Laflin v. Herrington

66 U.S. 326, 17 L. Ed. 45, 1 Black 326, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 484
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 18, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 U.S. 326 (Laflin v. Herrington) 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
Laflin v. Herrington, 66 U.S. 326, 17 L. Ed. 45, 1 Black 326, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 484 (1862).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WAYNE.

We shall confine ourselves to such of the facts of this case as-are sufficient to illustrate the point upon which we will decide it. Others have been insisted upon in the argument, but, in our opinion, they have no substantial bearing upon the merits of the controversy.

. The complainant and the respondents have chosen to put their respective rights to the land in dispute upon the sale of it, to satisfy the judgment of Stuart against J. Herrington, each claiming the sheriff’s certificate of sale by fair purchases, the former, however, charging that the purchase of the latter had been obtained by the fraud and circumvention of Augustus M. Herrington, their co-defendant, without accusing any of the rest of them with complicity in the transaction.

• It is recited in the bill that a judgment had been recovered by William Stuart, in the year 1887, against James Herring-ton, for six hundred and forty-six dollars and seventy-two cents. That an execution issued upon it, within tbe year of its rendition, commanding the sheriff to make the money out of the goods and chattels, lands and tenements of the debtor, and that the sheriff had returned it to the proper office, with the entry upon it, “that he could find no property.of the defendant whereon to levy.” This occurred in the lifetime of. James Hérrington. He died in the year 1839 intestate, leaving a widow and ten children.

The probate court of Kane county granted to his widow letters of administration upon the husband’s estate. It is against her, as administratrix, and nine of these children, one of them being dead, and the Illinois Central Railroad Company, that this suit is brought. The answer of that company *329 makes it unnecessary to notice it further in this opinion, except in confirmation of the fact that, at the time .it bought its interest in the land in controversy, and when the complainant bargained for his, it had become a subject of speculation.

Nothing was done for several years after the sheriff’s return upon the execution', and the death of the debtor, to collect the debt. -

■ But when it had been judicially determined that the debtor had died seized of theland in controversy,.Mr. Stuart, the judgment-creditor, empowered his friend and brother-in-law, William H. Adams, to take such means as were necessary to subject'the land to the. payment of his judgment. Adams accepted the agency, and employed Messrs. Farnsworth and Burgess, attorneys at law, in the case. They conducted it with the knowledge of Adams of every thing which was done, and with the acquiescence of his principal, Stuart. The counsel served a notice upon the widow and administratrix of J. Herrington, informing her of the unsatisfied existence of the judgment, and that they would apply in three months, at the clerk’s office, for an alias execution. They did so, and the execution was issued and levied upon the land. It was sold by the sheriff, in four parcels, for the aggregate sum of $1,378 42, subject to a right of redemption in one year, by the payment of the sums due, with accruing interest and the costs. Mr. Burgess attended the sale at the request of Mr. Adams, and bid on the land to the amount of the execution and costs, in his name, for the benefit of his principal, Mr. Stuart.,

Mr. Burgess, as counsel, directed the sheriff to make the certificate of sale to Mr. Adams, and that having been done, he received and retained .it. The purchase and retention of the certificate of sale by Mr. Burgess was approved by Mr. Stuart, it being understood it was to remain in the hands o.f himself, and his partner; Mr. Farnsworth, subject to the right of redemption, or to an assignment of it to a purchaser, as Mr. Adams might direct.

Shortly before the .expiration of the time allowed by the law to redeem, Mr. Burgess told Mr. Adams that Augustus M. Herrington, one of the children of the judgment-debtor, and now *330 a respondent to this bill, wished to redeeih tbe land by paying the amount due upon the certificate of sale, and wanted an assignment of it tó himself Mr. Adams directed Mr. Burgess vto write the assignment. He did so, leaving a blank for the ...-name of the assignee, and a figuré wanting for the date of the year, which Mr. Adams signed, giving a direction to Mr. Bur-gees, the latter assuring him it should be observed, that the certificate, with the assignment upon, it, should not be given up until the money had been paid.

Either late in January or early in February, 1.856, Augustus M. Herrington went to the office of Farnsworth and Burgess, the latter not being in, and he stated to Mr. Farnsworth his desire to get further time than the last day of redemption'for the payment of the mouey due upou the certificate of sale. To this application Mr. Farnsworth says: “ Knowing that there had been some conversation to transfer the certificate, to A. M. Herrington, and that there was an assignment in the office for that purpose, the transfer of the certificate was niade to him upon his giving his note of hand and a due bill in payment, the note being ante-dated as of March the sixth, 1855, with interest at- ten per cent.j. to be paid on the 1st September, 1856, to Farnsworth and Burgess; the due bill being for. one hundred dollars ‘and a trifle over,’ which was paid in a short time afterward, the amount of it being the fee due to Farnsworth and Burgess by Mr. Stuart, for their services in- the' case.” ,Mr¡ Farnsworth filled up the blank in the assignment with .the . name of Herrington, added the figure -5 togive that year "as the date.of the note, and concluded it, contrary to the fact,"with the words, “/or money actually loaned.”

Mr. Farnsworth declares, in his evidence, that the transfer was made and the note taken in good faith,' .-for the 'benefit, of Mr. Stuart, and for no other' purpose'fhan to'give to Herrington thé ownership of the certificate.^.-

Some days after it had been done, Herrington went to the office occupied by Adams and-by Farnsworth- and Burgess for-the transaction of their respective businesses — that of Adatas being to buy and sell land — when, the transfer of the certificate to Herrington became the subject of conversation, both *331 of the counsel and Adams being present. Adams then said' to them and to Herrington that he was satisfied with the arrangement, but that he being only an agent, he would write to his principal about it, and if he did not object to it, that he would riot'. He did'write, and received a reply from Mr. Stuart, complaining of what had been done, which was shown to Mr. Herrington on the 5th of March, the day before the expiration of one year from the date of the sale of the land.

But whatever may have been bis discontent with the arrangement, that letter and other testimony in the record show that Mr. Stuart did not then intend to disaffirm it, but was content to take the chances of the payment of Herrington’s note; at the same time holding his counsel responsible for the debt, if the note should not be paid at its maturity. He also required from them the deduction of their commissions on the amount “collected or to be collected.” No complaint was made-again' of Farnsworth’s arrangement by the parties- interested in-it, until after Herrington’s default in payment of the note.

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Bluebook (online)
66 U.S. 326, 17 L. Ed. 45, 1 Black 326, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laflin-v-herrington-scotus-1862.