Rio Grande Railroad v. Vinet

132 U.S. 565, 10 S. Ct. 168, 33 L. Ed. 438, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1905
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 23, 1889
Docket114
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 132 U.S. 565 (Rio Grande Railroad v. Vinet) 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
Rio Grande Railroad v. Vinet, 132 U.S. 565, 10 S. Ct. 168, 33 L. Ed. 438, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1905 (1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court.

' The appellant, which was plaintiff below, obtained in the Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana on January 5, 1885, a judgment .against the partnership firm of Gomila & Co. and against Anthony J. Gomila and Larned Torrey, who constituted the' parthership, for the sum of $26,731.97. It caused an execution to be issued upon the judgment, and had it levied upon a house, and the grounds 'belonging to it, in the city of New Orleans, a description of which is set forth in the bill filed in this case. It was discovered that there existed a mortgage upon this property for the sum of $18,000, made by A. J. Gomila, and the railroad company brought the present suit by way of a bill in chancery to remove this incumbrance, as an obstruction to the successful exercise of its right to sell the property for the payment of its debt. The action, commenced in the Civil District Court for the Parish- of Orleans, was afterwards removed by G'omila into the Circuit Court of. the United States, and the plaintiff there filed a new bill in equity substantially the same as the petition filed in the. state court.

This bill, after reciting the judgment in favor of the railroad company, already mentioned, and the levy of the execu- ’ tion under it on the property described, proceeds to state: “ That -there is inscribed on the books of the recorder of mortgages for the Parish of Orleans, against the name of Anthony J.' Gomila and aga'inst said property, an inscription of a mortgage made by said Anthony J. Gomila in favor of the commercial firm of Gomila & Co., -by act before Samuel Flower, a notary public, dated the 8th of February, 1884, to secure the sum of $18,000.” According to the bill, this act recited an indebtedness by A. J. Gomila to the firm of Gomila & Co. for *567 that much money loaned and advanced to him op that day, and that for said $18,000 he had made his four promissory notes to the order of and endorsed by himself. Three of these notes were for $5000 each, and' one for $3000. The $5000 notes were payable in one, two and three years after date respectively, and the $3000 note was payable three years after date.

The bill then alleges that “ said mortgage is fictitious, and is a fraud committed by said A. J. Gomila to cover his property and to prevent the seizure and sale thereof; that it is not true, as stated in said act of mortgage, that on the 8th of February, 1881, the said firm of Gomila & Co. loaned and advanced to A. J. Gomila the sum of $18,000, or any other sum of money; and your petitioner alleges that by reason of said fraud the aforesaid notes, amounting in all to $18,000, aré null and void; that after they were made and received by Larned Torrey, who accepted the act of mortgage, they were surrendered to A. J. Gomila, and thereby were cancelled, and they have been ever since in his custody or under his control, or in the custody and control of some confederate, whom, when discovered, your petitioner prays leave to make a party hereto: ” and the prayer of the bill is that these notes be can-celled and annulled, and that Gomila be required to surrender them up, and for such further relief as the nature of the case may require.

Supplemental and amended bills were filed making defendants to the suit J. Ward Gurley, Jr., and C. D. Barker, upon the allegation that they claim to be the owners of the notes, and assert the sufficiency and validity of the mortgage by which they are pretended to be secured, and they are required to answer the allegations of the original bill and to set forth the nature of their claim. A. J. Gomila answered the bill, and to special intérrogatories propounded to him in it he answered under oath as follows :

“ To the first of said interrogatories, which reads as follows, viz.:

“To whom did you deliver the notes described in the original bill on file, and when did you do so? Give his full name and address.
*568 “ He answers, viz.:
. “ Ans. The notes were all delivered, to Larned Torrey, the other member of the firm of- Gomila & Co., when they were made or executed, Feb’y 8th, Í884.
“ To the second of said interrogatories, which reads as follows, viz.:
“In -whose possession have said notes been-at all and any time up to the present time ?
“ He ánswers, viz.: •
“ Ans. The said notes were immediately thereafter delivered to J. Ward Gurley; Jr., of this city, from whom Gomila & Co. received the following sums of cash, viz., on 6th Feb’y, 1884 ($3496.50) three thousand four hundred and ninety-six and 50-100 dollars-; on Feb’y líth, 1884 ($1498.50) one thousand four hundred and ninety-eight and. 50-100-dollars; on 20th Feb’y, 1884 ($1000) one thousand dollars, besides some city bonds at Various dates ¡just before and subsequently, other small sums of money for costs in different suits, etc., all of which is still due said Gurley, with interest thereon; that $5000 of said siims of money was obtained from said Gurley for the purpose, and used to pay the balance of the purchase price of the property in question to the Hibernia Ins. Co.
“ That some months after the said notes were so delivered to said Gurley two of them — viz., the note for $5000, due in two years after its date,- and the note for $5000, due in three years after date — were withdrawn from the said Gurley'by Gomila & Co. through -the said Torrey, and pledged on the 21st Aug., 1884, with and to the Teutonia Ins. Co. of this city, to secure a loan then made, by said Ins. Có. to Gomila & Co. of $5000 in cash; that on the 3d Sept., 1884, the said loan was renewed with said Ins. Co., and on the 10th Qct., 1884, the said loan of $5000 was renewed in the State Nat’l Bank of this city, and said two mortgage notes were withdrawn by Gomila & Co., through the said Torrey, from said Ins. Co. and pledged with and to the State Nat’l Bank to secure said loan.
“Subsequently Gomila & Co., through said Torrey, withdrew said two notes from the State Nat’l Bank and placed them with C. D. Barker of this city, on or about 3d November, *569 1884, from whom said firm of Gomila & Co. received, through said Torrey, the sum of two thousand dollars in cash November 3d, 1884, and the additional sum of one thousand dollars’in cash Nov. 5th, 1884, and the additional sum of one thousand dollars in cash Nov. 7th, 1884.
“And, so far as deponent knows, the said last two mentioned notes are still held by said Barker, and the other two • notes, one for $5000, due in one year after its date, and one for $3000, due' in three years after its date, are now, ahd have always been, held by said Gurley since they were first delivered to him as aforesaid.
“ To the 3d of said interrogatories, which reads as follows, viz.: .
“ Who is now the holder of said notes ? Give his name and address.

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Bluebook (online)
132 U.S. 565, 10 S. Ct. 168, 33 L. Ed. 438, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rio-grande-railroad-v-vinet-scotus-1889.