Kennedy v. Georgia State Bank

49 U.S. 586, 12 L. Ed. 1209, 8 How. 586, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1691
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 21, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 49 U.S. 586 (Kennedy v. Georgia State Bank) 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
Kennedy v. Georgia State Bank, 49 U.S. 586, 12 L. Ed. 1209, 8 How. 586, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1691 (1850).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McLEAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

Henry Shultz and Lewis Cooper, in the year 1813, obtained from the State of South Carolina a charter for a bridge over the Savannah River, opposite the town of Augusta, in Georgia, for the term of twenty-one years; and in 1814 the State of Georgia granted to them a charter for the term of twenty years. In 1816, Henry Shultz and John McKinne, being the joint owners of the bridge, formed a partnership in the business of banking, under the ñamé of the “ Bridge Company of Augusta ”; the bridge was valued at seventy-five thousand dollars, and it, with other property named, constituted the partnership stock. In 1818, Shultz sold and transferred his interest in the partnership to Barna McKinne. The consideration of this *606 purchase was the. sum of sixty-three thousand'dollars, which Shultz owed to the firm, and which wlas credited to him on their books.

In a short time, the firm became greatlyembarrassed. Among -other debts, they owed to the Bank of the State of Georgia the sum of forty thousand dollars ;--and they obtained from it. a further loan of fifty thousand dollars, with the view, as was stated, to relieve the Bridge Company. To secure the payment of the sum of ninety thousand dollars to the bank, the McKinnes mortgaged the bridge, eighty negroes, and some real estate, the 10th of June, 1819. Previous to this the “Bridge Bank” stopped payment. On being'informed of this fact, Shultz resumed his place in the firm, by procuring a transfer' of Barna McKinne’s interest. He advanced fifteen thousand dollars of his own funds' to pay deposits in the,bank, and took other steps, with his partner, to sustain the credit of the bridge bills in circulation.

In 1821, a petition tv as filed by the Bank of Georgia, in the Superior Court for Richmond County, praying a foreclosure of the above mortgage ; and at the May term of that court, a rule was entered to foreclose the mortgage, unless the principal and interest due on it should'he paid; and at May term, 1822, the rule was made absolute. The sum of $ 69,493 was found- to be due to the bank on the mortgage, and the property was directed to be sold. The sale was enjoined by Shultz, Christian Breithaupt, and others, by filing a bill against the bank in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Georgia, which, among other things, prayed that the property might be sold, and the proceeds applied to the payment of the creditors' •of the Bridge Company, and particularly to those who had obtained judgments. An order was made for the sale of the bridge, and commissioners were appointed to make the sale. The sale was made on the 28th of November, 1822, to the bank, for the sum of seventy thousand dollars. For this amount the bank issued scrip, which, by the order of the court, was deposited with its clerk.

In the further progress óf the suit, the judges of the Circuit Court were opposed in opinion on the following points: — 1. Whether the complainants were entitled to relief. 2. What relief should be decreed to them. These points being certified to the Supreme Court, at the January term, 1828, the cause was dismissed for want of jurisdiction. The record did .not show that a part of the defendants were citizens of the State of Georgia.

At the January term of the Supreme Court in 1830, Messrs. *607 Wilde and McDuffie, being counsel for the parties, agreed in writing that the cause should be reinstated, and that the pleadings should be amended by alleging, “ that the stockholders of the bank were citizens of Georgia,” and that the cause be argued. The court dismissed the case, on the ground that the whole cause was certified, and not questions arising in its progress. And the case was remanded to the Circuit Court, with “directions to proceed according to law.”

This mandate was received by the Circuit Court at their May term, 1S30, aud the case was reinstated on the docket. And at the same term “ the cause came on to be heard on the ámended bill, answers, exhibits, and evidence, and the court having considered the same, it was ordered and decreed, that the sale of the Augusta bridge, made by virtue of certain powers of attorney and the consent of the parties, and held aud conducted under the direction of commissioners heretofore appointed under this court, be, -and the same is hereby, ratified and confirmed, aud the said Bank of the State of Georgia vested with a full, absolute, and perfect title to the said bridge and its appurtenances. under the said sale, freed, acquitted, released, and discharged from all manner of liens, claims, or encumbrances, at law or in equity, on the part of the said Henry Shultz, John McKinne, Barna McKinne,” &c.

“ And it is further ordered and decreed by the court, by and with the consent of the parties, complainants andjlefendants, that the scrip issued by the Bank of 'the State of Georgia for the sum of seventy-one thousand six hundred and eighty-six dollars and thirty-six cents,” &c., “ be cancelled and delivered up to the bank by the clerk,” &c., “and .that the bill' of complaint as to the several other matters therein con tanned, be dismissed, with costs.” Under which decree is the following agreement:— “ We consent and agree that the foregoing decree be entered'at the next or any succeeding term of the said Circuit Court of the United States, District of Georgia”: signed, “ George McDuffie, Sol. for complainants, and R. H. Wilde, Sol. for defendants.” Dated Washington, 10 April, 1S30. And the court say, — “The within decree having been drawn up, agreed to, and subscribed by the solicitors, on behalf of the parties, complainants and defendants, on motion of Mr. Wilde, ordered that the same be filed and entered as the decree of this court,” signed by both of the judges.

Fifteen jmars after the above decree was entered, the bill now before us was filed by Yarborough, as trustee of Henry Shultz, an insolvent debtor, and for the creditors of Henry Shultz, and Henry Shultz in his own right, which they say is “ in the na *608 ture of a bill of revivor and supplement,” against the Bank of the State of Georgia, the City Council of Augusta, John Mc-Kinne, and Gazaway B. Lamar. In this bill the proceedings in the original suit are referred to, and many of them stated at length, and they are made a part of the present procedure. And the complainants pray that the said original bill, with all its amendments, the answers, decrees, decretal orders, and evidence, may be reinstated and revived for the. causes set forth, to the extent of the several interests of the parties to this bill.

By way of supplement, the complainant Shultz states, that under the insolvent debtors act of South Carolina, he executed an assignment of all his estate, in trust for his creditors, to Thomas Harrison, on the 13th of October, 1828. That his interest in the bridge was transferred by this assignment. After-wards, the complainant, John W. Yarborough, was appointed trustee of Shultz for the benefit of his creditors. That the bridge and its appurtenances having been originally pledgéd, as copartnership property, by John McKinne and Shultz for the redemption of the bills issued by them, the lien, never having been released, still remains.

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Bluebook (online)
49 U.S. 586, 12 L. Ed. 1209, 8 How. 586, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-georgia-state-bank-scotus-1850.