McGillin v. Bennett

132 U.S. 445, 10 S. Ct. 122, 33 L. Ed. 422, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1890
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 16, 1889
Docket146
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 132 U.S. 445 (McGillin v. Bennett) 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
McGillin v. Bennett, 132 U.S. 445, 10 S. Ct. 122, 33 L. Ed. 422, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1890 (1889).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Blatchfobd

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action at law, brought in the Superior Court of Cook County, Illinois, by Milton H. Bennett and Bobert L. Dunman against Edward M. McGillin, and removed by the defendant into the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois. The suit was brought to recover the sum of'$108,150, with interest at six per cent per annum from the 15th of July, 1885. The defendant pleaded the general issue and sundry special pleas. The plaintiffs demurred to the latter, the demurrer was sustained, and leave to amend the pleas was denied. There was also a plea of set-off, to which there was a replication, joining issue; and there was a similiter to the plea of the general issue. On the written waiver of a jury, the case was tried before the court, which found the issues for the plaintiffs, and also made special find *446 ings, and assessed the damages of the plain tiffs, at $115,580.55; for which amount, with costs, judgment was entered in their favor. To review that judgment, the defendant has brought a writ of error.

The suit ivas founded on a written instrument, dated April 16, 1885, a copy of Avhich, as set out in the first count of the plaintiff’s declaration, is contained in the margin. 1

*447 There is a bill .of exceptions, which contains all the evidence offered on the trial by either party, and the special findings *448 made by the court. The material parts of those findings are as. follows': The parties executed the contract sued on. At the date of its execution, the defendant paid to the plaintiffs $25,000, and also delivered to them his promissory notes of that date for $75,000, due and payable July 25, 1885, with interest. at eight per cent per annum. Those notes were thereafter, and before maturity, transferred for value, and were, after the commencement of this suit, paid in full by the defendant to the legal holders thereof. On and prior to .July 14, 1885, the plaintiffs delivered to the defendant, and he accepted, the ranch and ranch outfit, as called for and described in the contract, and he took possession of the same; and, at the same time, they delivered to him 4854 head of the cattle called for by the contract, which were accepted by him, and were the only cattle delivered by them to him on the contract. There was a deficiency of 7646 cattle in the number called for by the contract. This deficiency, at the rate of $25 per head, amounted to $191,150, which the defendant was entitled to have credited upon the $400,000 which he was, by the contract, to pay to the plaintiffs for the ranch, ranch outfit and cattle. The failure of the plaintiffs to deliver the full number of cattle called for by the contract was by reason of heavy losses of cattle sustained by them, from cold and starvation, during the winter of 1884 and the spring of 1885, whereby their herd was reduced from about the number called for by the contract to the number actually delivered. When they made the contract they in *449 good faith believed that they had, and should be able to deliver. to the defendant, the full number of 12,500 head, and were not aware of the losses until they attempted to round up or collect their cattle, at about the time the delivery was to be made. Neither the defendant nor his agents or employés had any information that the plaintiffs would not be able to deliver the 12,500 head of cattle, until notified by the latter, on the 14th of July, 1885, that they had delivered all the cattle belonging to the ranch, and could not deliver any more. Before the 1st of July, 1885, the defendant had caused a deed to be made out, and signed and acknowledged by himself and his wife, conveying to the plaintiffs the eighty-four acres of land in Cook County, Illinois, mentioned in the contract; but there was an apparent incumbrance upon the land, as shown by the record of land titles in Cook County, by a trust-deed dated June 28, 1878, to one Manning, as trustee, to secure the payment of $40,000 from the defendant to one Sawyer, and that trust-deed was not released and discharged until December 5, 1885 ; but, in fact, the indebtedness secured thereby had been fully paid on or before July 1, 1885. On the 15th of July, 1885, the plaintiffs did not transfer, or offer to transfer, to the defendant the two leases mentioned in the contract; and the parties agreed to meet, at Kansas City, Missouri, within a few days after the said 15th of July, and then endeavor to adjust and settle all differences between them in regard to the contract. They did so meet in Kansas City, on the 17th of July, and the defendant then offered to convey to the plaintiffs the eighty-four acres of land in Cook County, on their paying to him $59,150, which conveyance the plaintiffs refused to accept on those terms. Thereupon, the defendant, to avoid litigation and as a compromise, as he said, offered to convey to the plaintiffs fifty-four acres of the Cook County land, in full payment of the balance due from him to them for the ranch and cattle. The plaintiffs refused to accept such offer; but the defendant did not tender any deed, either of the whole or of any part of the land. After such delivery of the ranch, ranch property and cattle to the defendant, the plaintiffs insisted that there was due to them from him $108,850, which should be divided *450 into two equal amounts and secured by the notes of the defendant, one payable on July 1, 1886, and the other on November 1, 1886, with interest on'each note at the rate of eight per cent per annum. The plaintiffs also insisted that the sum of $191,150, to be credited to the defendant on the $400,000 purchase price to be paid for the ranch and cattle, should be applied as a credit to extinguish the payment to be made in the Cook County land. But the, defendant refused to give the notes for $108,850, as demanded by the plaintiffs, and insisted that there was no cash payment or money due from him to them.' The defendant declined to settle unless the plaintiffs would take in settlement the Cook County land. Thereupon, the defendant, by way of compromise, offered to the plaintiffs that if they would repay to him the $25,000 cash paid by him, and would return to him his notes for $75,000, given under the contract, he would surrender to them the possession of all property delivered, throw up the contract, and'stand the loss of all moneys, amounting to about $5000, expended by him on the ranch. The plaintiffs declined this offer,' stating that they had used the money and parted with the notes, and that the acceptance of the offer was entirely beyond their control. At the meeting in Kansas City, the plaintiffs advised the defendant of the amount which they had advanced for rent on the leases named in the contract, subsequently to July 15, 1885, and which was to be refunded by the defendant; and thereafter the latter paid said rental, and the. plaintiffs duly transferred the leases to him.

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Bluebook (online)
132 U.S. 445, 10 S. Ct. 122, 33 L. Ed. 422, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgillin-v-bennett-scotus-1889.