Warner v. Godfrey

186 U.S. 365, 22 S. Ct. 852, 46 L. Ed. 1203, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 902
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 2, 1902
Docket191
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 186 U.S. 365 (Warner v. Godfrey) 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
Warner v. Godfrey, 186 U.S. 365, 22 S. Ct. 852, 46 L. Ed. 1203, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 902 (1902).

Opinion

Me. Justice White,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The main asserted badges of fraud upon which the complainant based her contention that the conveyance by Dutton to Richardson on April 13, 1896, should be treated, so far as the complainant was concerned, as a nullity, were: 1. The gross inadequacy of a consideration ; 2. A prior agency of the firm of B. H. Warner & Co., for the sale of the lots on behalf of the complainant; 3. The haste with which the negotiations for the sale were had and the sale was completed and, 4. The execution of title to Richardson for the benefit of Warner and Wine and the concealment of the interest of the last-named defendants in the purchase.

*375 To sustain and disprove these contentions voluminous evidence was introduced, which was elaborately and carefully reviewed in the opinions delivered by the courts below. Both the trial and appellate court concurred in holding that the proof absolutely vindicated the defendants from the charges of wrongdoing made against them and clearly established the want of merit in the' contentions. As no appeal was taken by the. complainant from the first decree of the Court' of Appeals, and as the'relief asked by the last,amendment to the bill in effect abandoned the claim that the defendants had' committed a fraud upon the complainant, by basing the claim for relief solely upon the hypothesis of a constructive fraud having been practiced upon Dirtton, the entire want of foundation for the charges of wrongdoing urgéd against the defendants and upon which the long litigation proceeded may be taken as conclusively established.

Whatever may be said.of the failure of Richardson in his answer to the original bill to fully and fairly disclose the actual transaction, certainly his not doing so did not iong mislead the complainant or conceal from her the real facts. There is no question possible on this subject, since the complainant testified that shortly after the filing of the answer of Richardson to the original bill, statements of the defendant Warner made to the attorney of the complainant in the city of New York, disclosing the actual transaction, were communicated to her, and it also appears that the attorney for the defendants, in company with the defendant Wine, called upon the attorney of the complainant in the city of" Washington and stated the facts of the transaction to him.' With full knowledge, then, of the facts, and because of such knowledge, the amended and supplemental bill was filed making Warner and Wrine defendants as-the real purchasers.

’ The closest inspection of the bill, as originally filed or as amended, discloses no averment which can be construed as predicating relief upon the theory that Warner and Wine had practiced a constructive fraud upon Dutton by purchasing, without his knowledge and consent, property which had been placed by him in the hands of the firm of B. H. Warner & Co, for sale. *376 On the contrary, the sole ground of relief was the claim that Warner and Wine had in effect conspired with Dutton to defraud the complainant, and because thereof the complainant was entitled to recover the property from the said defendants without in anywise reimbursing them for their expenditures in the matter. The answer of Warner and Wine, whilst conceding that they were the real purchasers, took issue upon the charges of wrong and fraud alleged against them.

Looking into the record, we repeat, nothing is found conveying even an intimation that the parties considered during the proceedings leading up to the joinder of issue and trial which ensued that any issue existed between them than the one made by the pleadings as above stated. Indeed, the record makes clear the fact that both parties, in taking testimony, acted upon the assumption that it was a fact beyond dispute that the firm of B. II. Warner & Oo. at the time of the sale represented the purchasers, Warner and Wine, and not the seller, Dutton. Thus, in interrogating the witness Hussey, who was at the time ' of the sale the attorney of Dutton, and who was called for the defendants, the following question was asked by counsel for complainant:

“ Q. So that at the time of this transaction, in April, 1896, when you agreed with 'Mr. Warner and Mr. Wine to share with them the commission, they to have two thirds, or $500, and you to have one third, or $250, so far as any knowledge that you had on the subject is concerned, you were treating with them as the irolcers of Louis W. Richardson, or whoever the jpurchaser was. Is that so ?
“ A. I treated with them as the brokers, and had no interest in who purchased it, so long as the money was paid for it.”

Again, in cross-examining the defendant Wine, the following question was asked by the complainant:

Q. Why did you conceal from Mrs. Mussey, at the time of the purchase of said property in April, 1896, your true connection with the said transaction as purchaser, and hold yourself out as the irolcer or representative of the dinnmy in whose name you tooh title to the property, taking two thirds of the commission for selling the property to yourself ? ”

*377 Under tbe circumstances which we have stated, the first question which arises is, Was the Court of Appeals justified, after concluding- every issue actually litigated, in favor, of the defendants, in remanding the case for the purpose of'allowing the complainant to amend the bill in order to assert a new and distinct ground of relief constituting a complete departure from the theory upon which the bill had been framed and upon which the casé had been tried ? And if it was so justified, was it authorized, whilst thus remanding the case for the purpose of allowing the amendment, to provide that the case should not be reopened; in other words, that the amendment could be made and relief granted on it and the defendants be deprived of all opportunity of interposing any defence? Inverting the order in which the questions have been just stated, and under the assumption that the court was justified on the record before it in remanding the case for the purpose of allowing the amendment, we think it was error to reopen the case in order to allow the amendment asserting the new and distinct ground of relief, and at the same time to treat the case as not reopened and the record as closed, the result being to deprive the defendants of all opportunity of a hearing on the new ground of relief permitted to be asserted against them. Hovey v. Elliot, 167 U. S. 409.

This conclusion would necessitate, in any event, a reversal, in order that.a trial be had of the new and distinct issue raised by the amendment made under the sanction of the court. This does not, however, relieve us from the necessity of determining whether the court was justified in allowing the amendment, since, if it be found that error was committed in that particular, the appellants would be entitled to a decree of reversal, finally disposing of the controversy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 U.S. 365, 22 S. Ct. 852, 46 L. Ed. 1203, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-godfrey-scotus-1902.