Sample v. Barnes

55 U.S. 70, 14 L. Ed. 330, 14 How. 70, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 427
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 30, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 55 U.S. 70 (Sample v. Barnes) 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
Sample v. Barnes, 55 U.S. 70, 14 L. Ed. 330, 14 How. 70, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 427 (1852).

Opinion

*71 Mr.- Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

In their bill, filed in the Circuit Court, it is alleged by the appellants that, in the month of October, 1836, the appellee, Barnes, in conjunction with one Dunett, introduced from other States of the Union into the State of Mississippi, and in violation of her constitution, arid laws, a number of negro slaves, for the purpose of being sold as merchandise. That, in execution of the design for which they were introduced, a -number of those slaves were sold by the appellee to one Thomas B. Ives, from whom he took, in payment, a bill of exchange, bearing date in October, 1836, drawn by Ives on N. and J. Dicks, of New Orleans, and indorsed by the appellant, Sample, mid one G, A. Thompson. That this bill, being presented first for acceptance and subsequently for payment, was, in each instance, refused by the drawees, but was not protested- either for non-acceptance or non-payment. That, after these transactions, upon some agreement between Barnes and Ives, a second bill of exchange was, in 1837, drawn by the latter upon the firm of Ford, Markham, & Co., for $5,916.66, at ten months after date, and was indorsed by the appellant, Sample, and by George A. Thompson, the in-' dorsers of the previous bill, and was substituted' in lieu thereof. That this second bill was not paid; but whether it was protested, or whether notice of its dishonor was ever given, the appellant, Sample, states that he was unable to recollect. That Barnes, being urged by Sample to sue Ives immediately for .the amount of the second bill, instead of complying with this direction, took a deed of trust oh certain property of Ives, stipulat-' ing in this deed to give further time for the payment of .the bill; and that this deed of trust, and the agreements therein contained, were made without the knowledge and against the consent and directions of the appellant, Sample, and in fraud of his rights as a surety. That a suit having been instituted in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Mississippi, against Sample, as the last indorser of the bill of Exchange drawn on Ford, Markham, & Co.; the said Ives, upon information- being given' him of that fact by Sample, assured him that he need not feel any -uneasiness on that account, as he, Ives, had employed able counsel to defend him in that suit. That, subsequently to this assurance. from Ives, in a conversation of the appellant, Sample, with Barnes, the latter pro miseá him, that, if Ives would confess a judgment in the State court for the amount of the bill, he, Barnes, would' dismiss the suit he had instituted against the appellant as indorser of that bill That, upon communicating to Ivés the proposition of the appellee, Ives professed his perfect readiness to comply with, that proposal, and Barnes • then parted with the *72 appellant, with the professed purpose of obtaining from. Ives a confession of judgment, and at the same time agreed with the appellant, Sample, that, in the event of a failure by Ives to give siXcli-confession, he would inform Sample them'-fi in order that they, conjointly, might endeavor to obtain'from Ives a fulfilment of his promise. That Barnes omitted to give information ,'of. the refusal on the part of Ives; but' permitted the appellafit, Sample, to remain under the impression that a confession of judgment had been given by Ives, until after, the commencement of the Circuit Court,- in the month of May, 1839,- when the appellant, Sample, was informed by Barnes that Ives was insolvent. That, by- these circumstances, and especially by the conduct of Barnes, Sample was thrown- off his guard, and a judgment by default was, in consequence thereof, rendered against him at the May term of the Circuit Court, in 1839, for the sum of ¡$6,822.62, and the costs of suit. • That, execution having been sued out on this' judgment,” the- appellant,' Sample, in conformity with advice given him, had, with the other appellants,' Pickins and Scott, as his sureties, executed a forthcoming bond for the delivery to the marshal of the property therein named; which bond, having been forfeited, operated as a judg-ment, and execution thereon had been sued out, and had been levied on the slaves and other personal property of Sample.

Upon the -foregoing statements, the appellants prayed, that the original contract for the sale of the slaves by Barnes, and all the undertakings' and liabilities growing out of that sale, might be declared to be void as having been in violation of the constitution and laws of Mississippi; and that for this cause, affecting the character of the contract, and by reason too of the fraud and dépéption imputed -by the bill to the appellee, Barnes, with reference to Sample, the judgments ajad executions obtained for-his benefit might be perpetually enjoined.-

"Upon the 24th of April, 1840, an injunction was awarded m*appellants by the Judge of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of Mississippi. *

To that portion of the bill which charges the introduction of slaves in violation of. -the constitution and -laws of Mississippi, the appellee declines to answer, as that charge included the liability to á criminal prosecution. To this refusal of the appellee no exception was taken, either in the pleadings or at the hearing of the cause. To every other charge in -the bill the answer-is directly responsive, and fully .denies- every material allegation. And with respect to all the charge’s, inclusive of the first, the testimony adduced by the complainant below, falls far short of sustaining any one of them. It is déemed loose, vague, and immaterial. Nay, the very contract with. Ives, filed as an exhibit *73 with the bill, and which is alleged to have been an agreement for .indulgence to Ives, to the prejudice of the rights of Sample,, absolutely, overthrows this assertion, and is shown upon its face, and by its terms and object, to have been simply an additional security from Ives, operating, if at all, for the advantage, of Sample.; a security too,- which the .grantee, in that instrument had the right to enforce immediately upon failure to pay the bill of exchange drawn on Ford, Markham, & Co.

Upon the hearing of this cause before the Circuit Court at the November term of 1848, the injunction which had been awarded the appellants was dissolved, -and th'e bill dismissed with costs. For the examination of -that decree upon appeal, this Cause is now- before us.

. This case is then left to be decided upon its features, as disclosed in the bill and answer; ándthe application to these of a few settled and familiar principles of equity jurisprudence, will at once determine its fate. And first with respect to the intriri-: sic merits of the appellant’s original claim to exemption from liability ; and secondly, as to the degree or extent in which such claim, if ever existing, has been affected by his own conduct, as evincing either the. assertion or. the surrender of that claim. The bill commences by charging the introduction and sale of slaves within the State of Mississippi, in violation of. the constitution and laws of that State, .as the essential ground' of impeachment of the-original contract and of Sample’s exémption from liability accruing therefrom.

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Bluebook (online)
55 U.S. 70, 14 L. Ed. 330, 14 How. 70, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sample-v-barnes-scotus-1852.