Ridings v. Johnson

128 U.S. 212, 9 S. Ct. 72, 32 L. Ed. 401, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 2212
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 19, 1888
Docket44
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 128 U.S. 212 (Ridings v. Johnson) 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
Ridings v. Johnson, 128 U.S. 212, 9 S. Ct. 72, 32 L. Ed. 401, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 2212 (1888).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Bbadley

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case comes before, us in a most unsatisfactory manner. It is an appeal from a- decree dismissing a bill in equity on demurrer ; and the record is grossly imperfect in omitting to set forth the documents referred to in the bill, and necessary to a fair understanding of the case ; there is no opinion of the court below showing the reasons of the decree, and no brief or appearance of counsel for the appellees to explain on what grounds the bill of complaint was faulty or insufficient. It is an imposition on the court thus to throw upon it the labor of finding out for itself the questions involved, and the arguments in support of the decree of dismissal. ■ This is specially true where, as in the present case, the system of laws out of-which the controversy grows, is an exceptional one and unfamiliar to the great body of lawyers and judges of the country.

The leading facts of the case, as stated in the-bill, areas follows: In December, 1865, the original complainant, Cornelius F. Yoorhies, sold to Samuel IL Johnson, the ancestor of one of the defendants, the Experiment plantation situated in the parish of Avoyelles, and for part of the purchase money received from Johnson his two promissory notes for $1000 each, payable at a bank in New Orleans on the 1st of February, *214 1867, and 1868, which notes were secured by special mortgage and vendor’s privilege, reserved in the act of sale. This act was not recorded in the office - of the recorder of the parish until'April, 1872. At the maturity of the notes the time for their payment was extended to the year 1871, when payments were made amounting in the aggregate to $2727. No other payments have ever been made.

On the 6th- of February, 1868, Johnson granted to Payne, Huntington & Co. a special mortgage on the same plantation to secure future advances to the amount of $30,000, to aid in cultivating it, and gave them his four notes for $7500 each. When Payne, Huntington & Co. took this .mortgage they were fully aware of Yoorhies’s right of mortgage and privilege on the plantation, and in their act of mortgage dispensed with the -production of a mortgage certificate. On the 15th of March, 1870, Yoorhies gave Payne, Huntington & Co. another mortgage on the same plantation for $26,000, to cover $20,000, then acknowledged to be due, and $6000 'more to be thereafter advanced. • .

After this, Johnson dying insolvent, Payne, the other defendant, who was the head of the firm of Payne, Huntington & Co., and assignee of the mortgages and notes given to his firm, in December, 1873; sued out an executory process from the District court of the parish of Avoyelles for the- full amount of the two mortgages given to the. firm, namely, $50,000, and had the plantation sold, and became himself the purchaser for the sum of $20,210.33, and retained the whole amount of adjudication on account of his debt. Of these proceedings Payne gave no notice to- Yoorhies, (who resided in Missouri and was ignorant of what was being done,) and, to facilitate the proceedings, procured from Johnson’s executor a written waiver of notice of demand, and notice of seizure, and time, and a consent that the sheriff proceed with the seiz nre and sale as if the formalities had been strictly complied with. \ •

' Tim sale upon the executory' process was made in February, 1874, and a little over a .year thereafter, in March, 1875, Yoorhies,filed the original bill in this case, to which the defendant *215 Payne demurred. ' The bill was then amended by filing -what is denominated in the record a supplemental bill' but which is more in the nature of an amended bill — setting forth the facts above stated with more particularity, afid praying, 1st, for a cancellation of the sale made by Yoorhies to Johnson, and a retrócéssion of the plantation ; 2d, if this should be refused, then, for a decree of nullity of the executory proceedings and sale to Payne, and for a recovery of the amount due on the complainant’s two notes, with an allowance of vendor’s privilege and mortgage with priority over the mortgages given to Payne, Huntington & Co.; 3d, if the decree of nullity should be refused, then, that the complainant might be decreed to be paid out of the proceeds of the adjudication to Payne, and that the latter might be condemned to pay accordingly; and 4th, for general relief.

The defendants again demurred, and the demurrer was sustained and the bill dismissed. As the demurrer was a general one, we cannot know with certainty for what reason it was sustained by the court. There was a motion for rehearing, and the grounds of that motion are spread upon the record, as well as the complainant’s brief, presented to the court on that occasion. These documents lead us to infer , that the principal grounds of objection to the bill were, first, that the executory process had-the effect of a judgment, and, being decided by a state court, could not be brought in question in a federal tribunal; secondly, that a proceeding to annul a sale ' and compel the vendee to retrocede the property should be au action at law, and not a suit in equity. The court- gave the complainant leave to amend his bill by inserting a charge of fraud and a prayer for discovery, so as to give equitable jurisdiction; but this the complainant declined to do, and stood on" the equity of his bill. ■ Whereupon the following consent order was made, to wit: “ On motion of the complainant and of defendants, suggesting that the former declines converting his action into one for discovery, as allowed by the decree for a new trial, it is agreed that this case be again submitted to the.court on the defendants’ demurrer to the jurisdiction of the court that this is not a case in equity, but one at law.” *216 Thereupon the court made á final decree dismissing the original and supplemental bills, and from that decree the present appeal was taken,

■ The ground on which the bill thus seems to have been finally dismissed, namely, that it exhibits a case for an action at law only, and not for a suit in equity, is- untenable. The prayer for a cancellation of the original sale by Yoorhies to Johnson is based on the rule of law which prevails in Louisiana with regard to commutative contracts, that is, “ contracts in which what is done, given, or promised by one party, is considered as equivalent to, or a consideration for, what is done, given, or promised by the other.” Civ. Code, art. 1768. The code declares that “a resolutory condition is implied in all commutative contracts, to take effect in case either of the parties does not comply with his engagements; in this case the contract is not dissolved of right; the party complaining of a breach of the contract may either sue for its dissolution with dainages, or, if the circumstances of the case permit, demand a specific performance.” Civ. - Code, art. 2046. “ The dissolving condition, . . . when accomplished, operates the revocation of the obligation, placing matters in the same state as though the obligation had not existed.” •The creditor seeking to avail himself of it is obliged to restore .what he has received. Civ. Code, art. 2045. “If the buyer does not pay the price, the seller may sue for the dissolution of the sale.” Civ. Code, art. 2561.

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Bluebook (online)
128 U.S. 212, 9 S. Ct. 72, 32 L. Ed. 401, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 2212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ridings-v-johnson-scotus-1888.