Livingston v. Story

34 U.S. 632, 9 L. Ed. 255, 9 Pet. 632, 1835 U.S. LEXIS 364
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 34 U.S. 632 (Livingston v. Story) 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
Livingston v. Story, 34 U.S. 632, 9 L. Ed. 255, 9 Pet. 632, 1835 U.S. LEXIS 364 (1835).

Opinion

Mr Justice Thompson

delivered the’opinion of the Court.

The appellant, Edward Livingston, filed his bill of complaint ' in the district court of the United States for the eastern district of Louisiana, against the appellee, Benjamin Story, to set aside a conveyance made by him. of certain lots of land in the city of New Orleans, and" to be restored to the possession of said lots'; alleging that the deed was given on a contract for the loan of money. Although in • the form of a sale, it was in in reality a pledge for the repayment of the money loaned, and calling for an account of the rents and profits of the property.

To. this bill the defendant demurred; and the court sustained the demurrer and dismissed' the complainant’s bill, and the cause comes into this court on appeal.

It will be enough for the purpose of disposing of the-questions which have been made in this case, to state, only some of the leading facts which are set forth and stated in the bill.

. The bill alleges that on.or about the 25th of July. 1832, the defendant and John A., Fort loaned to him, the complainant, the sum of 22,936 dollars, to secure the payment of which, with interest at the rate of eighteen per cent per annum, he conveyed tb them a lot of ground in New Orleans, with the *653 buildings and improvements thereon. That a counter letter or instrument was, at the same time, executed by the. other parties, by which they stipulated to reconvey the property on certain conditions. That the lot was covered with fifteen stores, in . an unfinished state, and the object of the loan was to complete them. The property is stated to have been worth at that time 60,000 dollars, and is now worth double that sum. That the complainant, soon after the said transaction, left New Orleans, where he. then resided, on a visit to the state of New York, expecting that during his absence some of the stores would have been finished, or in a state to let. That on his return, he.found that Story and Fort had paid 8000 dollars to a contractor, who had failed to finish the buildings, the rent of each of the three smallest of which would be the interest of 10,000 dollars a year when finished. A further time was requested for the payment of the money, which Story and Fort would not agree to; but upon condition that the property should be advertised for sale on a certain day namedthat the sum due should be increased from 25,000 dollars to 27,000 dollars, which sum was made up by adding to the 25,000 dollars the following sums; 1500 dollars for interest for the delay of four months, at eighteen per cent; 800 dollars for auctioneer’s commissions; 50 dollars for. advertising, and 200.'dollars arbitrarily added without any designation ; and that he, the complainant, should annul the counter letter given to .him by Story and Fort. That the complainant, being entirely at the meicy.of the said Story and Fort, consented to these terms, in hopes of being able to relieve himself before the day fixed for the sale of his property; but being disappointed, he was on that day, in order to obtain a delay of sixty days, forced to consent to sign a paper, by which it was agreed that the debt should be augmented to the sum of 27,830 dollars, and that if the same was not paid at the •expiration of the sixty days, the property , should belong to the. said Fort and Story without any sale. The bill contains some other allegations of hardship and oppression, and alleges that the rents and profits of the property received by Fort and Stofy. in the life time of Fort, and by Story since the death óf Fort, amount, at least, to 60,000 dollars. The bill then j)rays.that the said Benjamin Story may be cited to appear to the bill of complaint,'and answer the interrogatories therein propounded.

*654 The defendant, in tbe court below, demurs to the whole bill, and for cause, shows that the complainant has not by his said bill made such a'-case as entitles him, in a' court of equity in this state, to any discovery from this defendant, touching the matters contained in the said-bill, or any or either of such matters; nor to entitle the said complainant to any relief in this court, touching any of the matter's therein complained of. The want of Droper parties is also assigned for cause of demurrer.^

The court belów did not notice the want of parties, blit sustained the demurrer on the other causes assigned.

The argument addressed to this court has been confined, principally, to.the general question, whether- the district court of the United States, in Louisiana, has equity powers ; and, if so, what are the modes of proceeding in the exercise of such powers. The great earnestness with which this power has been denied at the bar to the district court, may make it proper briefly to state the origin of the district court of that stale, and the jurisdiction conferred upon it by the laws of the United States. When the constitution was adopted, and the courts of the union organized, and their jurisdiction distributed, Louisiana formed no part of this union. It is not reasonable, therefore, to-conclude that any phraseology has been adopted with a view to the peculiar local system of laWs in that state. She was admitted'into the union in the year 1812] and, by the act of congress, passed for that purpose, 4 Laws U. S. 402, it is declared, that there shall be established a district court, to consist of one judge, to be called the district judge, who shall, in all things, have and exercise the same jurisdiction and powers, which, by- the act, the title whereof is in this section recited, were given to the district judge of the territory of Orleans. By the act here referred to for the jurisdiction and powers of the court, 3 Laws U. S; 606, a district court is established, to consist of one judge; and it declares"that he shall, in all things, haye and exercise the same jurisdiction and powers which are by law given to, or may be exercised, by the judge of the Kentucky district; And, by the judiciary act of 1789, 2 Laws U. S. 60, it is.declared, that the district court in Kentucky shall, besides the jurisdiction given to other district courts, have'jurisdiction of all other causes, except of appeals *655 and writs of error, hereinafter made cognizable in a circuit, court, and shall proceed therein in the same manner as a circuit court. And such manner of proceeding is pointed out by the process act of 1792, 2 Laws U. S. 299, which declares that the modes of proceeding in suits of common law, shall be the same as are now used in the said courts respectively, in pursuance of the act entitled, an act to regulate process in the courts of the United Slates viz., the same as are now used and ■ allowed in the supreme courts of the respective states, 2 Laws U. S. 72; and in suits of equity, and those of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, according to the principles, rules and usages which belong to courts of equity, and courts of admiralty respectively, as contradistinguished from courts of common law ; subject to such alteration by the courts as may be thought expedient, &c.

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Bluebook (online)
34 U.S. 632, 9 L. Ed. 255, 9 Pet. 632, 1835 U.S. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingston-v-story-scotus-1835.