Kelsey and Mintyre v. Hobby and Bond

41 U.S. 269, 10 L. Ed. 961, 16 Pet. 269, 1842 U.S. LEXIS 368
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 19, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 41 U.S. 269 (Kelsey and Mintyre v. Hobby and Bond) 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
Kelsey and Mintyre v. Hobby and Bond, 41 U.S. 269, 10 L. Ed. 961, 16 Pet. 269, 1842 U.S. LEXIS 368 (1842).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Taney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is ah appeal from the decree of the Circuit Court for the district of South Carolina. -

It appears from the record that Kelsey, MTntyre, and Hobby, for some time previous to the 9th of February, 1822, carried ou *271 business in Georgia, as merchants, under the firm of C. Kelsey and Company; and it- having been agreed among the partners that Hobby should withdraw from the firm, they, on the day above-mentioned, entered into the following agreement:

“Articles of agreement entered into, at the dissolution of the firm of C. Kelsey and Company, between Alfred M. Hobby, of the first part, and Charles Kelsey and Charles MTntyre, of the second part, witnesseth, That the said Alfred M. Hobby doth agree to withdraw from the said firm upon the following conditions, viz.: that the said parties of the second part, are to take upon themselves the entire settlement of the business of the said firm, and are to pay to the said A. M. Hobby, after the debts of the said firm are all paid and discharged, and a sufficient sum collected out of the debts now due to the said firm, five-thousand five hundred dollars, and in Bridge bills whenever he shall demand them, one thousand one hundred and thirty dollars. And the said A. M. Hobby, for said consideration of the above sums of moñey to be paid, and the further sum of one dollar to him in hand paid, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, hath relinquished and by these presents doth transfer to the said parties of the second part, all his interest or claims of whatever nature he has, or may have, as partner in the said firm. It is also stipulated and agreed, that the said A. M. Hobby of the first part, in consideration as above specified, is to protect the said parties of the second part, from a certain judgment obtained against said firm by the branch of the United States Bank, in this city, and to hold them harmless from any balance, should there be any due, after the conclusion of the settlement between John M'Kinnie and Thomas Gardner, respecting the said judgment. And for the faithful discharge of this agreement, we bind oursélves, our •heirs,.executors, administrators, or assigns.”

At the time this agreement was executed, an inventory was taken of the assets and debts of the firm, by which it appeared that the goods and property on hand, together with the debts due to the partnership, were estimated at thirty-eight .thousand one hundred and sixty-four dollars and ninety-six cents; and that the debts due from it amounted to twenty-six thousand fifty-seven dollars and ninety-one cents, and that this schedule formed the basis of the agreement.

*272 In. November, 1829, Hobby filed his bill Kelsey and M'Intyre, charging that there was a surplus of partnership effects after paying all the debts sufficient to satisfy the five thousand five hundred dollars mentioned in the contract, as well as the Bridge bills, and praying an account.. These Bridge bills were notes issued by a company who had built a bridge, in the state of Georgia; and these notes circulated as money, but at a heavy discount.

On the 7th of February, 1830, M'Intyre put -in his separate answer, in which he dénies that the assets of the partnership produced the surplus charged by the complainant; and exhibited an account according to which the funds of the partnership realized only twenty-nine thousand five hundred and eighty dollars and eighty-three cénts, and the debts' paid amounted to twenty-eight thousand eight hundred and- seventy-four dollars, and sixty-six cents; and he insisted that large sums were also paid by them for interest on the debts of the firm, and heavy expenses incurred, which were not introduced into this account, but for which Kelsey and MTntyre ought to be allowed credit; arid that when these sums were -added, they would amount to considerably more than had been collected; and that in addition to this, they are entitled to an allowance of two and a half per cent, on all sums collected and paid by them. ■ He also averred that Hobby did not perform his part of the agreement, and that an execution was afterwards issued by the branch of the United States Bank, and the' goods of Kelsey and.M'Intyre seized for the'debt against which Hobby had covenanted to save them -harmless; ánd that by reason of that execution and seizure, they were put to great expense, and were seriously injured' in their credit and embarrassed in their business as merchants; arid insisted that they were absolved from their • agreement by the failure of Hobby to perform his-part. The answer further stated that although Kelsey and MTntyre denied the fight of the complainant to the Bridge bills he claimed, yet they were willing to give him an order for them on the attorney in whose hands they had been placed for suit, and who had prosecuted the claim to judgment. That the respondent had always been ready to account with the-complainant, Hobby, and to deliver him these bills, but that no demand was made until this suit was about to be instituted.

*273 Kelsey* the other respondent, had removed to New York a short time before the bill was filed, and his answer.was not put in until January 10,1838. This answer is in substance the same with that of M'Intyre, to which it refers.

There was a general replication to these answers, and the ac counts referred to a master, by order of the Court; when his report came in, many exceptions were filed to it on both sides; and upon hearing, the Court set aside the report, and returned it again to the master, with directions as to the ■principles on which it was to be stated. A good deal of testimony was taken on both sides, and the master made a second report at April term, 1839, according to which the respondents had paid two thousand and thirty-one dollars and five cents, beyond the assets which came to their hands. Many exceptions were again filed on both sides to this report, and it was by order-of the Court again returned to the master with directions to take further proof as to one of the items in controversy.

■ In the latter end of August, 1839, while thé accounts were pending before the master, as hereinbefore mentioned, Hobby went to New York where Kelsey resided and was carrying on business; and a few days after he arrived there, he was arrested at the suit of Kelsey and M'Intyre, upon a claim for four thousand dollars as damages for not having saved them harmless against the debt due the Branch Bank of the United States, according to his covenant in the agreement hereinbefore mentioned. It seems that Kelsey was advised by his counsel, in New York, that this claim could not be allowed him in the Chancery suit, because the damages were unliquidated. Being a stranger in the city, he found difficulty in procuring special bail. But an acquaintance whom he had occasionally met in society, and to whom he applied, entered into' a bail-bond to the sheriff conditioned that he would appear to the suit and put in special bail within twenty days after the fourth of September then next ensuing; Hobby assuring him that he expected some of his southern friends to be in New York in á few days, and that he would then be able to relieve him.

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Bluebook (online)
41 U.S. 269, 10 L. Ed. 961, 16 Pet. 269, 1842 U.S. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelsey-and-mintyre-v-hobby-and-bond-scotus-1842.