Lawton v. Kittredge

30 N.H. 500
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1855
StatusPublished

This text of 30 N.H. 500 (Lawton v. Kittredge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawton v. Kittredge, 30 N.H. 500 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1855).

Opinion

Woods, C. J.

The only question that in fact arises upon this case, relates to five shares in the Sullivan Railroad. The settlement between Mr. Hackett and Mr. [504]*504Kittredge is not attempted to be impeached in any other respect; nor is the amount accounted for, namely, about nine thousand and one hundred dollars, controverted as being less than the amount due.

The parties do not agree as to the amount that went into Mr. Kittredge’s hands in 1842. But that is now immaterial. By a compromise, the propriety of which is not questioned by either party, the sum found due was about $9,100, and it was settled for, according to the whole evidence, by the note of the defendant for $2,000, and stocks for the balance, and a receipt was given in full. And it appears, and is not disputed, that the stocks, at their par value, and the note, amounted to the sum of $9,100, due to the plaintiffs in the right of the wife, according to the estimation, and that the five shares in the Sullivan Railroad were included in the stock delivered.

The receipt shows that the settlement was regarded as full and complete, and it must remain, unless it is shown to be unfair or fraudulent, or to have been brought about,by some mistake or misrepresentation.

The stocks in the Eastern Railroad and in the Boston and Maine Railroad were above par at the time, and yet were delivered, on the compromise, as at par. That fact is immaterial, except as it may render it more probable that the Sullivan Railroad stock was taken also at the risk of the parties for whose benefit it was received, and as confirming, or tending to confirm, the answer.

The question whether Mr. Kittredge had authority or not, to invest the funds of his cestui que trust in the shares of the Sullivan Railroad, is also immaterial in the state of the evidence. Indeed, we see no competent evidence upon which we can conclude that any part of it was so invested. The statement in the answer, on that subject, is gratuitous, and is not sustained by any proof.

And it may be safely said that if the testimony of Mr. Hackett stood alone in this case, it would stand clear of [505]*505doubt that the plaintiffs were entitled to a decree for the amount of the loss upon the five railroad shares, and interest, since it would appear from that testimony that the shares were taken by Mr. Hackett solely upon the representation of the defendant that the stock was a sound stock, good at par, and about to make a dividend; whereas Hackett himself knew nothing about the stock, and relied on the defendant’s statements wholly, who assumed to know its value, whether he did or not. The representation, in such case, relied upon is equivalent to a warranty that the fact represented exists, and the party injured may take advantage of it as of a fraud.

But the great question in the case is as to the preponderance of evidence, according to the rule in equity upon this point. According, then, to the weight that properly belongs to the evidence, what was the character of the settlement?

It is conceded, on both sides, that it was a compromise; that the sum of §9,100 was found due from the defendant, and that stocks and. a cash note were delivered to that amount; the stock being all reckoned at its par value, a portion of which was, in fact, worth more than par, and that a receipt was given by Mr. Hackett, the agent of the plaintiffs, in full for the amount due from the defendant to them.

The stocks, according to Mr. Hackett’s testimony, were' not delivered or received as being the same that had been purchased with the trust money. They were not regarded as upon that footing. How that was, the evidence furnished by the answer does not show.

In connection with this state of facts, and the evidence of Mr. Hackett, the answer of the defendant must be consid-• ered. The manner of the settlement is brought in conflict by it. The whole evidence upon the point of the final settlement and the manner of it, is derived from Mr. Hackett’s deposition and the defendant’s answer.

Mr. Hackett, in substance, says that the sum- being fixed. [506]*506at $9,100 by the estimate, it was proposed to pay it by-stocks and a cash note; and that a note and stocks were delivered, of a satisfactory character, except $500; and that five shares in the Sullivan Railroad were offered for that balance, but objected to by him, and finally taken upon the representations of the defendant, alone, that it was a good, sound stock, and about to make a dividend, whereas it was nearly worthless; and that Mr. Hackett was not advised as to the value and character of the stock otherwise than by Mr. Kittredge’s representations, and that in accepting it he relied entirely upon those representations.

The answer, in effect, denies the manner of the settlement to have been as is set forth in the bill, and as stated by Mr. Hackett. It states that it was by a compromise, and denies that his note and the other stock were delivered for a specific portion of the sum of $9,100, and that a balance of $500 was due, for which the shares in the Sullivan Railroad were delivered in payment.

It states that Mr. Hackett, after advising with Rufus Kittredge, a friend of Mrs. Lawton, informed the defendant that he preferred to receive her property, partly in stocks, at prices to be agreed upon, and partly in the defendant’s notes; and that they so agreed, and that the defendant transferred the stocks as agreed, and gave his note for $2,000, and that Mr. Hackett executed a release to him, and a discharge from all liability and accountability by reason of his trust, and that the five shares in the Sullivan Railroad were included among the stocks. That the defendant then considered them of the value of $500; but he had not, and did not represent that he had, any means of knowledge as to their value, beyond the means possessed by other business men, such as Mr. Hackett was. The answer further denies that Mr. Hackett objected to the Sullivan Railroad stock upon any ground, or that any question was made as to its value, more than as to the other stocks.

Now since there is no question of veracity between these [507]*507parties to be considered, but only the weight of proof, as we have seen, according to a technical rule of evidence,— that the court, namely, will not found a decree upon facts stated in the bill and denied in the answer, except these facts be proved by evidence over and above the testimony of a single witness, — it is necessary that we should consider how far the allegations in the bill, supported by the evidence of the only witness who testifies to the point, are denied by the answer.

It is alleged in the bill that Mr. Haekett objected to receive the five Sullivan Railroad shares. And this allegation is supported in terms by the testimony of Mr. Haekett. But the fact being denied by the answer of the defendant, and not. otherwise supported by evidence, cannot, according to the rule adverted to, be taken as proved, for the purpose of the decree.

The bill further states that Mr. Kittredge, upon that objection being made, assured said Haekett that said Sullivan Railroad stock was good property and worth par, or $ 100 per share; that said road was about paying a dividend, and that he had invested said Helen’s money in said Sullivan Railroad, and that said Haekett, trusting to the defendant’s assurances, received said five shares for said balance. And the testimony of Mr. Haekett is to the same purport.

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30 N.H. 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawton-v-kittredge-nhsuperct-1855.