New Orleans v. Gaines's Administrator

131 U.S. 191, 9 S. Ct. 745, 33 L. Ed. 99, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1813
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 13, 1889
Docket4
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 131 U.S. 191 (New Orleans v. Gaines's Administrator) 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
New Orleans v. Gaines's Administrator, 131 U.S. 191, 9 S. Ct. 745, 33 L. Ed. 99, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1813 (1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bradley,

after stating the case as above reported, delivered the opinion of the court.

The complainant’s claim in this suit is that the city of New Orleans, as unlawful possessor and vendor of the property, is primarily responsible in the same manner and to the same extent as it would have been if it had never sold any part of it, but had remained in possession of the whole from the time of *208 its purchase to the present time. The argument is, that the city, as vendor, put its grantees into possession, and thus enabled them to- keep the complainant out of possession, and is, therefore, responsible as principal, and not merely as surety or guarantor of its grantees; — although the latter position is also assumed. Its liability as principal is asserted as a fundamental proposition on which the case may be safely rested.

Another principle invoked and applied is,.that, inasmuch as the city of New Orleans claimed the property under the sale of Eelf and Chew, although claiming it through the medium of Evariste Blanc, it was a possessor in bad faith, and, as such, accountable, not only for the rents and revenues actually' received, but for all that might have been received by the most provident management of the property.

The manner in which these assumed principles of law have been applied by the court below in the disposition of the case will be considered hereafter.

As already stated, the amount of the decree pronounced against the city was $1,925,607.83, of which $1,348,959.91 were for rents and revenues of unimproved property. The remainder, $576,707.92, was for rents and revenues of improved and unimproved property found due from the defendants in the suits of Gaines v. Monsseaux et al. and Gaines v. Agnelly et al., before referred to; the amount being somewhat increased by additional interest. The parties in those cases relied on the city to protect them, and appear to have let things take pretty much their own course.

As the complainant was allowed, in her first suit against the city of New Orleans, before referred to, to recover all rents and revenues received by the city from each portion of the Blanc tract, derived from Clark’s estate whilst it was in possession thereof, the complainant, in her claim before the master in the present case, waived all rents and revenues arising from the tract prior to March 10, 1837, the time when the auction sale was made as before mentioned; but claimed that there had been no adjudication or recovery against the city for any such rents and revenues after that date, except for the five squares inferred to in that former suit; and hence she *209 claimed an account for all rents and revenues accruing after the 10th of March, 1837, except with regard to the said five squares, and some few other lots specially designated, which do not require attention here.

The master, therefore, in talcing his account, assumed that no account of rents and revenues had ever been rendered by the city after the said 10th day of March, 1S37, except as aforesaid, and proceeded to charge it with the entire rents and revenues of all the land in the whole tract, (except as aforesaid,) from the said date to the time of making the report, without regard to the question whether the city or its grantees were in actual possession or not. The rents and revenues thus charged against the city for unimproved land were not rents and revenues actually received, but fictitious rents and ■ revenues, assessed at the rate of five per cent per annum on 70 per cent of the amount of the inflated sales of 1837, with interest thereon to the time of making the report, that being what the master deemed a fair equivalent of what the property ought to have produced. We shall see hereafter that the court added to this estimate interest on the other 30 per .cent of the amount of said sales.

From the reports of the master we are led to understand that the amounts found due from the defendants in the other suits, aggregating, with interest, $576,707.92, as above stated, were estimated and made up on the same principles which were followed with regard to the unimproved property; not by taking merely the actual rents and revenues received, but adding thereto fictitious amounts which it was supposed might have been received by provident management, and by interest on hypothetical values in the absence of other evidence of income.

Now, in relation to the principles before referred to, on which the complainant contends that her case may be rested, and which the court seems to have adopted, we have the following observations to make. The first proposition is that the city of New Orleans is primarily liable for all the rents and revenues of the entire tract derived from the Clark estate and purchased from Evariste Blanc, for the entire period since *210 1837, down to the time of the decree. Leaving out of view, for the present, the secondary liability to which the city may be equitably bound to respond on its warranty of title to its grantees, is it true, in point of law, that the city is primarily liable in the manner above stated, with regard both to the time when it had possession itself, and also to the time Avhen its grantees had the possession ? The contrary of this proposition was distinctly decided by the Circuit Court in the case of Gaines v. New Orleans, and its decision Avas affirmed by this court in New Orleans v. Gaines, 15 Wall. 624. It is true that the complainant acquiesced in the decision of the Circuit Court in that case, and did not appeal; but that only left the decision standing as a precedent against her, all the more effective for such acquiescence.

The common laAv, certainly, does not recognize any such rule as that contended for. The person Avho receives the rents and profits is the only person Avho is to respond for them. It Avas ■even made a question in Doe v. Harlow, 12 Ad. & El. 40, and in Doe v. Challis, 17 Q. B. 166, whether the landlord of a tenant in possession Avas liable for mesne profits. After argument it Avas decided that he Avas. But the reason of this is obvious : the tenant’s possession is the possession of his landlord. It is true that, by the ancient laAv, Avhere there was an entire disseisin, the estate was deemed out of the disseisee for the time being, and no intrusion upon the land was a trespass against him; and, therefore, a grantee of the disseisor, or a second disseisoi', was not responsible to the true OAATier at all, who had to look to his immediate disseisor for damages in an assize. Ilobart, 98. But the modern action for mesne profits only lies against the tenant in possession who is cast in an action of ejectment; and where no ejectment has been brought, the actual trespasser on the land is the person amenable to an action of trespass quare clausum fregit, or assumpsit for use and occupation, Avhere the trespass is waived.

The present case, however, is not to be decided by the rules of the common law. The counsel for the complainant relies on the French or civil law to sustain his position.

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Bluebook (online)
131 U.S. 191, 9 S. Ct. 745, 33 L. Ed. 99, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-orleans-v-gainess-administrator-scotus-1889.