Smith v. Babcock

22 F. Cas. 432
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1846
StatusPublished

This text of 22 F. Cas. 432 (Smith v. Babcock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Babcock, 22 F. Cas. 432 (circtdma 1846).

Opinion

WOODBURY, Circuit Justice.

The lapse of time since the proceedings in this case commenced has been such, that the members of the court are neither of them the same. Most of the counsel are also new, and the condition of all the respondents, with a single exception, has changed, it is said; and several, from what was supposed to be splendid affluence to bankruptcy, and one of them passed “that bourne whence no traveller returns.” Where the fault has been for such unusual delay, or whether there has been none but mere casualties and postponements, growing out of the great number of parties and counsel, and the complexity as well as magnitude of the case, I shall not attempt to settle. But my best efforts have been made to prevent any further postponement, not indispensable to a due hearing and examination of the cause; and I shall now proceed to deliver a final opinion on the questions necessary to be decided, with a desire to put both sides in possession of the reasons on which it is founded, rather than with the vain expectation of rendering it satisfactory to both. •

Various questions have been raised as to the competency of some portions of the testimony and the sufficiency of other parts, which may be first disposed of by a single general remark. Without giving in detail my decision in each case, it may be taken for granted, where I rely on a piece of evidence, and refer to it in support of a conclusion of fact, it is deemed competent; and where a fact has been denied by the answers in particulars responsive to the bill, it is not considered as sustained by sufficient proof, unless it be by more than the testimony of one witness. It may be added further in the outset, that I discover no delay in the institution of the proceedings by the complainant, which should be regarded as a bar to his recovery on the merits, if merits exist; and which can, therefore, be interposed to excuse this court from the labor and responsibility of examining the rights of the different parties on those merits. Warner v. Daniels [Case No. 17,181]; Mason v. Crosby [Id. 9,234]. The proceedings were begun in less than two years after the purchase of the land by the plaintiff, and in little more than one year after the deficiency in the timber was ascertained to be great, and after the conduct of the respondents was believed to have been unfair and Illegal. Nor is there understood to have been any alteration in the property or title since the sale, which is sufficient to disable the plaintiff from making a valid re-conveyance of his share, if it should otherwise appear just to rescind the sale; though it is stated in evidence that some auctions of the land for taxes have since taken place. But redemptions are understood to have been made before the title was foreclosed; and though some timber was got off by the plaintiff and others the first winter, it is supposed to be not so much as sensibly to change the value and 'condition of the premises.

Proceeding then to the great points in controversy, as the interests and liabilities of the respondents are in some respects different, I shall first consider those of Cross, the most active and conspicuous participator in the transaction; next, those of the rest of the First Boston Company; and, lastly, those of Noble.

It is clear, that the respondent, Cross, was the sole owner of the wliolé township in dispute, about the 1st of June, 1S35. It is equally clear, that in all the subsequent transfers of it, as well as in all thé contracts and arrangements for sales, whether defeated or perfected, [436]*436and in all the representations connected •with them, whether true or false, and in all the certificates obtained as to the timber, and which are conceded now to be so erroneous, he was the chief actor, and probably more deeply interested than any other individual. For if the whole land cost him only about $30,000, which is the price that was to be paid to Reed, according to his testimony, though Cross testifies to near $20,000 more in various ways; and if Cross obtained for it about $70,000 beyond this $30,000 from the First Boston Company, and next received in New York near $30,000 more than he was to pay to the First Boston Company, and something like $5,000 more net profits on his one tenth reserved in his original deed, and invested in that company, he would, supposing all the payments to be honestly made, have realized, in only this one township, in about six months, the enormous profits of near $105,000; while all the other persons united, so far as is known here, could not have profited in this same operation half that amount, and no one person over one twentieth as much. It will be seen, then, at a glance, how great was his interest or inducement to effect these various sales, and how strong were his motives to press on purchasers such considerations, as should be likely to throw within his grasp in so short a time, and in an operation as to a single tract of land, such a brilliant fortune. Cross being thus situated, as the great gainer by these sales, was therefore in a condition to be tempted into misrepresentations in order to effect them. But having stronger motives that any others to do wrong, is only one step in the inquiry as to his real conduct; and the next is what representations, if any, did he actually make concerning the township, which were in fact erroneous, and likely to de-. ceive the plaintiff?

The first specific examination concerning Cross’s course, in respect to these sales, may as well be in relation to the representations about the quantity of pine timber on the township. What kind of statements on that subject did he actually make to the plaintiff and others, about the same period, and connected with the sale of this land, so as to render them competent evidence? See cases in Warner v. Daniels [supra], showing when they are competent. Next, were they relied on by the plaintiff? and were they false? The case is full of proof, that he made statements as to the quantity of good pine being one hundred and thirty millions feet per acre, not only at Boston and Hopkinton, in writing and orally, by guarantee separately and in bonds, but at Long Island and to this plaintiff, with the other purchasers. That they were relied on, also, is proved by the fact, that the land was purchased with the view of paying the interest and part of the principal speedily, by sales of the timber; that Cross gave a guarantee of twenty-five per cent, profits from it by such sales; that even before leaving New York he was constituted their agent, to go at once on the land and begin the removal of the timber, to realize these great profits from it; that he gave written guarantees of the quantity, and computations showing how some $43,200 per share could be made by the purchasers of this timber.

It is an objection not well sustained, which his counsel have urged against setting up such representations as fraudulent, that another remedy existed on those guarantees. It is a novel' doctrine, that a written warranty is a bar to a suit or defense founded on fraud in the same transaction; and the cases are not . only numerous, that fraud vitiates all contracts tainted by it, but that it may be set up in contests as to the consideration of the sales, whether a warranty existed or not. Semble Schwartz v. United States Ins. Co. [Case No. 12,505]; 1 Day, 156-158; 4 Mass. 491, 492; 4 Dum. & E. [4 Term R.] 67, 337; 6 Johns. 110, 181; 1 Johns. 414, 503; 2 Wooddeson, 416; 7 Mass. 68.

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Bluebook (online)
22 F. Cas. 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-babcock-circtdma-1846.