Walker v. Brown

58 F. 23, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2853
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 9, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 58 F. 23 (Walker v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Brown, 58 F. 23, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2853 (circtsdia 1893).

Opinion

WOOLSOK, District Judge.

This is an action in equity, brought by James IT. Walker, Columbus R. Cummings, and William B. Howard, residents and citizens of the state of Illinois, and doing business under the name and style of James H. Walker & Co., against Anna L. Brown, in her own right and as administratrix, and Willis S. Brown and Edward L. Marsh, as administrators, of the esfate of Talmadge E. Brown, deceased, all of said respondents being residents and citizens of the state of Iowa,

The facts, as contended for by complainants, are substantially as follows: That in the summer of 1889 a corporation known as the Lloyd Mercantile Company, doing business at Ellensburg, Wash., was indebted to said Walker & Co. for merchandise sold to said company. That about August 1, 1889, a copartnership under the name and style of Lloyd & Co. succeeded to the assets and assumed the liabilities of said mercantile company. That said Lloyd & Co. applied to said Walker & Co. for sales of merchandise upon credit That, as said Walker & Co. understobd, one Talmadge E. Brown had been a stockholder in said mercantile company, and his relation was now changed, as to said new company, to that of a creditor of said Lloyd & Co. That Walker .& Co. declined to make said sales upon credit to said Lloyd ,& Co. [24]*24That at that time said Brown had $15,000 in bonds, (of the city of Memphis, Tenn.,) which he had loaned to J. 0. Lloyd, (one of the members of Lloyd & 'Co.,) to be and which were used as security for a loan of that amount at the Union National Bank of Chicago, Ill. That at the instance of said’ Walker & Co., and to enable said Lloyd & Co. to obtain credit with Walker & Co., said Brown wrote and delivered to said Walker & Co. a letter and agreement, as follows:

“OMeago, Sept. 21, 1SS9.
“Messrs. Jas. H. Walker & Co., Chicago, Ill. — Gentlemen: I beg to advise you that the loan of fifteen thousand dollars, Memphis bonds, made by me to Mr. J. C. Lloyd for the use of Messrs. Lloyd & Co., Ellensburg, Wash. Ter., is with the understanding that any indebtedness they may be owing to you at any time shall be paid before the return to me of these bonds, or the value thereof, and that these bonds, or the value thereof, are at the risk of the business of Lloyd & Co., so far as 'any claim, you may have against said Lloyd & Co. is concerned.
“Yours, truly, T. E. Brown.”

—And thereupon said Walker & Co. sold and delivered to said Lloyd & Co., on credit, and between August 20, 1889, and December 11, 1889, a large quantity of merchandise, in value, and for which said Lloyd & Co. agreed to pay, over $12,000. That thereafter said Brown, “for the purpose of avoiding and escaping from the effects of his said agreement” with said Walker & Co., “and without any equivalent or consideration moving from said Brown to said Lloyd & Co.,” took said bonds into his (Brown’s) possession, and retained same till his death, and the same came, as a part of his estate, into the hands of respondents as his ad-ministratrix and administrators. That said complainants did not know of said bonds having been so taken up by said Brown until after all of said indebtedness had been contracted by Lloyd & Co. That Lloyd & Co. have become wholly insolvent, and are unable to pay said debt; and therefore complainants pray discovery as to whereabouts of said bonds, and by whom held and claimed, and further pray—

(1) A specific lien on said bonds, or any part thereof, if owned by the estate of said Brown, and that same be sold, and proceeds thereof to the amount of the unpaid indebtedness of said Lloyd & Co., which is averred to be over $13,000, be paid complainants.

(2) If said bonds have been sold or exchanged for other properties, which are now traceable to the hands of said administrators, that a lien in like manner be adjudged thereon in favor of complainants, and same sold, proceeds applied, etc.

(3) If the bonds or proceeds do not now form a part of said estate in said administrators’ hands, complainants may be adjudged creditors of said estate, and their claim be herein established to amount found due.

(4) That “said administrators be ordered to render and state under the direction of this court an account of all their doings as such administrators touching the administration and management of said estate, as well as of all creditors or other claimants upon said estate.”

[25]*25The proof is not entirely, although mostly, in harmony with these con tended-for facts. It is proven that Lloyd & Co.’s account with complainants shows over $13,000 due for merchandise by IJoyd & Co. purchased; that complainants refused to sell Lloyd & Co. said merchandise on credit until said Brown wrote and delivered to them said letter or agreement, (above set out in full,) and that said sales were made on the strength of said letter; that Brown never was a stockholder in the Lloyd Mercantile Company; that said Memphis bonds were never the property of said mercantile company, but were the property of said Brown, aud the same, to wit, 810.000 about October 26, 1889, and $5,000 about December Ü, 1889, were taken up and returned to said Brown, and without the knowledge of said complainants, hut that at the time of their taking up an equal amount of money was paid into said Union National Bank, and the debt for whose payment they stood thereby paid off; that about December 25, 1889, Lloyd <& Co. failed, and their property has all been disposed of under judgments against them; that before said Brown’s death he gave to his wife, respondent Anna L. Brown, said Memphis bonds, and samé ate now her property, in her own right. The evidence has also gone1 Into other lines, particularly the methods to secure and obtain payment of complainants’ debt after failure of Lloyd & Co., and what is claimed worked a payment of said debt.

The first point of defense we meet, which is made in the answer and vigorously urged on the trial, is that complainants, under the evidence, have no standing in equity in this case, and that whatever remedy complainants have lies at law; that they have "a plain, adequate, and complete remedy at law.” There is little opportunity for dispute as to the doctrine prevailing in the federal courts on this point. Section 723 of the Revised Stainless is in these words: “Suits in equity shall not be sustained in either of the courts of the United States in any case where a plain, adequate and complete remedy may be had at law.” The court is bound to enforce this demand in any case falling under it; and if counsel did not raise the point, in a case where the same applied, it is the duty of the court, sua sponte, to take notice of the point, and act accordingly. Parker v. Woolen Co., 2 Black, 545; Lewis v. Docks, 23 Wall. 466; Killian v. Ebbinghaus, 110 U. S. 574, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 232. Insurance Co. v. Bailey, 13 Wall. 621, applies with noticeable vigor the doctrine of this section. Bailey took out two policies in the insurance company on his own life 'in the name of his wife.

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Bluebook (online)
58 F. 23, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-brown-circtsdia-1893.