N. C. Railroad v. Swepson

71 N.C. 350
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 71 N.C. 350 (N. C. Railroad v. Swepson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
N. C. Railroad v. Swepson, 71 N.C. 350 (N.C. 1874).

Opinion

Read®, J.

The plaintiff had a sinking fund, and a committee of three, viz; the defendants Mendenhall, Davis and Planner, to manage it. A part of this sinking fund was $100,000 in North Carolina bonds known as “old sixes.” At a meeting of the plaintiff’s Board of Directors in July, 1863, a resolution was adopted that the said committee be authorized to convert the old sixes North Carolina bonds into new sixes as occasion may offer.”

1. Prior to December, 1864, the committee had disposed of all the “ old sixes ” satisfactorily to the plaintiff, except $33,000. Of that sum the plaintiff alleges that $10,000 has never been accounted for by the committee in any way; $23,000 remained *351 in the hands of the committee, Davis being the custodian. On the 5th of December, 1864, defendant Swepson applied to Davis to allow him to take the said balance of “ old sixes,” $23,000, on the terms of his giving two “ new sixes ” for one old, and allowing him time to comply with the terms. Davis, who lived in Salisbury, replied by letter, that he would accede to the proposition if Mendenhall would, who lived in Greensboro,’ and that is the last that Davis heard of it. Mendenhall did agree to it with Swepson, “ but took no proceedings actually to carry out the exchange.” And there the matter rested. On the 12'th of January, 1865, plaintiff’s Board of Directors passed a resolution directing the committee to exchange no more “ old sixes ” unless for its own 8 per cent, bonds, and this notice was immediately served upon the members of the committee. Davis immediately, 16th of January, 1865, wrote to Swepson informing him of the order of the Board. After which Davis never heard more of the exchange; considered his authority to make the exchange at an end, and did not know that any exchange had been made until it was all over. Swepson made no reply to Davis’ letter informing him of the order of the Board of the 12th of January, 1865, but went to Mendenhall and insisted that the contract should be carried out, notwithstanding the January order. Menden-hall declined, and insisted upon writing and laying the matter before the Board at its next meeting. Of all this Davis knew nothing, and Elanner, the other member of the committee, had never been consulted at all, until about the 8th of April, 1865, when happening to be in Greensboro’, Swepson saw him and told him the state of things, and he told Swepson that if the contract had been made before the 12th of January order, he thought it ought to be carried out in good faith, and he went with Swepson to Mendenhall and said the same. But he did not then consider himself as acting as committee-man, as he had never been consulted or had anything to do with the contract, and he would have then given different advice if he had known that Swepson was not prepared to comply with the con *352 tract, as it seems be was not. About the last of April or first of May, 1865, and only a short time before the Board were to meet in July, Swepson aud Mendenhall effected a sham exchange, by Mendenhall’s delivering over|to Swepson the “ old sixes ” and Swepson delivering over to him “ new sixes,” which were not his, but were borrowed for the purpose and were to be returned to the owners in kind, and which were subsequently re-delivered by Mendenhall to Swepson in exchange for others which Swepson had bought up at three cents in the dollar. As before stated, Davis had been the custodian of the fund and of these old sixes, and had sent them to Mendenhall for safe keeping upon the approach of the Federal army, and he did not know of the disposition of the “old sixes” by Men-denhall until the funds were returned to him, when he found the old sixes gone and the ne^v ones in their place.

The excuse given for this transaction between Mendenhall and Swepson is, that the contract was made in December, 1864, before the order of the Board forbidding it, 12th of January, 1865, and that good faith required that it should be carried out. Davis, to whom Swepson made the first proposition to make the contract and who knew the terms proposed by Swep-son, and what he-had done on his part, did not think so, but thought the whole matter ended. Planner had not been consulted in making the contract, and although he subsequently said to Swepson and Mendenhall that he thought it ought to be carried out, yet if he had known the truth about it he would have advised differently. Mendenhall himself at first declined to carry it out without consulting the Board. How is it that Mendenhall never consulted either of his co-committeemen, especially as Davis made the contract and was the custodian of the bonds ? And if Mendenhall had determined to make the exchange, where was the propriety of the unreasonable indulgence given Swepson to comply on his part % Swepson had some time before this transaction, made a like proposition for $25,000 of the old sixes ” and asked time to comply, and the terms were accepted and the exchange was made in a short *353 time thereafter. But here the contract was made 5th of December, 1864, and Swepson had made no proposition to comply 12th of January, 1865, and never was ready to comply until May or June, 1865, six- months after the contract. It is true, Swepson had before that demanded of Mendenhall a compliance, but he was not himself prepared to comply. And if Mendenhall had intended to comply at any time, how easy it would have been for him to say, well, I am ready. And then Swepson being not ready, the matter would have ended. But he is indulged for six months, a part of the time under the plea by Mendenhall that he wanted to consult the Board, which was to meet in July. And then just before July the matter is hurried up as if to forestall the Board in July. And thus the valuable effects of the plaintiff were exchanged for “ trash ” under the plea that good faith to Swepson required it.

And yet, if good faith had required that the contract should be observed, and that Swepson should be indulged it would have been no bad faith in Mendenhall not to observe it; for it was not Ms contract. He was but an agent, and was dealt with as an agent, and the contract was the contract of his principal, the plaintiff. And, for a breach of it, he was not liable legally or moraly. If there was a breach of it by the order of 12th January, 1865, or in any other way, the plaintiff was liable in damages. But that order put an end to Mendenhall’s agency in that matter. It forbid him to make the exchange; and good faith ” in Mendenhall required him to obey his principal.. It is said, that the refusal of the plaintiff’ to complete the contract was an afterthought, induced by the repudiation of the’ new sixes by the State Convention under Federal.influence.. That cannot be so, because the war had not then ended, and. the Convention did not meet until the Fall succeeding; but if it' were true, still the bad faith of the plaintiff did not give the agent power to act. But, put the case in the most favorable light, the agent made the contract 5th December, 1864, when new sixes ” were of considerable value; Swepson says in his answer that many business men thought them perfectly good,. *354

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Related

Martin v. State
23 Neb. 371 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1888)
The N.C. R. R. Company v. . Swepson .
73 N.C. 316 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1875)
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71 N.C. 398 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1874)

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Bluebook (online)
71 N.C. 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/n-c-railroad-v-swepson-nc-1874.