James O. Safford & Co. v. Gallup

53 Vt. 291
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedAugust 15, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 53 Vt. 291 (James O. Safford & Co. v. Gallup) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James O. Safford & Co. v. Gallup, 53 Vt. 291 (Vt. 1880).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Ross, J.

In the original bill the orators set forth the contract of August 1, 1874, by which they agreed to advance to Samuel Smith, of Troy, so much money as they saw fit, with which he was to purchase slaughter hides, and tan them, and send them to Boston to be sold by the orators. The hides were to be the property of the orators. The orators were to receive back the money advanced with interest and commission on the sales, and allow Smith eight cents per pound for buying and tanning. The profit [294]*294or loss arising from tlie transaction was to be shared equally between the orators and Smith. The orators also allege that they advanced to Smith during the spring and summer of 1875, large sums of money under the contract; that Smith mingle'd the same with his own money, and therewith bought slaughter hides in his own name, and also bought some on his own credit and with his own funds, and commingled the same all together in the process of tanning ; that the defendant, Gallup, as officer, attached all said commingled hides, when in process of tanning, on writs in favor of the other defendants against Smith ; that the other defendants obtained judgments in their suits, and were about to sell said hides on executions issued on the judgments, when the orators replevied all of the hides ; that the replevin suit was referred, and at the hearing before the referee they first learned that Smith had commingled the money advanced by them with his own, and had purchased hides with the money thus commingled, and also had bought some of the hides with his own money and on his sole credit, and had commingled all such hides in tanning, and were surprised thereat, and could not be prepared with any evidence to show the contrary ; that since the hearing before the referee they had discovered new and important testimony to show that three-quarters of the hides were purchased with money advanced by them ; that on the referee’s report judgment was rendered in the replevin suit in favor of the defendant Gallup for the return of the property; that Smith was insolvent, and had never repaid any of the money advanced by them. The orators pray that, on the establishment of the alleged facts, the property may be decreed to them ; and the judgment in the replevin suit may be annulled, vacated, and set aside ; and if not, that an account may be taken of the proportion of the hides purchased with the money furnished by the orators ; and with the money or credit of Smith ; and that the orators may be allowed their due proportion of the property. The orators also asked for and obtained an injunction against the further prosecution or enforcement of the judgment in the replevin suit; or the prosecution of the bond given in that suit. The defendants answered the bill, specifically setting out all the proceedings in the suits against Smith and in the replevin suit; and [295]*295denied that any of the hides were bought with the money advanced by the orators; and also demur to the bill, as wanting in equity. Evidence was thereupon taken by both parties. This evidence is substantially the same that was before the referee in the replevin suit. It shows that nearly all the hides were purchased by Smith, in his own' name, and on his own individual credit, without the use of the credit of the orators, or of money advanced by them, intermingled with his own money. There is no claim, by the orators, that they have any newly-discovered evidence. Hence, there is no occasion to consider whether a party who has been cast in a suit at law can, on newly-discovered testimony, have the judgment at law vacated and set aside, on a bill in chancery. The establishment of such a doctrine, in ordinary cases, would doubtless be a surprise to the profession. The orators’ testimony tends to show that they made some advances to carry on the process of tanning the hides while they were under attachment; and also that they advanced quite a sum to complete the process of tanning a portion of the hides after they took them from the possession of the defendant, Gallup, on the suit of replevin. They thereupon obtained leave from the chancellor to file a so-called supplemental bill, alleging these facts. The defendants answered, denying that the orators advanced any money to carry on the process of tanning, while the hides were under attachment, and averring that if they did make such advances after they replevied the hides, it did not concern the defendants, as the hides were valued in the replevin suit in the condition they were in when replevied; and also demurred to the so-called supplemental bill. The facts alleged in the so-called supplemental bill all existed, and were known to the orators at the time they brought the original bill. The usual, and almost exclusive, office of a supplemental bill is to bring upon the record new facts which have transpired, or new parties which have become interested in the subject-matter, subsequently to the bringing of the original bill. Hence, the so-called supplemental bill is more in the nature of an amendment to the original bill. It is claimed by the orators that the facts alleged in the last bill, by whatever name called, require an accounting, and so give a court of equity jurisdiction, if it did [296]*296not have jurisdiction on the facts alleged in the original bill. If this is strictly supplemental matter, it cannot confer jurisdiction upon a court of equity if it had no jurisdiction of the original bill. But the evidence, when carefully considered, fails to establish that the orators were at any expense for tanning the hides in controversy while under attachment, prior to the commencement of the replevin suit. They had some western hides in Smith’s tannery, on which their claimed expenditures were evidently made. What they expended in completing the tanning of the hides after they received them in the replevin suit is no concern of the defendants, inasmuch as the orators can only be charged with the value of the hides in the condition in which they were at the time they were replevied. The orators admit they have sold the hides, and so cannot return them to the officer. If they had the hides to return to the officer, and they had increased their value materially by necessarily completing the process of tanning, there might be some foundation to the claim, that an account of such expenditures should be taken, and the sum found be repaid by the defendants, before the hides should be returned to the officer. Under the facts of this case, the last bill becomes wholly immaterial, and its further consideration may be dismissed. As we have seen, there is no ground for disturbing the judgment in the replevin suit. So far as the rights of the parties to the hides in controversy were therein adjudicated, the parties are concluded. An inspection of the referee’s report shows that the larger part of the hides were purchased by Smith in his own name and on his own credit, without using any of the money advanced by the orator, and also that a small portion of the hides were purchased by him in his own name with the money advanced by the orators commingled with his own money. On this state of facts, the orators themselves, not having knowledge of, or being responsible for, the commingling of the money advanced by them, by Smith with his own money, the hides, so far as they were bought with commingled money, by Smith, in the execution of his agency, became, so far as regards the defendants, as attaching creditors of Smith, the property of the orators, and those bought upon Smith’s credit, or with his sole money, in his own name, would be Smith’s property ; [297]

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Bluebook (online)
53 Vt. 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-o-safford-co-v-gallup-vt-1880.