Lawrence v. Tucker

64 U.S. 14, 16 L. Ed. 474, 23 How. 14, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 749
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 19, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 64 U.S. 14 (Lawrence v. Tucker) 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
Lawrence v. Tucker, 64 U.S. 14, 16 L. Ed. 474, 23 How. 14, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 749 (1860).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

■ We havé been unable to find'anything in this record to authorize us to change or modify the decree made by the Circuit Court in-this case.

Andrew Lawrence filed his bill in that court, .for the northern district of Illinois, against Hiram A. Tucker, to redeem the furniture óf a hotel in the city of Chicago, called the Briggs House, upon which Tucker has a mortgage.

On the 1st of September, 1856, John J. Floyd and George *23 H. French, who then were the keepers of' that hotel, wishing to have a current business credit with Tucker and the firm of H. A. Tucker & Co., and the bank iramed in the mortgage, executed, under the name and firm of Floyd k French, to Hiram A. Tucker, a mortgage of the furniture of the hotel, to secure a note of Floyd k French, made to Tucker, for $5,500, and sucji advances of money as there had been or might be made within two years, by H. A. Tucker, H. A. Tucker & Co., or the Exchange Bank of H. A. Tucker k Co.* not to exceed in all an indebtment of six thousand dollars in addition to the sum for which their note was given. The note was dated on the 1st of September, the day on which the mortgage was made, payable one day after date, with interest at the rate of ten per cent, per annum. The note was to be held by Tucker, as a collateral security for such advances as have just been stated, and the amount of the note also. Under this arrangement, successive advances were made to Floyd k French, on their checks or by discount of their notes, until some time in October, 1857, when they ceased.

Tucker, during this time, continued to hold the note for $5,500. He also held several other promissory notes of Floyd k French, as appears by the exhibits, C, D, E, G, H, annexed to Tucker’s answer to the complainant’s bill. All of these notes, except that for $2,000, are drawn payable to H. A. Tucker; all of them are prior in dates to other mortgages upon the same furniture, except the note just mentioned for $2,000, and that was a renewal of a note, for a loan made on the 26th September, 1857, prior to 'the' date of the mortgages made to Briggs k Atkyns. The mortgage to Briggs was made on the 19th November, 1857, by Floyd k French,, and one Amesj who had been taken into their firm. It was given to secure'de'bts due tó Briggs-, and- liabilities he had assumed for. them, and also for such advances of money as Briggs might' thereafter make to them, with a power of sale on default. When Briggs took this mortgage, he knew that Tucker had a prior mortgage on the same furniture, and.he states in his evidence .that he knew advances of money had been made upon it by Tucker, for whibh he knew it stood as a security.

*24 On the 12th of January, 1858, Floyd & French and Amea made a third mortgageof the same property to Henry Atkyns, ■as trustee, with a like power of sale, to secure debts mentioned in it. Both of these mortgages refer to Tucker’s mortgage as an existing encumbrance upon the furniture, &c., &c. Briggs and Atkyns had then, of course, notice of Tucker’s mortgage.

Atkyns sold the furniture under his power of sale on the 27th February, 1858; Briggs sold under his power of sale on the 12th March following. Lawrence became the purchaser at. both sales. Briggs sold to him expressly subject to the. mortgage of French & Floyd to H. A. Tucker; and Lawrence admits, by a stipulation in the record, that when he purchased the property under the mortgages, he had notice that either 'the defendant Hiram A. Tucker or H. A. Tucker & Co. held the notes against Floyd & French, as they are set forth in the defendant’s answer, and that the amount was claimed to be due upon them, as it is set out in the answer.

'Upon referring to that answer, and its exhibits, C, D, E, G, H, we find that the only securities now claimed to be due are, with one exception, notes of hand given by Floyd & French, payable to the order' of H. A. Tucker alone, precisely within the mortgage, and that the note of December 18th, 1857, payable to H. A. Tucker & Co., for the sum of two thousand dollars, payable at the.counting-house of H. A. Tucker & Co., in Chicago, was for an actual loan of money, and that it was the renewal' of a former note for the same sum, dated the 26th September, 1857. •'

"We have, then, the admission of the complainant, that when he purchased under the mortgages of Briggs & Atkyns, he knew the particular items constituting the outstanding unpaid debt 'of Floyd &. French to Hiram A.. Tucker and H. A. Tucker & Co. for advances. One of these notes, dated the , 14th October, 1857, was for $1,000, exhibit 0; another, dated 22d October, 1857, exhibit D, was for $8,000; the third, exhibit É, dated July 11, was for $450; exhibit G, of the same date, was a note for the sum. of $5,000; and exhibit H, dated the .18th December, 185.7, was for $2,000.

Floyd, who did'the financial business of the firm of Floyd *25 & French, testifies that the notes just mentioned were given for advances; but he claims a credit of $1,500 on the note, exhibit D; and states that the note for $450, exhibit E, had not .been given for money advanced, but that it and another note for. the same amount were given for the interest for one year on the note for $5,500 Floyd also states that the note marked exhibit I, for $5,500, was signed by himself when he signed the mortgage, and that he personally made the negotiation with.H. A. Tucker & Co.

It is further stated by him, that the aggregate amount of all the advances which had been made by the defendant to his firm upon the faith of the note and the mortgage, since the first of September, 1856, amounted to “from fifty to a hundred thousand dollars,” and that the sum now remaining due was “somewhere in the vicinity of ten thousand dollars.” He verifies "the notes named in the exhibits, C, D, E, Gr, H, with the-originals; confirms the statement in exhibit A of the discounts which his firm had received under the note and mortgage; and-adds, that when the note and mortgage were given, his firm then owed to H. A. Tucker & Co. twenty-five hundred dollars, which was paid on the Tth September, 1856; and repeats in his cross-examination what he had said in his examination in chief, concerning the amount of the discounts and cash received from H. A. Tucker & Go. under the note and mortgage.

It must have been upon the testimony of this witness that the court below gave its decree.

But we have not referred to it with the view of testing the correctness of the sum allowed to the defendant, as the condition upon which the complainant might redeem the mortgage — though, having made the computation, we find it to he correct, with a small mistake. Our object has been to show that the parties to the original transaction understood it alike, and acted upon it- accordingly; that there never was a difference between them, as to the character of the mortgage ai}d its purpose; and that it was intended to be a security for.and a lien upon the. property mortgaged, for future «advances, to the extent of the sum provided for in it.. So also Floyd & *26

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Bluebook (online)
64 U.S. 14, 16 L. Ed. 474, 23 How. 14, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-tucker-scotus-1860.