property that may have descended to the plaintiff. It is, however, not easy to extract from the books any precise rule by which the jurisdiction of the court is, in such cases, to be exercised. The bond, most probably, could not be enforced at law, though it appears on the face of it to be an absolute bond for the payment of money. The lapse of 27 years, if not most satisfactorily accounted for, would form of itself a conclusive bar to a recovery; and the admissions in the answer must destroy its validity here, even if they Cannot be received as a defence at law. Why, then, should it any longer exist to cast even a shade over the title to the assets of the ancestor ?

I have looked into the cases on the point of jurisdiction, and I have no doubt that the court has competent power to order the bond to be cancelled; and the power is the more necessary since there is no such jurisdiction at law.

In Minshaw v. Jordan, (3 Bro: 18. n.,) a bill was filed to have a promissory note delivered up and can-celled, as obtained by fraud, and without consideration. The Master of the Rolls retained the bill, and allowed the defendant to proceed at law upon the note; and the verdict being found against it, he then decreed that the note be delivered up to the plaintiff to be cancelled. But, afterwards, in Ryan v. Macmath, (3 Bro. 15.,) Lord Thurlow would not direct a note to be delivered up, though a recovery had been unsuccessfully attempted at law; and he would not admit the rule in this general extent, that whenever one party had an instrument on which he could not maintain an action at law, he must be decreed to give it up, and he accordingly dismissed the bill, but without costs. Sir Samuel Romilly, in citing this case, in 13 Ves. 584., observed, that the decision was disapproved of, at the time, as the note was void, not upon the face of it, but from collateral circumstances [521]*521and in Newman v. Milner, (2 Ves. jun, 483.,) notwithstanding this case of Ryan v. Mackmoth was mentioned, Lord Loughborough ordered a bill of exchange, avowedly given by one partner in the name of the firm, for his private debt, to be delivered up, with costs, without even waiting to have its validity tried at law; and he did it on the ground, that the evidence was clear and decisive against the bill, and that the payee took it, knowing it to be for a private debt, and that there was no need of a verdict to satisfy the conscience of the court. But the subsequent cases of Franco v. Bolton, (3 Ves. 368.,) and of Gray v. Mathias, (5 Ves. 286.,) are calculated to throw doubt once more on the exercise of this power. In the first of those cases, a bond was alleged to have been given for an illegal consideration, and the obligee had obtained a verdict at law. The bill was to have the bond delivered up ; but it was, on demurrer, dismissed by Lord Loughborough] on the ground, that there was no necessity for the interposition of the court, as the matter could have been pleaded, and the bond rendered null, at law. In the other case, the bond was void on its face, as appearing to have been given pro turpi causa, but the court of exchequer refused a decree to deliver it up, and principally on the ground of the length and expense of such a remedy in equity, when the defence at law was irrefragable. The Gh. Baron observed, with some sensibility, that though equity.,might have a concurrent jurisdiction, it was not fitting, in that particular case, to exercise it, as the plaintiff had a full defence at law; and it was oppressive to seek, by a long and costly litigation in chancery, to have the bond delivered up, when, by the plaintiff’s own showing, it was a mere nullity. In that case, the bond had never been sued at law, and the bill was dismissed, with costs.

The equity power was afterwards asserted by Lord Eldon, in Bromley v. Holland, (7 Ves. 3.,) and he dwelt much on the question of jurisdiction, and did not concur in the decision in Franco v. Bolton. He seemed to think the [522]*522question had become settled, by a serious of decisions, in favour of the authority of the court to direct instruments to be delivered up, though they might be void at law. He admitted there was some degree of contradiction in the cases, but he inclined in favour of the jurisdiction, even if the question had been res integra ; and though he could not say, if it was clear that no use could be made of the instrument, that was ground enough for the equitable jurisdiction, yet “ it was not unwholesome that an instrument should be delivered up upon which a demand maybe vexatiously made as often as the purpose of vexation may urge the party to make it.” In Jackman v. Mitchell, (13 Ves. 581.,) the equity jurisdiction was again freely exercised. The bond there was given to secure one creditor the deficiency of a composition, and was never communicated to the other creditors, and had never been put in suit. The bill charged the bond to have been thus taken against the policy of the law, and in fraud of creditors; and the counsel for the defendant, when speaking of the jurisdiction, observed, that if an instrument was void upon its face, the court would not assume jurisdiction and cancel it, because it was void at law; and that “ there was no instance of a decree for delivering up a bond, appearing upon the face of it to be void.” Lord Eldon expressly waived any opinion on that distinction as to jurisdiction, but said that the bond was bad, because it was proved? aliunde, that it was intended to be kept secret; and he accordingly decreed, that it be delivered up, and awarded ■costs against the defendant.

I am inclined to think, that the weight of authority, and the reason of the thing, are equally in favour of the jurisdiction of the court, whether the instrument is, or is not, void at law, and whether it be void from matter appearing on its face, or from proof taken in the cause, and that these assumed distinctions are not well founded. Itis every day’s practice, as the counsel observed, in French v. Connelly, (2 Anst: 454.,) to order instruments to be delivered up, of [523]*523which a bad use might be attempted to be made, at law, although they could not even there entitle the holders to recover.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Johns. Ch. 517, 1815 N.Y. LEXIS 174, 1815 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-cummings-nychanct-1815.