Johnson v. Elkins

23 App. D.C. 486, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 5278
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMay 3, 1904
DocketNo. 1099
StatusPublished

This text of 23 App. D.C. 486 (Johnson v. Elkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Elkins, 23 App. D.C. 486, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 5278 (D.C. Cir. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Morris

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This suit, which is a proceeding in equity to enforce specific performance of a sale of lands in the territory of New Mexico, was instituted in the supreme court of this District, on September 6, 1888; and the litigation, therefore, has now been in progress for nearly sixteen years, and the transactions upon which it is based occurred about thirty-three years ago. In other words, a whole generation has passed away since the cause of controversy arose; and two of the principal participants in it, William Blackmore, of London, England, and General Benjamin E. Butler, have departed this life. It would seem to be time to dispose of the case finally upon its merits, especially as we think that there are equities manifested in the record which should be protected and enforced. But we find it impossible so to dispose of it.

Me deem it unnecessary at this time to enter into any detailed statement of the facts, or into any elaborate discussion of the law that bears upon the case. That has been well done in an able and well-considered opinion rendered by the learned justice who heard the cause in the court below, and which is to be found in the record before us. It will suffice for our present purpose to state the outlines of the case very briefly.

Stephen B. Elkins, Samuel S. Smoot, and Ehud N. Darling were three of a syndicate of five persons who associated themselves in 1870 for the purchase of a tract of land in New Mexico, designated as the M.ora grant, of which they became the owners to the extent of about 800,000 acres, the legal title being taken in the name of Elkins. In 1871 Smoot sold part of [488]*488his interest to William Blackmore, of London, England; and subsequently, in pursuance of various negotiations extending to the year 1875, he sold his entire one-fifth undivided interest to Blackmore. There was written evidence of the transaction, but no formal conveyance, and there was an agreement, in writing by Elkins to convey to Blackmore when requested so to do. There would seem to have been pending at tire time, and continued for several years thereafter, negotiations by Blackmore for the purchase, not alone of Smoot’s interest, but likewise' of all the other interests of what may be called the Elkins’ syndicate ; but nothing seems to have come of these protracted negotiations.

Blackmore died in 1878. He seems to have been acting not only for himself, but- also for an English syndicate of seven persons, of whom he himself was one, and of whom five, with two other persons, afterward and after the death of Blackmore, became incorporated under the English law as the Land Company of New Mexico, Limited, one of the complainants in this case. This company appears to have been organized for the purpose of acquiring, managing, and selling land in New Mexico, and it seems to have acquired, through Blackmore, interests in three or four other grants in that territory, besides the Mora grant. Blackmore, from time to time before its incorporation, had made conveyances of interests in these several grants to trustees for the benefit .of the syndicate. No one of these conveyances was placed upon record in New Mexico, and there was not on the public records of that territory any paper whatever to show the acquisitions by Blackmore.

Dissensions arose between Blackmore and Smoot, apparently in consequence of double dealing on the part of the latter. Complications had also arisen between Smoot and Darling in consequence of loans by the latter to the former, for which Smoot undertook to assign to Darling one half of his interest in the Mora grant as security for his indebtedness, notwithstanding that he had already sold it to Blackmore; and both Smoot and Darling notified Elkins not to convey to Blackmore. Subse: quently, in consequence of indebtedness by Smoot to General [489]*489Benjamin E. Butler, the latter acquired the possession and control of Smoot’s interest in the Mora grant; and the Union Land & Grazing Company, a corporation organized by him under the laws of the State of New Jersey, and now, as it would seem, owned and controlled by his family or his legal representatives, holds the possession of the property.

Henry Johnson, claiming as trustee under various settlements and arrangements by Blackmore and his syndicate, and the trustees for the syndicate, and the Land Company of New Mexico, for which he holds as trustee, claiming to have succeeded to the right, title, and interest of Blackmore, instituted this suit in 1888, for specific performance of Sinoob’s contract with Black-more by a conveyance from Elkins. The court below, without passing upon the merits of the controversy as between the assignees and legal representatives of Blackmore on the one side, and Darling and the Butler people on the other side, dismissed the hill of complaint, and we think rightly dismissed it, without prejudice, for the reason that it was not sufficiently shown that the complainants, here the appellants, stood in privity of estate or interest with William Blackmore, and had the right to maintain the suit, at all events without bringing in the legal representatives of William Blackmore, the alleged assignor, as parties to their suit.

Of course, it is essential to the validity of every legal proceeding that it should he instituted by the right person, and that the plaintiff or complainant should, upon the threshhold of the case, show his title to maintain it. If one claims as assignee, the assignment must be shown before a defendant ean be called upon to answer to the merits. The proof is necessary for the protection of the defendant, so that he should not be called upon to answer again to another claimant, who may he the true owner of the thing in litigation. These are elementary principles which no one will dispute, but they have not been sufficiently observed in this case.

Neither Henry Johnson nor the Land Company of New Mexico ever received or claims to have at any time received any assignment or conveyance of interest from William Blackmore. [490]*490The company was not organized until after the death of Black-more, and Henry Johnson’s trusteeship did not begin until after the death of Blackmore. There is a deed in the record, the due execution of which has been admitted, between Johnson and the company on the one side, and two persons, Lloyd and Newman, former trustees for the syndicate, on the other side, whereby under a power duly reserved to them Lloyd and Newman appointed Johnson as their successor in the trust, in the creation of which Blackmore had participated. But, apart from the question whether Lloyd and Newman, as trustees for a syndicate, could, without the concurrence of Blackmore, or his representatives, as Blackmore himself was then dead, transfer their trust to another for the benefit of a corporation, in which the membership was not entirely the same as that of the syndicate, without the concurrence of all the members of that syndicate, the more important difficulty arises, that in the record there is no conveyance or assignment whatever, or any indication of a conveyance or assignment, by Blackmore of the Smoot interest in the Mora grant acquired by him, either to Lloyd and Newman, trustees, or to any of their predecessors in the trust; for there were previous trust arrangements. In one of these, a deed of May 28, 1872, executed by Blackmore, and by two persons, Lloyd and Fisher, as trustees, there is mention of a one-twelfth undivided interest acquired from Smoot by Blackmore in the Mora grant.

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23 App. D.C. 486, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 5278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-elkins-cadc-1904.