Preston v. Keene

39 U.S. 133, 10 L. Ed. 387, 14 Pet. 133, 1840 U.S. LEXIS 362
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1840
StatusPublished

This text of 39 U.S. 133 (Preston v. Keene) 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
Preston v. Keene, 39 U.S. 133, 10 L. Ed. 387, 14 Pet. 133, 1840 U.S. LEXIS 362 (1840).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Barbour

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This. case comes before us, by appeal, .from a decree of the Circuit Court of the United States, for the Eastern District of Louisiana.

It was a petition, according to the course of practice in that state, but which we consider as substantially a bill in equity, filed by the appellee, against the appellant, as executor of James Brown deceased; stating, that James and Samuel Brown had become bound for a valuable consideration, by them received, to convey to 'him a lot in New Orleans, by a notarial contract, bearing date 'the 21st of August, 1-807;. that',he had in vain demanded of James Brown a fulfilment of his contract in relation to the lot; that said James Brown having died, and constituted the appellant his executor, by his last will,- the executor had duly qualified as such, and taken upon himself the burden of its execution. And praying, that said Brown’s executor might be condemned hnd adjudged, to convey and deliver to him, with good and valid title, the said lot, or to. pay .to him the value thereof; which he stated to be, at the time of filing his petition, thirty-seven thousand five hundred dollars.

Brown’s executor answered, setting forth the origin and character of his right to the lot in question: that it was a lot in the batture of New Orleans; .that a certain John Gravier had, by a judgment of the Superior Court of Orleans, recovered the batture in front of the suburb of Saint Mary; that he had sold two-thirds thereof to Peter Delabigarre, who sold one-half of his interest to Edward Livingston ; that -Delabigarre died, having by his will appointed certain trustees, with direction to make partition of said batture ; that the trustees and.Livingston did make partition thereof on the 14th of August, 1807, in which it. was ¿cknowledged that a certain lot therein described, which is the one now in question, was to be conveyed to James Brown, who had been employed as counsel in prosecuting the claim of Gravier to the said property; and the trustees agreed to convey to James Brown the said lot, out of their proportion. of the batture; that it was in consideration of James .Brown’s right, such as before stated, in a lot, on the batture y that Keene made the conveyance in the notarial act of the 21st of August, 1807. ' He denies that Brown ever conveyed, or agreed himself to convey title to the lot to the plaintiff, but only agreed to *135 substitute plaintiff to himself, to receive such title as the representatives of Delabigarre and Livingston could make. He avers, that on the day after the notarial act aforesaid, to wit, the 22d of August, 1807, Brown addressed a letter to the executors of Delabigarre, acknowledging that the plaintiff had become the owner of the lot due .to him by Edward Livingston, and requesting them to execute to the plaintiff the necessary deeds to convey the property.

Livingston, it seems, was the one who had employed Brown in Gravhr’s suit, to prosecute the claim to the batture; and the lot .in question was to be Brown’s compensation for his services.

The answer, then, relies upon certain correspondence between Keene and Brown,in relation to this lot, as explaining the understand-, ing of the parties, as to the nature of the contract'between them concerning it. The answer avers that Keene was one of the counsel for the corporation of New Orleans, in Gravier’s suit against them for the batture; that he was perfectly acquainted with Brown’s right to the lot; and that it was the right of Brown thus known to him, and not a title from and warranted by Brown, which was the consideration of the deed,' or notarial act of sale, of the 21st of August, 1807, which is that on which Keene founded his right of'recovery. The answer, finally relies on the prescription of one, five, ten, twenty, and thirty years. The Circuit Court decreed in favour of Keene, thirty-one thousand five hundred dollars, with costs; and that if Brown’s executor, should, by' a given day, convey to Keene a lot of that value, containiiig sixty feet in front, by one hundred and twenty feet in depth, situated on a part of the batture particularly described, then that the judgment, exclusive of -costs, should be satisfied; From that.decree, this appeal is taken.

The following is the notarial'contract, or act of sale annexed to Keene’s petition, and on which his claim is founded.

“ Know ¿11 men by these presents, that I, Richard Raynal Keene, of the city of New Orleans, for and in consideration of a certain lot or parcel of land, consisting of sixty feet front and one hundred and twenty feet deep, situated on the batture,-lately decreed and adjudged to John Gravier by th.e Superior Court holden in said city, have conveyed and transferred, and by these presents do convey and- transfer unto James Brown and Samuel Brown, of said city, all my right, title, and interest in and to a .certain tract or parcel of land,- consisting of five acres front and forty acres deep, and' situated at the English turn on the left bank of the Mississippi, be the same more or less; which said.tract of land, I, the said Keene, purchased in the year 1805 of Helene Modeste Barbinnée Guinault, hereby warranting and defending unto the said James, and the said Samuel, all my right and title, as aforesaid, and unto all persons claiming under them.”

The first question which arises, and that, indeed, which lies at the very foundation of the case, is, what is the true interpretation of this act of sale, or notarial contract ?

.On the part of the appellee, it is contended that it is an exchange; *136 that by the Civil Code of Louisiana, in évery contract of exchange, each party is individually considered in the double light of vendor and vendee; that Brown being considered as vendor of the lot stated in the act of sale, and the lot being the consideration for Keene’s conveyance, it follows, that he incurred the two obligations \/hich the Civil Code imposes on all .vendors, to wit, that of delivering,' and that of warranting] the. thing • which he sells; that Brown has failed in the fulfilment of both of these obligations, and consequently, was liable to the decree which has been made, as the just equivalent for their non-fulfilment. Aásuming the contract in question to be an exchange, there is no doubt but that the obligations attached to it, and the consequences which flow from it, áre accurately stated in this summary of the -appellee’s argument.

But let us examine whether the contract in question is of the class to which this course Of reasoning assumes that.it belongs. In article 263Ó of the Civil Code, an exchange is defined to be “a contract by which.the contractors’give to one another one thing for another, whatever i£ be, except money; for in that case, it would be a sale.”'

This definition,proves, as the term exchange, ex vi termini, imports, that it is what is denominated in the Civil Code, a reciprocal contract; which, by article 1758 of that Code, is declared to be a contract, where the parties expressly enter into mutual engagements. The question then, is, does the act of sale now under consideration contain mutual engagements ?

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Bluebook (online)
39 U.S. 133, 10 L. Ed. 387, 14 Pet. 133, 1840 U.S. LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preston-v-keene-scotus-1840.