Samson v. Burton

21 F. Cas. 297, 5 Ben. 325
CourtDistrict Court, D. Vermont
DecidedJune 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 F. Cas. 297 (Samson v. Burton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samson v. Burton, 21 F. Cas. 297, 5 Ben. 325 (D. Vt. 1870).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity, praying, for reasons set forth in the bill, this court to restrain the defendants from proceeding with certain suits now pending in the state courts of Vermont, in which the defendants are severally parties on the one side, and Clark, the bankrupt, is a party on the other, and also praying that this court direct that the controversies involved in the suits thus pending in the state courts be heard and determined in this court under such issues as this court shall order. For a clear understanding of the questions now to be decided, it will be necessary to give a brief history of the litigation pending in the state tribunals, which this court is now asked to arrest.

[298]*298' The bankrupt, Alanson M. Clark, and the defendant, Oscar A. Burton, are brothers-in-law, and prior to the year 1860 were on friendly terms, and had business transactions together; but during that year disputes arose between them, and they both resorted to the state courts. Among the suits instituted by the parties that year, was one by Oscar A. Burton against Clark, in which his property was attached to the value of ten thousand dollars, one by the Franklin County Bank, a corporation in which it is said that Oscar A. Burton owned a controlling interest, against Clark, in which his property was attached to the value of five thousand dollars, and one by Clark against Oscar A. Burton, demanding seventy-five thousand dollars. These were all actions of assumpsit.

In 1862, the controversies between Clark and Burton were, by mutual agreement submitted to three arbitrators, the suits still remaining in court without any action being taken in them by either party. The claims of the parties were contested before the arbitrators from time to time, down to the year 1867, when one of the arbitrators died before a conclusion was reached, thus terminating the submission. The litigations were then reopened in the courts, and though Burton had, as early as 1861, in the action of assumpsit which Clark had brought against him in 1860, filed a declaration in offset containing the common counts, setting up a claim of seventy thousand dollars, yet, on the 26th of August, 1867, he commenced a suit known in Vermont as an action of book account, in which he demanded one hundred and fifty thousand dollars as justly due him from Clark to balance book account between them. The direction in the writ was to attach to the value of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, and an attachment was actually levied upon all Clark’s property, amounting to a hundred thousand dollars, more or less. This attachment was of course subject to the preceding ones in favor of Burton and the Franklin County Bank, and also to one by Carlos C. Button, in a suit brought by him against Clark, in March of the same year. It was also subject to one or more prior mortgage liens. In the mean time Clark proceeded with his action of assumpsit against Oscar A. Burton, and the same was brought to trial at the April term of the Franklin county court in 1S6S, and resulted in a verdict of about forty-six thousand dollars in favor of the defendant on his plea or declaration of set-off. This cause was then carried to the supreme court on a bill of exceptions, where it remained until the January term of the latter in 1870. At that term a motion was:’ made by Clark's counsel to continue the cause till the next following term, in January 1871.

It,is unnecessary to detail the reasons set forth on behalf of Clark in support of this motion for a continuance, but it was strenuously insisted by both Clark and his counsel in their affidavits, that the judgment in favor of Burton ought not to stand, and that the same would be reversed by the supreme court if the case could be fully presented by the plaintiff. Thereupon Burton entered his consent, that the same should be reversed, | and it was reversed and a new trial ordered. The ease was of course remanded to the county court, where it now stands.

To the action of book account brought by Burton against Clark, in August, 1807, de-1 manding one hundred and fifty thousand dol- ! lars, the latter filed a plea in abatement, al- | leging as grounds of abatement that the mat-i ters intended by Burton to be determined in that suit, had been set up by him as defendant in the action of assumpsit brought by Clark against him, and were therefore then pending in that suit. This plea in abatement was overruled, to which ruling the defendant excepted and auditors were appointed to adjust the accounts between the parties, and report to the court, as is customary in actions | of this character, which, it may be remarked i here, are peculiar forms of suits in use in Ver-j mont and Connecticut and nowhere else. ¡ The parties appeared before the auditors on the 18th of May, 1869, when the hearing was adjourned, on motion (of which party does not appear), to the 12th of July, 1869, when the parties appeared again, and on motion of the plaintiff the hearing was further postponed to the 19th of July, 1869. The parties appeared on the last named day, and the plaintiff then moved to postpone the hearing till after the then-next term of the supreme court for Franklin county. This motion was supported by a long affidavit of the plaintiff, detailing certain alleged facts which need nof be recited here. The auditors overruled this motion, and refused to further postpone the hearing, directing that the same should then be proceeded with. Neither party presented any account for adjudication. The auditors made their report to the court at its next term, on the second Tuesday of September following. In their report they recited their action in postponing the hearing to the 19th of July, their denial of the plaintiff’s motion to postpone made on that day, and the fact that tlie parties declined to present any accounts. They then report nothing due either party to balance book accounts, and leave the matter for such action as the court might deem proper for tiie protection of the rights of the parties. To this report the auditors annexed a copy of the plaintiff’s affidavit, presented to them in support of his last motion for a further postponement.

At the same time, and on presentation of this report, the plaintiff moved “for reasons apparent on said report and the papers thereto annexed and referred to,” that the cause be recommitted to the auditors. This motiOD was granted by the court, to Which ruling the defendant excepted. In this condition that cause now stands.

There were also two suits in chancery, one [299]*299brought by Oscar A. Burton against Clark and Bradley Barlow, and one by Clark against O. A. Burton. The one against Clark and Barlow was to restrain the transfer or collection of five seven-thousand-dollar notes, amounting in all to thirty-five thousand dollars, and dated February 1st, 1860, which weré originally given by Oscar A. Burton to Clark, and by him indorsed before due to Barlow, Burton claiming that they were accommodation notes without consideration, and that Barlow took them with knowledge of that fact. The other chancery suit was one brought by Clara against Burton, and had reference to the same subject-matter.

It is conceded that the claims respectively set up by the parties in these suits were, from their commencement, the subject of a protracted, bitter and severely contested litigation, each insisting that the demands of the other were unfounded and fraudulent. This hostile and uncompromising attitude of Clark •and Burton toward each other apparently continued down to January, 1870.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 297, 5 Ben. 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samson-v-burton-vtd-1870.