Rowan v. Sharps' Rifle Manufacturing Co.

31 Conn. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 31 Conn. 1 (Rowan v. Sharps' Rifle Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rowan v. Sharps' Rifle Manufacturing Co., 31 Conn. 1 (Colo. 1862).

Opinion

Hinman, C. J.

The original bill seeks to foreclose the re7 spondents’ interest in certain mortgaged premises, but the parties have conflicting claims to the property, and the result in the superior court was a decree in favor of the respondents upon their cross-bill and answer, by which the petitioner’s interest therein was foreclosed, unless he paid to the respondents [17]*17a large sum of money claimed as damages against the British Government, represented in this cause by the petitioner,Rowan.

The premises are the two outer sections of a tract of about twenty-five acres, upon the central section of which the respondents’ rifle factory is situated. The whole tract was purchased by Robbins & Lawrence for the purpose of erecting the factory thereon, (and which was soon after the purchase elected,) under a contract between them and the respondents, dated January 9th, 1852, by which they bound themselves, with the aid of $>40,000 advanced by the respondents on their giving satisfactory security therefor, to purchase the necessary land, and erect thereon and equip a manufactory for the making of rifles, and to manufacture for the respondents twenty thousand Sharps’ rifles, to be paid for on delivery, and the whole to be made and delivered by the 1st day of January, 1855. It was further provided by the contract that the land should be conveyed to the respondents, who were to hold it until the contract was performed, and then to reconvey it to Robbins & Lawrence; with a right, however, at their election to become the absolute owners of it by purchase, upon giving six months’ written notice of their election so to purchase; the price to be fixed by an appraisal, to be made by three disinterested appraisers, one to be named by each party and the third by the two thus appointed. The title to the twenty-five acres was, in accordance with the terms of the contract, conveyed to the respondents, and they have ever since held the central portion, on which the factory was built, having in 1857 become the absolute owners of it by an election to purchase it, and by proceedings taken for the purpose under the contract. On the 11th of December, 1855, they released their interest in the two outer sections to Robbins & Lawrence, to enable them to mortgage the same to Fox, Henderson & Go.; and Robbins & Lawrence having accordingly executed the mortgage, and it being now held by assignment by the present petitioner, he seeks by this bill a foreclosure upon it. After the contract of January 9th, 1862 was executed, the respondents made further advances to Robbins & Lawrence, besides the $>40,000 provided for therein, to secure which Robbins & Lawrence, on [18]*18the 23d of September, 1853, made a mortgage of the same estate, with the factory thereon and the machinery contained in it, the factory having been then built and equipped, to the respondents, to secure them for the original $40,000, and for such subsequent advancements.

The respondents’ rights in the property then, previous to their release of the 11th of December, 1855, were based upon the contract of the 9th of January, 1852, with the legal title which they held under that contract, and upon the mortgage of September 23d, 1853. The contract of January 9th, 1852, so far as it provides for a conveyance of the legal title to the land to the respondents, and a reconveyance by them to Robbins & Lawrence when the twenty thousand rifles were manufactured and delivered, in connection with the fact that the legal title to the land was by deed conveyed to the respondents pursuant to the contract, shows clearly that the land was held by them as a security for the performance of that contract for the manufacture of rifles. If this part of the contract had been embodied in the deed it would have been but an ordinary defeasance in a mortgage, and it can surely make no difference that two instruments instead of one were executed, or that they were executed on different days. If they were to form but parts of one contract, courts should give effect to them according to the intention of the parties. As a security for the performance of the contract to manufacture and deliver twenty thousand rifles, the land can only be held for such damages as the respondents have suffered by the failure of Robbins & Lawrence to perform that contract, and Robbins & Lawrence would be equitably entitled to demand a reconveyance to them on their performing the contract or paying the damages caused by their non-performance. The provision for the purchase by the respondents at their election is all that gives the contract any peculiarity. But this is an independent provision in the contract, the performance of which on the part of Robbins & Lawrence was secured, if the respondents should elect to purchase, by their taking the legal title in the first instance, instead of relying upon the voluntary act of Robbins & Lawrence, or upon the power of a court of equity to enforce [19]*19such performance. But it did not operate to restrict the power of Robbins & Lawrence to convey their equitable interest in the land. Such a conveyance would operate to pass the title to the land in case the respondents elected not to purchase, and would amount to an assignment of their claim upon the respondents for the price of the land if they elected to purchase it. And this was the view taken of this contract in the late case between the same parties. 29 Conn., 282. If this was the position of the respondents on the 11th of December, 1855, when they released to Robbins & Lawrence their title to the portion of the land now in controversy, to enable them to mortgage it to Eox, Henderson & Co., upon which mortgage now held by the petitioner this bill was brought, it is obvious that the only effect of holding that release to have been executed under such circumstances that the interest released stands like a surety for tlie debt of another, and is discharged in this case by the transactions between Robbins & Lawrence and the mortgagees, is to postpone the petitioner’s mortgage to the prior incumbrance created by the contract of January 9th, 1852, and the conveyance to the respondents of the legal title pursuant to that contract, and also to their mortgage of September 23d, 1853. Without, therefore, determining the legal effect of the circumstances which are claimed to operate to avoid that release, let us see if the decree of the superior court can be sustained upon the assumption that there had been no such release executed. The consequence of holding the release to be inoperative would be, that the respondents would be re-instated in the same position which they occupied before the release was executed; in which case they would be entitled to hold the property as security for the balance of their account against Robbins & Lawrence, and for any damages they had sustained by the non-fulfillment of the contract to make the twenty thousand rifles, and would be enabled to take the property at an appraisal. Subject to these rights of the respondents the petitioner is most obviously entitled to his mortgage to secure the $130,000.

Before coming, however, to the questions arising upon the decree in favor of the respondents on their cross-bill, it is [20]

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Related

Savings Bank of New London v. Santaniello
33 A.2d 126 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1943)
Goodwin v. Keney
49 Conn. 563 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1882)
Rowan v. Sharps' Rifle Manufacturing Co.
33 Conn. 1 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1865)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Conn. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowan-v-sharps-rifle-manufacturing-co-conn-1862.