Neufville v. Mitchel

1 S.C. Eq. 480
CourtCourt of Chancery of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 15, 1796
StatusPublished

This text of 1 S.C. Eq. 480 (Neufville v. Mitchel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neufville v. Mitchel, 1 S.C. Eq. 480 (Conn. Super. Ct. 1796).

Opinion

Chancellor Rutledge

delivered the decree of the court:.

Complainant’s bill states that he was applied to by defendant, W. B. Mitchell on his own and his brother the defendant I» Mitchell’s account, to become purchasers of the plantation in hill mentioned, and a considerable number of negroes; that complainant sold them the plantation for 9400k and 137 negroes for 8905k They agreed to pay the sum of 8905k with interest from April, 1794,-. in three equal annual instalments; and 9400k in six annual instalments. They proposed to give bonds for the purchase money, and mortgages not only of the abovet. mentioned property, but also of 100 other negroes; and a plantation of the said John Mitchell as a security for the payment thereof — That the said W. B. Mitchell took possession of the said plantation and negroes — That lie and the defendant John Mitchell have invariably exercised acts of ownership over the property ever since, and are now in actual possession of it; and uniformly refuse to fulfil their part of the contract. The bill therefore prays a specific performance of the agreement and payment to complainant of what he is entitled to receive from them. The defendants in their answer admit the purchase of the lands and negroes; that the land whs to be paid for in six annual instalments; but insist that the negroes were to be paid for iiy five annual instalments; and refer [481]*481to exhibit A. to prove it. They also admit the agreement to make the mortgages; but insist they were to be made in such mode only as is set forth in the answer. And they admit the possession of the property and exercising acts of ownership over it. The answer of defendant, W. B. Mitchell, then states various other matters, such as loss of crop by freshets, against which he asserts complainant warranted; and that several negroes died with the whooping cough for which complainant was liable; and that many of them were diseased and not taska-ble; all of which were causes for abatement or reduction in the price of the property. The importance of this case arises more from the magnitude of the debt than any intricacy in the subject. The questions for the determination of the coui't are two. What was the time stipulated for payment of the negroes, and whether any and what allowance ought to be made on account of the losses, &c. mentioned in defendant W. B. Mitchell’s answer. As to the first point respecting the time agreed upon for payment of the negroes. In all cases when a bill is brought for discovery and to compel specific performance of an agreement, the complainant being deficient in proof, defendant’s answer must be held as true, so far as respects the agreement; unless contradicted by two witnesses or one witness, and some strong corroborating' circumstances. In this case the defendant, W. B. Mitchell has positively denied that he agreed to pay for the negroes in three years, but that the time agreed upon was five years; and to corroborate his answer he refers to an exhibit filed with it being, a list of negroes delivered him by complainant, wherein the terms of payment for the said negroes are specified; in which list it is mentioned that the amount of one third of the purchase money of 144 negroes with interest to 1st April 1795 is 37751. 4s. and immediately under it is said, one fifth of the principal with interest of the negroes is 2588l. from which circumstance, and because on the same paper the terms of payment for the land are altered from five to six years, the defendant has sworn positively that the agreement was five and not three years. It must here he observed that a list of the [482]*482negroes actually sold and delivered to tlie defendants is filed with the bill; and on that paper the terms of payment are said to be three years for the negroes, and six years f°r the land. Whether such a list was ever delivered to the defendant has not appeared; neither of the lists are dated. That referred to by defendant’s answer is signed by complainant, the other is not, though both are in his hand writing; so that the court might make choice of either, if the defendant had not sworn so positively that the instalments agreed on were five years. The defendant has likewise sworn that 40001. and no more was to be paid for the first instalment, in which he is confirmed by complainant’s own memorandum on the list exhibited with his bill. That sum however is rather more than the instalment of one fifth of the purchase lnoney of the negroes with interest, and a sixth of the, land; at the same time that it is 1300Z. less than a third part. This business has been very loosely conducted. There appears to have been various propositions on the subject. All the papers are in complainant’s hand writing. The court can only determine on what has been positively sworn to, which is that the agreement was for five years’ instalment; and the list referred to by the answer, seems to warrant the conclusion. The complainant perhaps may think it hard to be kept longer out of his money than he intended or thought he had stipulated for; but it is the unavoidable consequence of his own improvident conduct, in parting with the possession of so large and valuable a property without taking the precaution which every prudent man should do, of reducing the agreement to writing and completing his contract at once. The second point for determination is whether any deduction is to be made on account of the injury the defendants have sustained by the loss of crop and the death of negroes. If this question had depended and was to be determined solely on defendant’s answer without proof, the complainant would have been in a very unfortunate situation. For the defendant, W. B. Mitchell has sworn that the complainant warranted the land to be perfectly free from all freshes and the negroes free from all dis • [483]*483eases. The defendant’s answer in this particular cannot be taken as sufficient evidence against complainant to charge him with such a warranty. If there had been one, it is probable he had it inserted in the deeds, which his own counsel drew; and tiiose deeds must have been produced to shew what was the agreement. That has not been done, and therefore the court must conclude there was not such a warranty. Indeed it is not reasonable to suppose the complainant would have been so rash as to warrant against all freshes, when it is a matter notorious that there are very few swamp plantations that can be. said to be above all freshes. A variety of witnesses have been examined to prove this land liable to freshes, and the negroes unsound, &c. &c. The substance of their testimony however respecting the land is that the land is of the first quality; that it would be returned as such on oath to the tax collectors; that it is as good as any on the river; and it has the best banks of any plantation on the river one only excepted; that very good crops are usually made on it; that it is not generally subject to freshes; that it was overflowed in 1786; the banks were then had; they have been made entirely new since, and no fresh has gone over them from that period till the year 1794. Mil Hamilton declares he had sold a plantation opposite, containing only 220 acres for 4000Í. The land in question is 550 acres and was sold for 94001. That the soil of Hamilton’s tract was by no means so good, and the banks very inferior to those of the plantation in question; and that the land is not in the least injured by the fresh. CoL M’Pherson has offered the same price for the land and negroes, which was given by defendant; and that since the fresh of 1794, he offered defendant, W. B. Mitchell 5001. for the bargain.

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Bluebook (online)
1 S.C. Eq. 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neufville-v-mitchel-ctchansc-1796.