Morrison v. Shuster

12 D.C. 190
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 11, 1881
DocketNo. 6962; No. 7093
StatusPublished

This text of 12 D.C. 190 (Morrison v. Shuster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrison v. Shuster, 12 D.C. 190 (D.C. 1881).

Opinion

Mr. Justice IIagner

delivered the opinion of the court.

The first step in these cases was a bill filed by Morrison, Harrimon & Co., against the defendants, on the 16th of September, 1879. It alleged that the complainants were [192]*192wholesale dry goods merchants in the city of Philadelphia ; that the defendant Henry C. Shuster was a retail dry goods dealer in Washington city ; that for neaidy a year he had been purchasing, from time to time, goods from the complainants; that on four occasions, named in the bill, the first in May and the last in August, 1879, the complainants had furnished him with large quantities of dry goods, which had been received by him and placed on the shelves in his store ; that about the tenth of September they received a communication from him stating his belief that he would be unable to meet his notes, not yet due, for the goods so furnished-The bill then charged that for the previous six months ITenry C. Shuster had been, in fact, insolvent; that he knew such to be his financial condition, and had obtained the goods from the complainants knowing his inability to pay for them that under these circumstances there was no valid contract of sale between the parties, and the complainants were advised that they were entitled to demand the re-delivery of their goods ; that they accordingly made this demand upon Henry C. Shuster, but he refused compliance, and forthwith executed to the defendants, William M. Shuster, jr., and Daniel Larrabee, an assignment in writing of all his property, including the said goods of the complainants, by which the assignees were empowered to make sale of the effects conveyed, and collect all debts due to the assignor, and from the proceeds to pay, in the first instance, to his brother, William M. Shuster, about $1,700, and to his mother-in-law, Mrs. Emily Fuller, $600 ; and out of the residue of the proceeds, after defraying the expenses of the trust, to pay pro rata the claims of such of his other creditors as should agree to execute full releases to him of their claims ; and that the pro rata share which would be payable to any creditor who might refuse to execute such release, should be paid over to the grantor ; that this assignment wras void by reason of the requirement therein of releases, and the resignation of part of the proceeds to the grantor ; that the defendant had so mixed the goods thus obtained by him from the complainants with other goods in his store, that it [193]*193would be extremely difficult to separate them, and hence they were remediless by action at law to obtain possession of their said property.

The bill prayed that the assignment might be declared void as against the creditors of Henry C. Shuster; that a receiver might be appointed to take charge of the said goods, and hold the credits and other .property' of Henry C. Shuster ; that the defendants might be enjoined from proceeding to carry said assignment into effect, and that the complainants might have such other and further general relief as their case might require.

The bill is not framed as was contended, in conformity with the proceedings in the case of the Idaho, 93 U. S., the circumstances of that case being quite different from those disclosed in the present: But it seems to be justified in its general features by the proceeding in the case of Hyde vs. Ellery, 18 Md., and in the case in 42 Ga., 46, Cohen vs. Myers.

It is worthy of remark, however, that there is no charge in the bill that the alleged confusion of the goods of the complainants with those of the defendant, Henry C. Shuster, was fraudulent or wrongful; and as the Supreme Court, in the case of the Idaho, in announcing the law upon this subject, remai’ked, that it is not enough that such confusion should be accidental or even intentional; it must also be wrongful, to justify the interposition of a court upon that ground,” the bill might, perhaps, have been demurrable for the want'of such an allegation.

A restraining order was passed as prayed. The answers of all the defendants were filed, denying emphatically and in the amplest terms the various supposed equities of the bill. Although the bill did not call explicitly for answers upon oath, it prayed that the defendants might answer, &c., which is certainly not equivalent to an agreement to dispense with answers under oath. Under such circumstances the familiar and well settled principle applies, that where an answer is responsive to the charges of the bill and swears away its equity, the denials of the answer must prevail, and the bill [194]*194will be dismissed, unless the defendants’ statements are contradicted by the testimony of two witnesses, or of one witness with pregnant corroborating circumstances.

In the case at bar, the complainants have presented no witness at all to overcome the denials of the answers. The only testimony is that produced by the defendants, and the evidence of Henry C. Shuster, taken before the examiner, confirms the denials of his answer in every particular. Under these circumstances there could be no question that the prayer of the bill for the redelivery to the complainants of the goods must be denied. 19 Md., 172, Blonheim vs. Moore.

But it is insisted that the court may, under the prayer for general relief, proceed to direct payment to the complainants of the value of their goods out of the proceeds of sale now in court. But it is obvious that the sole theory upon which the complainants’ bill was filed was that they were not creditors of Henry C. Shuster; that the transactions between the parties with reference to the last four shipments of goods did not constitute a sale in the legal sense of the term, because Henry C. Shuster had no honest purpose^ the time he received the goods to pay for them, since he knew he was insolvent, and had no expectation of being able to pay for them; and, in accordance with this theory, by the order of October 7,1878, appointing the assigneees as receivers and authorizing them to sell thé property, the receivers, at the request of the complainants, were particularly required to keep separate the proceeds of the property so claimed by the complainants.

It is settled that under a prayer for general relief the complainant can only claim relief of the same general nature as that prayed in the bill, that the claims under the general relief clause must be consistent with the particular relief claimed, and that different parts of the bill cannot claim relief upon principles diametrically opposite. A plaintiff cannot “ blow hot and'cold ” in the same bill in such manner. The court say in Evans vs. Iglehart, 6 Gill & Johnson, 171: Claims must be consistently urged. A party cannot be pursued for the value of the property, and then when the [195]*195property is found to be more valuable than supposed, be, pursued for the property itself.” Especially would this principle be observed in chancery courts, where the special prayer for relief is grounded upon allegations of fraud, in fact. 15 Howard, 56, Eyre vs. Potter; 7 English Common Law, 260.

But it is urged that the bill is also framed as a creditor’s bill, and that under this feature jurisdiction may be maintained notwithstanding the denials of the answer and the absence of proof of the particular charges. The statement in the bill, which it is supposed converts iti into a creditor’s bill, is in these words: “The complainants sue as well for themselves as for all other creditors of Henry C. Shuster

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 D.C. 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-shuster-dc-1881.