Pickett v. Foster

149 U.S. 505, 13 S. Ct. 998, 37 L. Ed. 829, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2319
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 15, 1893
Docket175
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 149 U.S. 505 (Pickett v. Foster) 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
Pickett v. Foster, 149 U.S. 505, 13 S. Ct. 998, 37 L. Ed. 829, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2319 (1893).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shiras,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

Upon the.facts disclosed by the pleadings and evidence it is plain that the complainants are not entitled to a reversal of the decree below, dismissing their bill, unless they have sustained their allegations of fraud on the part of George Foster, as public administrator of Carroll Parish, and of such knowledge and complicity therein on the part of Mrs. Mary J. Foster as to deprive her of her alleged title as a bona fide purchaser of her husband’s interest at a sheriff’s sale.

The answer of Foster explicitly denied the charges of fraud contained in the bill, and the answer of Mary J. Foster was, in effect, a pléa that she was a bona fide purchaser, for a valu *524 able consideration, without notice. Although answers under oath were-waived in the bill, and the defendants’ responsiye answers cannot, therefore, be treated as evidence in their favor, still, upon the issues thus raised, the burthen of proof was upon the complainants.

To sustain their side of the case the complainants put in evidence the promissory, notes and the deed of trust securing them, bearing date January, 1866. They proved the death of James C. Pickett on July 10, 1872; that Joseph D. Pickett, one of said complainants, was on the 20th of May, 1873, appointed his administrator; and that said Joseph D. Pickett and Theodore John Pickett, the other cofaplainant, were the sole heirs-at-law of James C. Pickett. Jos ph D. Pickett testified that on September 27, 1873, he put the notes and deed of trust into the hands of E. M. Scanlan and J. H. Green, who were then the husbands of the makers of the notes, and entered into a written agreement with them, whereby they were authorized to employ attorneys to collect said notes, and also gave them- a letter proposing to give the lawyers who should undertake the collection of the claim two-thirds of whatever they should recover, and that the Pickett estate should not be subjected to any expense whatever. Pickett further testified that he understood that E. M. Scanlan and J. H. Green, in pursuance of this arrangement, employed J. W. Montgomery, a lawyer' resident in Carroll Parish, to enforce payment of the claim; that Montgomery procured Lanier, as public administrator, to bring a suit in the district court of the parish; that he, Pickett, was not kept advised of the progress of the suit, and that he never knew .that said suit was dismissed until he saw the record of the court, showing such dismissal in September, 1885; that he had no personal knowledge of the history of the suit; that upon learning that the Lanier suit had been dismissed, he sent W. H. Pickett, as his attorney, to Louisiana, who received the notes and mortgage deed from Montgomery, and employed W. G. Wyly to bring the present suit. He further testified that he had never seen or known Foster till the latter called on him, at his office in Frankfort, Kentucky, on the first day of June, 1886.

*525 Theodore John. Pickett, the other complainant, testified that he had no personal knowledge of the suit brought by Lanier; that he did not know that such suit had been brought, nor did he know that the suit had been dismissed on December 4, 1875, till he was so informed by Joseph D. Pickett in September, 1885; and that he never saw George Foster.

William H. Pickett testified that he was present at the interview between Joseph D. Pickett and E. M. Scanlan and J. H. Green, when the agreement was made about the collection of the notes in September, 1873; that in November, 1885, he went, as attorney for complainants, to Louisiana, and inspected the record of the District Court of Carroll Parish, showing that a suit had been brought by B, H. Lanier, as public administrator, and that the same had been dismissed in December, 1875; that he procured the notes and mortgage from J. W. Montgomery, who had been employed by Scanlan and Green, and employed Mr. Wyly to bring the present suit. He does not profess to have any personal knowledge whatever, of the facts of the case, except what he acquired by examining the record of the Lanier suit.

J. W. Montgomery testified that he had been employed by E. M. Scanlan to bring suit on the Pickett notes and mortgage; that he procured Lanier, as public administrator, to bring the suit; that when Lanier was superseded by the appointment of George Foster to be public administrator he ceased to have anything further to do' with the suit; that he was not Foster’s attorney, and that the first he knew of Foster’s appointment was the dismissal of the suit shown by the judgment rendered by the court; and that the notes were never in the actual possession of George Foster, nor did he have any control of the suit filed on them after he became administrator.

. William G. Wyly and Jesse D. Tompkins testified that they knew George Foster, and that he seemed to be and to act for years past as owner of the Morgan plantation.

In addition to this testimony complainants put in evidence the record of the oath taken by George Foster, as public administrator, and his bond, in $10,000, as such. Also the *526 records of the suits of one Goodrich against .Mrs. Ricketts and Mrs. Bell, afterwards Scanlan and Green, and in which it appeared that Goodrich, as tutor of the said defendants, had entered judgments confessed by them in his favor, and had levied on their interests in the Morgan plantation, and sales and conveyances by the sheriff to said Goodrich of the interest of Mrs. Ricketts, and to John H. Green of the interest of Mrs.' Green. Also proceedings and deeds whereby these interests finally became vested in George Roster.

Upon the flots so shown by the complainants, it is difficult to hold that charges óf fyaud' against George Roster, and of complicity therein on the part of Mary J. Foster, can be said to be made out with sufficient clearness to warrant a court of equity in granting the relief prayed for in the bill.

The long periods of time within which the events disclosed in the evidence took place, and the open and avowed character. of the several suits and conveyances whereby at last the title to the property became vested in Mary J. Foster, should be considered. Apart from the legal effects- of the lapse of time, which we shall consider hereafter, there seems to have been unaccountable delay in the successive steps taken by the holders of these notes and mortgage.

No effort was made by James C. Pickett in his lifetime td collect the notes, although the notes were overdue for several years. His administrator apparently took no steps to collect the notes until visited and aroused t< _ action by the husbands of the makers of the notes, with whom he made a cbntract by which he agreed to give an attorney unknown and unnamed! two-thirds of the- amount which might be collected. He then — although as he himself states he was not informed of what his agents and attorneys were doing — took no further action, and made no inquiries till September, 1885, a period of twelve years. He even says that he did not know into whose hands his agents, Scanlan, and Green, had put the notes for collection. -*

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Bluebook (online)
149 U.S. 505, 13 S. Ct. 998, 37 L. Ed. 829, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickett-v-foster-scotus-1893.