Wallis v. Thornton

29 F. Cas. 95, 2 Brock. 422
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia
DecidedMay 15, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 F. Cas. 95 (Wallis v. Thornton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallis v. Thornton, 29 F. Cas. 95, 2 Brock. 422 (circtdva 1831).

Opinion

MAESHALL, Circuit Justice.

This suit is brought by a creditor, claiming from the defendants a sum of money which this court has decreed to him, and which he has not received. In December, 1825, a decree was entered in his favour, against the original debt- or, ordering a sale of lands which were subject to the debt, on a credit of one year, or on such farther credit as the plaintiff’s attorney might direct, taking a bond or a deed of trust from the purchaser, to secure the payment of the. purchase-money. The marshal, John Pe-gram, acting by Anthony E. Thornton, his deputy, made the sale and took the bonds to himself as marshal, and a deed of trust to Anthony E. Thornton and William Carter, who were his deputies, specifying the times of payment, and stipulating that, in case of default, the trustees or the survivor, or his heirs, should, at the request of the said John Pe-gram, his executors, administrators, or assigns, sell, according to the terms of the deed. Default having been made in paying the first instahnent, a sale was made by the trustees, and Eichard Anderson became the purchaser. He paid the whole purchase-money, including the two instalments not then due, discounting from the amount, the legal interest on that part of the debt which was not due. The money was received by Anthony E. Thornton, who died soon afterwards insolvent. His liability for the money not being questioned, a decree was entered against his representative at a former term, reserving to the plaintiff the right to proceed against the other defendants, as to whom the cause was continued. That decree having been unproductive, the plaintiff now asks a decree against the other defendants. Three persons are now before the court, the creditor, the purchaser, and the surviving trustee, on one of whom the loss sustained, in consequence of the default of Thornton, must fall.

The creditor has proceeded in a regular course of law, to obtain his money; has given no authority to any individual which the law does not give, and has committed not a single act of indiscretion or irregularity, that has been shown to the court. The extension of credit on which the sale was made, under his first decree, which has produced no loss, and the selection of trustees to whom the trust property should he conveyed, if he did select them, constitute his whole agency, except as a plaintiff prosecuting his suit in court. His selection of, or assent to, the trustees, gave them no power not expressed in the deed, and their actions can affect him no farther than they have acted by his authority. If, then, the creditor has lost his debt, he must have lost it by the mere operation of law, or by a correct exercise by the trustees, of the authority vested by him in them. If he has lost it by the operation of law, it must be because the money was paid according to the decree of the court. The decree orders the marshal to sell on a credit, ‘‘and to bring the proceeds of sale into court, to be disposed of by future order.” Now, what are the proceeds of this sale? The decree directs that he shall “take bond with approved security, and deed of trust of the premises to secure payment of the purchase-money.” These bonds are the [98]*98immediate proceeds of sale, and tlie decree directs that they shall be brought into court to be subject to its future order. This implies no right in the officer to make any disposition of them, either to the debtor himself, or to any other person. If the term “proceeds” be construed to apply to future, as well as immediate proceeds, to the money secured by the bonds, as well as the bonds themselves, this does not dispense with the necessity of bringing the bonds into court, or confer a right on the officer to exercise over them any of the rights of ownership. As a matter of convenience, they may be permitted to remain in the hands of the officer; but as a matter of strict right, the creditor might, I presume, have required that they should be brought into' court.

It seems to be agreed, that the bonds being taken to the marshal, he had a right to collect them, which right might consequently be exercised by his deputies. I have felt some doubt on the propriety of making the bonds payable to the marshal. It is directed by no law. The decree does not specify the obligee, and I am not certain that the direction to take bond, implies that it shall be taken to the officer, rather than to the creditor. But passing over this difficulty, and supposing that, for the sake of convenience, there has been a general acquiescence under this practice, the marshal must be considered as a trustee for the creditor. He acquires no property in the bonds; no right of ownership over them; no power to dispose of them at his own will: he is a mere trustee. If empowered to collect them, he must collect them according to the trust. I do not mean to inquire, whether he exercises this trust by virtue of his office, or under an implied authority from the creditor. I am aware of the delicacy and consequences of this as a general question, and do not purpose to touch it; but will observe that these bonds are not taken to the marshal and his successors, but to John Pegram. marshal, &c., and to his executors, administrators, or assigns. Had the marshal been changed before tne money was paid, could his successor, without an assignment, have acted on these bonds? However ibis may bo. whether his trust was personal or official, it is a trust, and ought to be faithfully executed.

It is argued, that the bonds are payable on or before the day mentioned in the condition, and that a consequent rigid existed in the obligor to pay, and in the obligee to receive the money, immediately. The decree does not authorize the insertion of these words. The sale is to be made on credit, and bonds are to be taken for the payment of the purchase-money. It is the common formula, because an individual who is to receive money for himself, never objects to payment before the day. In trusts, it may be different. Payment before the day is never expected; and if it may be made without the knowledge of the cestui que trust, his situation may be changed, often to his very great injury, without enabling him to provide for his safety. But, admitting that the general direction to take bonds implies that they may be taken in the common form, and that this gives the debtor a right to pay before the day, it gives him a right to pay the whole debt, and the obligor a right to receive the whole debt, not a part of it. It gives no right to the one to purchase, nor to the other to sell the bonds for less than the sum mentioned in the condition. Such a transaction is not the exercise of any power conferred by the decree. If, then, this could be considered an an official act, it is an abuse of office; it is a wrongful act, and can confer no rights in equity on those who are parties to it. If the receipt of this money could be considered as an official act, the sureties of Thornton, if he gave any, would be responsible for it. I do not mean now to indicate any opinion on this question, if it be one, because I think General Pegram, whether officially or personally, was a trustee for the creditor, was known to all the parties as a trustee, and could not, by his own act, violate the trust for his own purposes. Consequently, that power could not be imparted to his deputies.

The creditor, then, has not lost his debt by the operation of law, and the responsibility of the parties before the court to him, is not changed by the circumstance that the trustees were also deputies of the marshal. They acted as trustees, the debtor contracted with them as trustees, purchased from them as trustees, and. paid the money to them as trustees.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 95, 2 Brock. 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallis-v-thornton-circtdva-1831.