Kilbourn v. Sunderland

130 U.S. 505, 9 S. Ct. 594, 32 L. Ed. 1005, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1772
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 22, 1889
Docket188, 261, 262
StatusPublished
Cited by197 cases

This text of 130 U.S. 505 (Kilbourn v. Sunderland) 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
Kilbourn v. Sunderland, 130 U.S. 505, 9 S. Ct. 594, 32 L. Ed. 1005, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1772 (1889).

Opinion

Me. Chief Justice Fullee

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is argued on behalf of Kilbourn, Latta and Olmstead that Stewart was an indispensable party to the cause, and that the bill should have been dismissed because he was not made suVh. Title to the real estate purchased by Sunderland, Hillyer ahd. Stewart was placed in Latta in trust as matter of convenience, and it appears that in December, 1872, Stewart sold all his interest to- Sunderland, evidencing the transaction by a memo-,randüm in writing, in form of a bill of sale, which is not produced, but the fact is admitted by stipulation, and that he subsequently executed a more formal assignment, which is given in the record..' Stewart testifies that Sunderland “ was; *514 with the -knowledge and consent of the-firm of Kilbourn & Latta, substituted in my place, and from that day I ceased to have any interest whatever in the transactions or business.” On the 1st of November, 1883, the appearance of Stewart was entered by counsel, with a disclaimer “ of all right and cause of action on his part against the defendants, or any of them, on account of any of the matters set forth or involved in this cause.” Under these circumstances we regard this objection as untenable.

The point is also pressed that the remedy at law was plain, adequate and complete, and jurisdiction in equity therefore wanting. We do not understand counsel to repudiate ' the stipulation, or to suggest multifariousness or any objection arising upon the rather unusual mode pursued to secure a conclusion in four cases rolled into one, but to contend that the determination of all the matters in issue belongs on the law side of the court. The defendants fully answered the bill, and raised no such objection, and, the cause being at issue, and evidence-taken, it was ordered on the 23d of February, 1883, by consent, to be heard by. the general term in the first instance. On the 24th of March, 1884, the defendant moved to dismiss on the ground of the adequacy of the remedy at law.

We have had occasion recently to remark that where it is competent for the court to grant the relief sought, and it has jurisdiction of the subject matter, this objection should be taken at the earliest opportunity and before the defendants enter upon a full defence. Reynes v. Dumont, ante, 354. By stipulation several suits had in effect been consolidated with the intention,, by consent, of adjusting the conflicting claims between Sunderland and Hillyer jointly and Sunderland alone, and Kilbourn, Latta, and Olmstead and Latta alone, and the parties had proceeded in their pleadings upon that theory, and taken -all the- evidence, and had the cause set down for hearing. It is then suggested that Sunderland and Hillyer and Sunder-, land cannot maintain their suit in equity, but must be remitted to actions at law. We do not agree with this view.

The jurisdiction in equity attaches unless the legal remedy, both in respect to the final relief and the mode of obtaining- it, *515 is as efficient as the remedy which equity would confer under the same circumstances. The parties stood in a fiduciary relation towards each other, and, in the course of the transactions between them, from thirty to- forty different lots of ground were bought for the complainants in upwards of fifteen distinct. purchases. As to five of these purchases fraud is specifically charged. A considerable amount of complainants’ money was in defendants’ hands, and a counter-claim was set up by them in relation to services performed in and about the care of a portion of the property purchased; services covering many payments for taxes, interest, etc.; making of loans nnd procuring renewals; receipts and advances. The transactions were all parts of one general enterprise, and the claims óf a character involving trust relations. Before the severance of the connection between the parties, Kilbourn & Latta dissolved, and the amounts due from Kilbourn & Latta, if any, and from Latta alone, if any, to Sunderland and Hillyer or to Sunderland, and the offsets and counter-claims of Kilbourn & Latta' or of Latta, all sprang from one series of operations, and required an accounting on both sides, and that accounting, until disentangled by the investigation of the court, was apparently complicated and difficult. “ There cannot be any real doubt that the remedy in, equity, in cases of . account, is., generally more complete and adequate than it is or can be at law/’ 1 Story’s Eq. Jur. § 450; and, as the remedy at law in the case in hand was rendered embarrassed and doubtful by the conduct of the defendants, and' fraud has in equity a more extensive signification than at law, and, as charged here, involved the consideration of the principles applicable to fiduciary and trust relations between the parties throughout the period of their connection, we concur with the Supreme Court of the District in sustaining the jurisdiction.

Complainants proceeded upon the liability of the defendants to account for the unauthorized. appropriation of moneys received as .complainants’ agénts, the amount of which they sought to reduce by excessive charges for the care and management of complainants’ property; and also for certain differences between what was paid .by complainants for property purchased *516 through defendants at one price, though obtained by defendants at another. The different amounts claimed are sufficiently set forth in the statement of the case.

By the decree the court awarded in favor, of the complainants and against all the defendants, the sum of $3316 as- received from'complainants in the purchase of lot 17, square 158, under circumstances requiring its. return,.and the sum of $8000 forexeessive charges; and in favor of the complainants and against' the defendant Latta the sum of $2500 for overchargesand disallowed all the other items. The correctness of these allowances' and disallowances is questioned upon these appeals respectively.

We. affirm the conclusions reached by the Supreme Court of the District in disposing of the various amounts alleged to have been so received as to justify a decree against the defendants in respect to them.

As to lot No. 17 in square No. 158, the direction of the complainants to the defendants was, “ we are willing to give 50 cents a foot for any property you can get in that square.” .This was the maximum price, and lot 17 at that rate would have, amounted to $8316. The defendants succeeded in purchasing it for $5000, and then charged it to the complainants at the maximum. Clearly, the money so received must be accounted for to the complainants from whom it was obtained by a violation of fiduciary relations.

The claim for profits on square 156, of $14,601, rests on different ground! That property had been purchased by a real estate association in October, 1871, for speculátive purposés, and conveyed to Kilbourn by Thomas Young, the vendor, as trustee for the association. Evidence is given by which it is attempted to show that Kilbourn & Latta had been guilty of dereliction of duty as between themselves and the real estate association, and it is argued that they did not account to their associates in that concern for their half of the profits. But with all this these complainants have nothing to do.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 U.S. 505, 9 S. Ct. 594, 32 L. Ed. 1005, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kilbourn-v-sunderland-scotus-1889.