Hunt v. Oliver

118 U.S. 211, 6 S. Ct. 1083, 30 L. Ed. 128, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1921
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 10, 1886
Docket214
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 118 U.S. 211 (Hunt v. Oliver) 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
Hunt v. Oliver, 118 U.S. 211, 6 S. Ct. 1083, 30 L. Ed. 128, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1921 (1886).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Woods

delivered the opinion of the court.

The bill was filed by David D. Oliver, the appellee, against Henry S. Cunningham, Garrett B. Hunt, Jacob Eschleman, Philip M. Ranney, Calvin Haines, George J. Robinson, and Henry M. Robinson. The following facts are shown by the pleadings and evidence. In the summer of 1868, Oliver, the plaintiff, was the owner of about twelve thousand five hundred acres of pine lands, and held a contract for the purchase of six thousand five hundred acres more from one David Preston. These lands were in the State of Michigan, mainly in Alpena and Alcona Counties. Six thousand acres of these lands Oliver had purchased in 1866 from the defendants Hunt, Eschleman, and Cunningham, for $35,000. He paid nothing on the purchase money, but secured its payment by a mortgage on the lands purchased and other lands owned by him. In 1867 he put up a steam saw-mill and made other improvements on the mortgaged lands, and carried on the business of manufacturing pine lumber cut from the lands, first with one George W. Hawkins as a partner, and afterwards with the defendant George J. Robinson, to whom he conveyed an undivided one- *212 fourth in all his lands. In the summer of 1868 the plaintiff was in arrears for interest past due on the mortgage above mentioned, and on a mortgage for $16,000 to the defendants Haines and Ranney, and also on one to E. & G. R. Haines, for $10,000, covering part of the lands included in the Hunt, Eschleman, and Cunningham mortgage. His property was also encumbered by other mortgages to the amount of $13,000; he owed on the Preston contract for the purchase of lands $12,000; he owed an unsecured indebtedness of $6000, and the firm of Oliver & Robinson was indebted in the sum of $25,000, making in all $117,000, without including interest. He had not the ready means to meet his pressing demands. He was, therefore, financially embarrassed, and was, moreover, involved in difficulty with his partner, George J. Robinson, whom he accused of Hying to dispossess and defraud him. Thereupon, on June 9, 1868, he wrote to Hunt and Cunningham for help, stating his situation, and asking them to take from him a quitclaim deed of all his property, and to purchase the Elaines and Ranney mortgage, the E. & G. R. Haines mortgage, and other indebtedness outstanding against him, to take possession of and manage his property, and, when they had paid all his debts and the property was clear, to reconvey the same'to him by quit-claim deed, and for all their trouble and services he offered to pay a reasonable compensation. They did not accede to Oliver’s proposition, and matters remained in statu quo until September. In the meantime, Oliver went to Buffalo, and there saw Hunt, Eschleman, and Cunningham, and urged them to help him out of his troubles with his partner and his creditors. But they did not yield to his importunities. Of these three persons Cunningham alone had any experience in commercial affairs. Hunt and Eschleman were farmers living in Erie County, New York, and Hunt was Cunningham’s father-in-law.

Oliver had given his creditors Haines and Ranney an option to buy his property, but they had declined to purchase. Finally, on September 2, 1868, Cunningham, being urgently entreated by Oliver, left Buffalo and went to Ossineke, in Michigan, Oliver’s place of residence, and had an interview with him. Be *213 fore leaving, he assigned his interest in the Hunt, Eschleman, and Cunningham mortgage to Hunt and Eschleman, and, as it appears, without consideration paid at the time.

Cunningham, while at Ossineke, accepted, at Oliver’s own solicitation, quit-claim deeds from him of all the latter’s real estate and bills of sale of all his personal property, including his interest in the firm of Oliver & Robinson. The conveyances were upon their face without condition or trust. Cunningham refused before the deeds were made to give Oliver any writing showing the terms on which he accepted them. Oliver, in his testimony in this case, states that at the time the conveyances were made he understood that “ the object of the transfer was a trust ; that he,” Cunningham, “ was to use the property to pay off the debts, and when the debts were paid to deed it back.” In the bill he alleges that “ said transfers were made for the purpose of enabling the mortgagees to sell said property in such a way as to pay their own debt, and to pay the other debts of complainant and leave him a surplus.” Cunningham testifies that the purpose of Oliver in making the transfer to him was to enable him to hold the title for Oliver, so that the property should not be seized in suits then pending or about to be brought against Oliver, and to enable Oliver to make a sale thereof.

No consideration for the transfers passed at the time of their execution. The deeds were dated September 3,1868, but were not in fact executed until September 8th, following. Oliver endeavored during the thirty days that followed the date of the deeds to make a sale of his property, but failed. About the first of October, 1868, he was in Buffalo, and, with Cunningham, entered upon a treaty with the defendants Calvin Haines and Philip M. Ranney, who were partners under the name of O. Haines & Co., and with the defendant George J. Robinson, for the sale of the property to them. A contract was agreed on, and, as the appellants insist, was as agreed on, reduced to writing, and dated and executed on October 3,1868. It was signed by Cunningham, C. Haines & Co., and George J. Robinson, and, for the sake of brevity, is called in the record the Buffalo agreement. It provided, among other things, that *214 on the expiration of thirty days Cunningham, party of the first part, should convey to C. Haines & Co. and Robinson, party of the second part, all the real estate situated in townships 28 and 29 north, range 8 east, in the counties of Alpena and Alcona, Michigan, which was conveyed to him by Oliver and wife by deed, bearing date on or about the fifth day of September, 1868, and also all the personal property conveyed to him by Oliver by bill of sale executed on the same day, the sale and conveyance to be subject to the following claims:

1st. The Cunningham-, Hunt, and Eschleman mortgage upon a part of said real estate, on which mortgage there was unpaid $30,000 and interest.

2d. A mortgage to O. Haines & Co. for about $19,000.

3d. A mortgage to J. B. Wayne for about $12,000, on a portion of said real estate.

4th. A claim of James H. Hill for about $3000.

5th. The copartnership indebtedness of the firm of Oliver & Robinson.

The party of the second part agreed to take the property subject to the above claims, and to assume and pay, at the time of the.conveyance by Cunningham, one-half of a debt for about $10,500 due to E. & G. R. Haines, secured by a mortgage executed by Oliver on his lands. The party of the second part further agreed that they would, at the time of the conveyance by Cunninghain, release and discharge all mortgages given by George W. Hawkins to Calvin Haines or E. & G. R.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 U.S. 211, 6 S. Ct. 1083, 30 L. Ed. 128, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1921, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-oliver-scotus-1886.