Irvine v. Marshall

61 U.S. 558, 15 L. Ed. 994, 20 How. 558, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 487
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 14, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 61 U.S. 558 (Irvine v. Marshall) 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
Irvine v. Marshall, 61 U.S. 558, 15 L. Ed. 994, 20 How. 558, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 487 (1858).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

The proceedings in this cause, though in form somewhat, anomalous ' and peculiar, may be regarded as presenting substantially the case of a bill for the specific performance of a contract; a demurrer to the relief sought by that bill, a decree (or what in the proceedings is called a judgment) sustaining the demurrer, although there is no express or formal direction or order for a dismission of the bill; and a general affirmance, by what is styled the judgment of the Supreme Court of the Territory, of the 'decision of the District Court.

The appellant, in his complaint in-the District Court of the Territory, alleges-, that at a sale of public lands which occurred on the 11th day of September, in' the year 1854, at the. land office at Stillwater, in the Territory of Minnesota, in pursu *559 anee of the proclamation of the President of the United States, the appellee, Marshall, as the agent, and with the funds.and under the authority of the complainant, and of the appellee, Barton, purchased for them the southwest quarter of section number seven, in township number twenty-eight north, of range twenty-three west, in the county of Ramsey, containing.. One hundred and sixty acres, at the price of one- dollar and twenty-five cents per acre, making an aggregate of two hundred dollars for the entire purchase; the certificate for which purchase was, with the assent of the complainant and Barton, issued in the name of their said agent, Marshall. That notwithstanding the equality of interest in the land in the complainant and Barton, and the fact that the price was furnished by them in equal portions, viz;■ one hundred dollars by each of these parties, the appellee, Barton, has claimed the entire tract of land; and the agent, Marshall, in consequence, or under the pretext of this pretension, refuses to convey to the complainant his rightful portion, viz: one full undivided moiety of these lands.

The bill next charges, that Marshall is about to convey the whole of the land to Barton* in fraud of the complainant’s rights, and concludes with a prayer that Marshall may be enjoined from executing such a conveyance to Barton, and. may be compelled to convey .to the complainant his full undivided half-part of the land, in conformity, with the terms and objects of the purchase; it contains also.a prayer for general relief. To this complaint there was no answer; but the record of the District Court discloses the following entries:

“ Territory of Minnesota, county of Ramsey. District Court, second district. John R. Irvine against William R. Marshall and Thomas Barton. Then came the .defendants, by their attorney, and demur to the complaint of the plaintiff herein, and specify the following grounds- of demurrer:
“First. The complaint-does riot state on its face facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
“ Second. The complaint alleges that the defendant, Mar-, shall, purchased the land mentioned therein, in trust for the plaintiff and the - defendant, Barton. No trust arises or can grow out of the facts stated.-
“Third. Admitting that .a trust could'arise upon the facts, the complaint does not show the plaintiff entitled to the relief sought, inasmuch as it does not specify the nature of the trust..
■ “Fourth. There is a defect of the parties defendants; it does not appear that the defendant, Barton, has any interest in the event of the action.. It does not appear -that the defendant, *560 Barton, has any interest ‘ in the event of the suit, adverse to the plaintiff.’ ”

Next follows the decision, judgment, or decree,' by whichs'o-' ever of these titles it may be appropriately designated, in these words: “There is ho allegation in the complaint that the conveyance was taken without the knowledge or consent of the complainant, nor that the purchase was made in violation of some trust. The .complainant does not therefore bring himself within the provisions of sec. 9, p. 202, of the revised statutes, and the demurrer must be sustained. See also sec. 5, of the same chapter. I do not discover any defect of parties. The plaintiff has twenty days to amend, so as to bring his complaint within the provisions of sec. 9 referred to, if he shall be advised that the facts will warrant it.”

There having been no amendment of the pleadings in the District Co'urt, either proposed or allowed, the decision of that court must be regarded as final between the parties upon the case, as disclosed on the face of the record; and that decision having been taken by appeal to the Supreme Court of the Territory, the following' transcript is certified as, containing the proceedings of the latter tribunal in this cause:

“July 15, 1856. John R„ Irvine, appellant, v. Marshall and Barton, respondents. This cause having been argued and submitted, after due considei’ation of the matters at issue herein, it appears to the court that in the order and j udgment thereon in the court below, there is no error. It is therefore ordered that said judgment be in all things affirmed, with costs to respondents.”

The omission in this latter decision of any statement of the particular grounds on which it has been placed, and the general reference made by it to the -opinion of the District Court, not showing the principles and the authority on which the judgment of affirmance has been rested, lead necessarily to an examination of the opinion of the District Court as the true test of conclusions, adopting that opinion and relying upon it for their support. In such an examination, it would be unnecessary, and even irregular, to consider any points not ruled by. the inferior court; as whatever has not been adjudged or passed upon by an inferior tribunal,, cannot be embraced in a general judgment, either of affirmance or reversal, upon an appeal from its opinion.

The points intended to be ruled by the District Court, and affirmed by the Supreme Court of Minnesota, if sought for solely upon the face of the judgments of those courts, or even with the aid of the references to the Territorial statute furnished by the former judgment, it might be difficult to dis *561 cover. Connecting those references, however, with the seventh and eighth sections of the statutes of Minnesota, (Rev. Stat., pp. 202, 203,) we may perceive in the decisions of these Territorial courts the design to assert and establish the following positions, viz: That.in every instance.of a grant or purchase, or of an agreement for the purchase of lands for a valuable consideration, in which the price or consideration shall be paid by one person, and the conveyance or the contract for title shall be to another, no use or trust shall result in favor of the person by whom such payment shall be made, but the title and possession shall vest exclusively in the person named as the alienee in such conveyance or agreement. ■ The position asserted by the court of Minnesota, m interpreting their statute, must be understood as broadly as it has just been stated, or it has no application to the ease before us.

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Bluebook (online)
61 U.S. 558, 15 L. Ed. 994, 20 How. 558, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irvine-v-marshall-scotus-1858.