WHITING v. the Bank of the United States

38 U.S. 6, 10 L. Ed. 33, 13 Pet. 6, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 408
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 22, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by203 cases

This text of 38 U.S. 6 (WHITING v. the Bank of the United States) 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
WHITING v. the Bank of the United States, 38 U.S. 6, 10 L. Ed. 33, 13 Pet. 6, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 408 (1839).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Story

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is the case of .a bill, purporting to be a bill of review. The substantial facts, a? they appear on the record, are as follows: Gabriel J. Johnson being the owner in remainder of a five .acre lot, *12 No. 9, in Louisville,.Kentucky, of which his mother, Enfield Johnson, was tenant for life, under the will of his father, and being also the owner in fee, by another title, of another piece of land adjoining the five acre lot, (a part of the slip No. 3,) on the 12th day of November, A. D. 1818, conveyed the same in mortgage to James D. Breckenridge, to secure the latter for his endorsements of three certain notes of Johnson to Ruggles Whiting, each for four thousand dollars, and for any other notes and contracts which Breckenridge should thereafter make, execute, accept, or endorse, for the benefit of Johnson. Afterwards, on-the 9th day of August, A. D. 1820, Johnson, and Breckenridge, as his surety, being indebted to the Bank of the United States in the sum of nine thousand nine hundred and thirty-one dollars and thirty-seven .cents, arrangements were made between them and Whiting, by which Whiting assumed-the payment of the same debt, and gave his note-therefor to the bank accordingly; and as security for the due payment thereof, Johnson and his mother, Enfield Johnson, Breckenridge, and Whiting, on the same day executed a mortgage of the .five acre lot and slip of land above mentioned, to the Bank of the United States, reciting, among other things, the foregoing arrangement.

The condition of the mortgage, among other things, stated, that it was agreed by the parties, that after the satisfaction of the said demands due by Whiting to the bank, and by Gabriel-J. Johnson to Whiting, the estate, or the residue thereof, or any surplus, if money, by the sale thereof, should be paid or conveyed to Enfield Johnson or her assigns. . The mortgage also contained a stipulation for the sale of the .premises, to meet the payment of the debt due to the bank. In April, 1823, the debt due and thus secured to the bank remaining unpaid, a bill for a foreclosure and sale was brought by the bank, in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Kentucky; and to that bill, Gabriel J. Johnson, Enfield Johnson, and Whiting were made parties. But Breckenridge was not made a party. At the November term of the Circuit Court, A. D. 1826, a decree of foreclosure of all' the' equity or right of redemption of the defendants in the mortgaged premises was passed; ana a further decree, that the premises should be" sold by commissioners. The sale took place accordingly; the bank became the purchasers; and the sale was confirmed by the Circuit Court, at the May term, 1827. In the intermediate time between the original decree of foreclosure and the sale, viz., on the 26th of February, 1827, Whiting died in Massachusetts, leaving the'plaintiffs in the present bill, Paulina Whiting, and Helen B. Whiting, and one L. R. Whiting (since dead without issue) his children and heirs at law; who were then infants under age; and the youngest, Helen, did not come of age until 1831.

The present bill is brought .by Paulina Whiting and Helen B. "Whiting, by James Richardson, administrator of Ruggles Whiting, and by ..Gabriel J. Johnson and Enfield Johnson, against the Bank of the United States; and after stating the proceedings in the original suit upon the mortgage, and that the sale was made at a great *13 sacrifice of the property, it relies on the following grounds of error in the proceedings, decree, and sale in the original suit. 1. That it was irregular and erroneous to entertain the bill and pronounce the decree for foreclosure and sale, without Breckenridge being made a •party defendant. 2. That it was irregular and erroneous to sell the property mortgaged, without a revival- of the suit against the heirs, of Whiting. 3. That it was unjust and oppressive to sell in the manner and at the'price-when the sale took place.

The answer of the bank denies all équity in the plaintiffs, and insists that the decree and sale were fair and just. It also denies that Whiting or Breckenridge had any title to the property; and insists that they joined in the mortgage merely to complete the arrangements made between Johnson and themselves. It also denies that the death of Whiting was known at the time of the sale. It states that the property was, after the purchase by the bank, improved, and parts thereof sold to bona fide purchasers for valuable considerations ; and by reason of the improvements and the extension of the city, parts of the grounds so sold are now among the most beautiful and densely built parts of the city. The answer also states, tha-' Whiting died insolvent and deeply indebted to the bank, by certain other judgments and notes.

Such are the material facts and statements in the case, and upon them, so far at least as the present bill of review is concerned, there is no controversy between' the. parties. ' The prayer of the bill is, that the proceedings may be revived, (as the word stands on the record, probably by mistake, for reviewed;) and that the decrees anísale may be set aside, that the plaintiffs may be permitted to redeem.; and for other relief.

Some suggestions have been made as to the nature and character • of the present bill — whether it is to be treated as a bill of review, or what other is its appropriate denomination. As the original decree, which it seeks to review, was properly, according to our course of practice, to be deemed recorded and enrolled as of the term in ■which the final decree was passed, it is certainly a bill of'review in contradistinction to a bill in the nature of a bill of review; which latter bill lies only when there has beén no enrollment of the decree. Being a bill brought by the original parties and their privies in representation, it is also properly a bill of review in contradistinction' to an original bill in the nature of a bill of review; which latter bill brings forward the interests affected by the decree other than those which are'founded in privity of representation. The present bill seeks to revive the suit by introducing the heirs of Whiting before the Court; and so far it has the character of a bill of revivor. It seeks also to state a new fact, viz., the death of Whiting, before the sale; and so far it is supplementary. It is, therefore, a compound bih of review, of supplement, and of revivor; and it is entirely, maintainable as such, if it presents facts which go to the merits of the original decree of foreclosure and sale.

It has also been suggested at the bar, that no bill of review lies *14 for errors of law-, except where such eprorsAre apparent on the face of. the decree of the Court. That is true in the sense in-which the . language is used in the English practice. In England, the decree alwavs recites the substance of the bill and answer and pleadings, and also the facts on which the Court founds its decree. But in America the decree does not ordinarily recite either the bill, or answer, or pleadings; and generally not the facts, on which, the decree is founded. But with us the bill, answer, and other pleadings, together with the decree, constitute what is properly considered as the record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 U.S. 6, 10 L. Ed. 33, 13 Pet. 6, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whiting-v-the-bank-of-the-united-states-scotus-1839.