Holker v. Parker

11 U.S. 436, 3 L. Ed. 396, 7 Cranch 436, 1813 U.S. LEXIS 441
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 10, 1813
StatusPublished
Cited by100 cases

This text of 11 U.S. 436 (Holker v. Parker) 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
Holker v. Parker, 11 U.S. 436, 3 L. Ed. 396, 7 Cranch 436, 1813 U.S. LEXIS 441 (1813).

Opinion

Marshall, Ch. J..

after stating the

facts of the case, delivered the opinion of the Court as follows:

On the part of the Appellants it is contended that an attorney at law has no power, without the consent' of his client, to transfer a cause to other judges than those appointed by the laws, and to place it before a tribunal distinct from that before which the party Kiniself has chosen to place it.

In this opinion however the majority of the Court docs not concur. It is believed to be. the practice throughout the union for suits to be referred by consent of counsel without special authority,' and this universal practice must be founded on a general conviction .that the power of an attorney át law over the cause of his client extends to such a rule. Were it otherwise, Courts could-not justify, the permission which they always grant, to enter a rule of reference when consented to by counsel on both sides. In this case, however, the letter *450 and affidavit’ of Mr. Holker of the 8th of September, i798, manifests at least an acquiescence in the rule, which the opposite party had a right to consider as an assent to it.

The same letter and affidavit will meet the still stronger objection which has been made to the reference of matters not involved in the suit actually depending in Court. They certainly impair very much the weight and influence of those arguments which have been urged against so much of the award as respects those demands of Holker which were not in suit.

The Court, however, does not perceive, in the transactions which took place previous to the award itself, any circumstance Which could justify a decree to set it aside. The great and real question in the cause is; has the award been made under such circumstances, and is it of such a character, that it ought to bind the Parties?

In examining this question it is natural tó enquire whether this be in fact an award, in forming which the judgment of the arbitrators lias been exercised, or a compromise wearing the dress of an award.

The evidence upon this point is thought very clear. Nothing can be more explicit than the testimony of general‘Hull, who was the attorney of Mr. Parker. He states an agreement in the most express terms between hitnsélf and Mr. Lowell on the sum for which the award should be given; and the .arbitrator, whose deposition has been taken, declares that the award was made solely on the acknowledgment of the Defendant’s counsel.

To the deposition, of Mr. Lowell himself great respect is due. He denies a compromise; but on examiiiingdtis testimony the Court is of opinion that his denial goes no further than hi the form, of an agreement. The facts he states prove one in substance. Believing himself that Ilolfcer’s judgment against Parker was released, and that the referees would entirely disregard it: he himself not having insisted on it, or questioned the .validity of the pleas in bar; lie reminded Parker’s attorney in the presence of' the referees of his former oiler to give % 7,200 in satisfaction of all demands,

*451 It was impossible to misunderstand this declaration. It was substantially a proposition to accept an offer which had been formerly rejected. General Hull replied that he would not now give that sum, but would give g> 5,000. Mr. Lowell did not agree to accept this offer, but he did not reject it. He looked on silently, and saw the referees about to máke up an award, not on the testimony of the cause, but on a declaration on the part, of the Defendant that he would give $ 5,000, made in answer to one from himself apparently clinging to a former offer to give $ 7,200. The referees necessarily construed this silence into consent, and Mr. Lowell was not unwilling that they should put this construction on it. He thought it his duty, he says, to secure even this sum for iiis client rather than have an award that Parker owed him nothing; which would have been equally obligatory.

This then is substantially a compromise, and not an award. It is difficult to examine this cause, and to feel the clear conviction which was felt by Mr. Lowell that the referees, had the case of Holker been brought as fully before them as it was in the power of his attorney to'bring it, and pa ssed as earnestly on-them as its importance deserved, would have awarded that .Parker owed him nothing.

Had not the sufficiency of the pleas in bar been impliedly admitted, — bad the legal operation of the covenant of six parts been seriously contested, it is far from being clear that the referees, would have affirmed the sufficiency, of these picas,- or have construed the covenant to be a release of the judgment. There is certainly much reason to doubt whether the covenant of Hob ker, although it may be an independant covenant, -'amounts-to á release of the judgment he had obtained against Parker. The mind of the referees does not appear to have been exercised on, or called to this question. They do not appear to have had a fair opportunity to form an opinion on it. It does not appear that the indenture itself wras inspected by them; and the description given of it in the pleas is inaccurate. The pleas describe the covenant as containing the word ««judgment,” which' it does not contain. The covenant is «to vacate, annul, discontinue and withdraw, all *452 suits, actions and proceedings whatever.” The pleas introduce the Word “ judgment” in their description of the covenant; a word which essentially varies its construction. Had the real case been brought before the referees, and their attention been directed to this circumstance, it cannot pc assumed as certain that they would have considered the judgment as vacated, or would have refused to receive it as prima facie evidence of a claim to its full amount; open to such objections as Parker might make to it.

Had they even been of a different opinion, they could not have believed it certain that Parker, who had escaped from this country, leaving debts to an immense 'amount which Holker was compelled to pay, against whom, when only part of those debts were paid, Holker had obtained a judgment for g 125,951 04, was not the debtor of Holker to a.large amount. With this view of the case, liad they understood that Holker was intercepted in his attempt to attend them, and detained by legal process, it ought not to have been supposed that thef would have refused to suspend their award until the issue of his application to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania for the liberation of his person should bé known,

To this Court, then, it appears that this award is not the judgment of the arbitrators in the cause, but a compromise, between the attornies, faking the form of an award, and a compromise made at a time when the cause wvis not so desperate as the attorney supposed it to be. It was a sacrifice of great and important interests at a time when th.at sacrifice does not appear to have been absolutely necessary. Has the attorney a right to make such a compromise ?

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dershaw v. Herman Family Trust
E.D. Pennsylvania, 2024
Government of the Virgin Islands v. 0.459 Acres of Land
286 F. Supp. 2d 501 (Virgin Islands, 2003)
Malave v. Carney Hospital
170 F.3d 217 (First Circuit, 1999)
United States v. O'Neal Woods
169 F.3d 1077 (Seventh Circuit, 1999)
Manzitti v. Amsler
550 A.2d 537 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1988)
Garabedian v. Allstates Engineering Co.
811 F.2d 802 (Third Circuit, 1987)
Garabedian v. Allstates Engineering Company
811 F.2d 802 (Third Circuit, 1987)
Laszlo N. Tauber v. E.F. Hutton & Co., Inc.
813 F.2d 403 (Fourth Circuit, 1986)
Delaware Shipping Corp. v. M/V Mini Lymph
574 F. Supp. 717 (E.D. Louisiana, 1983)
United States v. Texas
523 F. Supp. 703 (E.D. Texas, 1981)
United States v. 32.40 Acres of Land
614 F.2d 108 (Sixth Circuit, 1980)
Moore v. Allied Chemical Corp.
480 F. Supp. 377 (E.D. Virginia, 1979)
Luis C. Forteza E Hijos, Inc. v. Tom Mills
534 F.2d 415 (First Circuit, 1976)
Ingalls Iron Works Company v. Ingalls
177 F. Supp. 151 (N.D. Alabama, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 U.S. 436, 3 L. Ed. 396, 7 Cranch 436, 1813 U.S. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holker-v-parker-scotus-1813.