Jenkins v. Eldredge

13 F. Cas. 462, 3 Story 181
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedMay 15, 1844
DocketCase No. 7,266
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 13 F. Cas. 462 (Jenkins v. Eldredge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenkins v. Eldredge, 13 F. Cas. 462, 3 Story 181 (circtdma 1844).

Opinion

STORX, Circuit Justice.

This cause is one of extraordinary complexity, and no small difficulty, as well in the principles of law involved in it, as in the conflicting and varied details of the evidence. It has been most fully and elaborately argued at the bar; and to discuss it, at large, upon all the topics, embraced in the argument, would require from the court a length and volume of opinion and reasoning, totally inconsistent with ■ its duties to other suitors. What, therefore, I shall endeavor to do, is to bring into view those principles of law, which must form the foundation of the ultimate decree of the court, with such allusions only to the evidence, as may serve to show, what are the conclusions of fact, to which I have arrived, as, on the whole, the best supported, without any effort to reconcile discrepancies, or to explain or dissipate the obscurities, which surround many parts of it. And, after all, I am persuaded, that so far as my own judgment is concerned, .it is to the survey of the cause in masses, and not in minute details, that I may hope to expound the grounds of my own opinion, and to enable the parties to take the opinion of the supreme court, upon an appeal in the premises. The bill of the plaintiff and-the answer of Eldredge present, in truth, the entire outline of the case, as each party desires to have it to be understood, and supersedes the necessity of any other detailed statement.

The great points in the cause, to which all others are subordinate, and on which all others depend, are, (1) whether Eldredge originally took the property in controversy upon trust for the ultimate benefit of Jenkins, substantially as stated in the bill; and if so, (2) whether that trust is one. which, in point of law, it is competent for this court to direct to be earned into execution.

That there was a trust of some sort between the parties seems to me clear from the whole evidence in the case, including the answer of Eldredge. The latter insists, indeed, that it was a mere honorary understanding, or arrangement, dependent, for its execution, [490]*490solely upon his own free will, discretion, and pleasure, and by no means constituting, or intended to constitute, any trust binding in law or in equity, and that Jenkins always so understood it, and agreed to it. At the same time, Eldredge admits, that his motive in engaging in the speculation or enterprise was, mainly, with a view to the benefit of Jenkins’s family, with some of whom he was nearly connected, after receiving a full remuneration for his own services and advances, if the speculation should turn out to be successful. In furtherance of this view, he states in his answer, “And this defendant denies, that any agreement or understanding whatsoever, except the express agreement and understanding between the said complainant and this defendant, that this defendant should take a title to said property, free from all right or claim on the part of the said complainant, express or implied, in law or equity, (as in the complainant’s seventh interrogatory is inquired for,) ever existed, or was made between the said complainant and this defendant, other than the expressions of the motives and designs of this defendant, depending wholly on his own free will, and discretion, and pleasure, for the execution thereof, as therewith expressly declared and fully understood, as hereinafter fully and particularly declared and set forth, and every allegation of any other or different agreement, or understanding, express or implied, in the said complainant’s said bill contained, this defendant denies. And this defendant says, that although there was no such agreement, as by said complainant alleged, and although he, this defendant, always refused to take, or hold, any conveyance or title, excepting an absolute and unconditional estate in the prern-ises free from any trust whatsoever; nevertheless, he freely admits, that one of his motives in purchasing the said estate, from the said Deblois, and taking the conveyance thereof from her, herein stated, was, besides the hope of profit and benefit to himself, a desire also to benefit the complainant’s family, and with them, the complainant himself, and that this defendant then believed, that if the said building should be completed, in the manner projected, it might yield some pecuniary profit, and that it was his design, and intention, if, in the end, the same should be found to exceed in value the amount of all his payments, expenses and liabilities therefor, and such reasonable profit to himself, as he should in his own discretion think light, and also the amount of certain debts then, and before, and now due, to this defendant, from the said complainant, and also from a member of his family, then to give to the said complainant, or to his family, an opportunity to purchase the same for the amount of all his, this defendant's payments, expenses and liabilities therefor, and other claims aforesaid. And this defendant freely also admits, that he did, after the expiration of the time fixed by said decree, and not before, state his motive and design aforesaid in conversation with the said complainant, both before, and after his, this defendant’s, receiving the conveyance from the said Elizabeth herein stated, but this defendant expressly declares, that while thus having and expressing such motive and design, it was therewith also distinctly declared by this defendant to the complainant, and.by the said complainant at all times well known and understood, that no agreement whatever in any way binding upon this defendant, either at law or in equity, existed or was made or should be made, or was intended to be made by this defendant, or between him and the said complainant; nor was this defendant to be in' any way, or by any means, a trustee for the complainant in respect of the premises, but that, on the contrary, the said land and estate was, and was to be, the property of this defendant, absolutely, and unconditionally, with the right of disposal thereof, and of the proceeds thereof, at his own discretion and free will and pleasure, in such way as he should think fit; all which this defendant says was often and expressly declared to the said complainant, and as often and expressly admitted and assented to by said complainant, and that said declarations and admissions, were so full, clear, and explicit, that no possibility of mistake or misapprehension, could or in fact did exist, or remain on the part of the said complainant.”

On the other hand, Jenkins insists, that, although it was agreed between himself and Eldredge, that there should be no written agreement given or held by Jenkins, which should evidence the nature of the trust between him and Eldredge, yet that it was positively agreed, that Eldredge should hold the property in trust for him, subject to the agreement between them, the due execution of which required, that Eldredge, in order to raise money to complete the erections on the land, should possess a clear title, which he should be able to convey to the purchaser free from all incumbrances and equities. And that it was a contemporaneous arrangement, that Eldredge should make and keep among his own papers a written declaration of the trust to evidence the same in the event of his decease, or other like necessity. The bill charges, “That as said Eldredge had not the capital for that purpose, and would need the legal title to said property, both to enable him to borrow money to secure him for his liabilities as the indorser or surety of your orator and for the compensation to be paid to him for all his trouble in the business, your orator formally, distinctly.

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. Cas. 462, 3 Story 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-eldredge-circtdma-1844.