Egerton v. Buckner
Egerton v. Buckner
070rehearing
Same Case — on a Reheabjng.
A re-hearing was granted in this case, on an allegation and admission after the judgment, that there was a clerical error in the.record, which misled the court on one point; and because a doubt was created in our minds by the ingenious arguments contained in the petition, which have induced us to reexamine the case with great care.
The correction of the record, by showing that the suit was
It was well understood, when the original agreement was made, that the plaintiffs were to return to the defendants, the same description of notes they had received, and receive the same kind they had given ; the plaintiffs, therefore, had no right to take every thing into their own hands, and by a combination fix the sum the defendants shall pay. The contract between the parties was not one of sale, and, therefore, the rules as to establishing the rate of damages are not applicable.
We will not, on such evidence as is before us, finally settle this controversy; nor can we be induced to do so, although it is urged that the defendants are now bankrupts, and that if the judgment is reversed, the claim of the plaintiffs will be lost. There is no evidence before us of the bankruptcy, nor any fact that induces the belief that the defendants are not as solvent now, as they were in February, 1842.
The former judgment remains unaltered.
Opinion of the Court
This suit arises out of the following written instrument: “We have received from Buckner, Stanton & Co., $14,000, in United States Bank notes, and have paid them $10,080 in Louisiana bank notes, with the understanding, that whenever said Buckner, Stanton & Co. require the United States Bank notes, by giving five or six days notice, we are to return the said amount of United States notes, say $14,000, and they are to return to us the amount of Louisiana bank notes, say $10,080, by giving them two days notice. New Orleans, January 3d, 1842. (Signed,) Egerton & Co.”
The plaintiffs state in their petition, that “the motive for said agreement, on the part of Buckner, Stanton & Co., was to have the use of petitioners’ money, until they should require to use their United States Bank notes, and the consideration or motive of petitioners was to realize the profit which they expected to make, by selling said United States notes, in New Orleans, and replacing them by others to be purchased at a lower rate at the north.”
It is shown, that, on the 7th of February, 1842, the plaintiffs, in writing, informed the defendants, that they were ready to return to them the $14,000 in United States Bank notes, and demanded of them, the sum of $10,080 in currency, or New Orleans money. The person who made this demand says, that he had with him the $14,000 in United States Bank notes, when he delivered the letter. On the 10th of February, the plaintiffs again wrote to the defendants saying, that on the* 7th, they had informed them that they were ready to return them the United States Bank notes, and had demanded the return of $10,080, in New Orleans currency, which had been given as security that the $14,000 should be returned; and that, as that demand had not been complied with, they, the defendants, were further notified, that unless they returned the $10,080, in New Orleans funds, on or before
The United States Bank notes, were offered for sale by a broker, to a great number of persons. He could not get more than fifty cents on a dollar, offered for them; which sum, was offered by Buckner, one of the defendants ; and finally, the plaintiffs themselves, bought them for fifty-one cents on the dollar, and now claim $2,975, the difference between the proceeds of the sale, and the sum of $10,080.
The evidence shows, that the motives stated in the petition actuated the parties. The plaintiffs are brokers, and were able to sell the United States Bank notes, in New Orleans, at seventy-two cents on the dollar ; and the evidence shows, that those they purchased at the north, and had on the 7th and 10th of February, to return to the defendants, cost them only sixty cents on the dollar, less the commissions for purchasing, and there is no evidence of any such charge. The defendants were largely indebted to the Bank of the United States, which debts were not due, but they were preparing to meet them, by occasionally buying at a discount, the notes of the Bank. Not wanting, in the early part of January, 1842, to use the United States Bank notes, and having use for funds current in New Orleans, the defendants let the plaintiffs have them, as they could sell them at a profit, and buy others to replace them, before the defendants would have use for them, as was then supposed; and in return, they, the plaintiffs, let the defendants have the use of $10,080, in current funds, for the use of which, they no doubt expected to make a profit also.
There is a mass of testimony, as to a demand made by the defendants, on the plaintiffs, to return them the United States Bank notes, about the 20th January, 1842, and their successful efforts to procure them from the Merchants Bank, and the refusal of the defendant Buckner, to go with Egerton to the Bank to receive
There was a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, for $2,975, with interest, from which the defendants have appealed.
As to the question, whether the parties were in default, we do not consider it very material. If it be, we are satisfied, that Buckner did not, by the, request he made of the plaintiffs, on the 19th or 20th of January, put them in default, according to the provisions of the Civil Code, arts. 1905 to 1907. He did not give them the requisite notice of five or six days, nor offer to comply with his part of the bargain ; and it is not clearly shown, that the plaintiffs put the defendants in mora. On the 7th of February, they gave the defendants notice, that they were ready to return them the $14,000, in United States Bank notes. On the 9th, they commenced their suit for $2,975, as being the difference between the proceeds of the sale of the notes and the $10,080, and, on the next day, notified the defendants of their intention to sell them. The account of sales is not rendered, until the 14th or 15th of the same month ; and the testimony of Hepburn does not state particularly the day, he sold to Goodman the agent of the plaintiffs. He says, it was some days previous to the 14th of February, and from all the circumstances, it would appear, that it was on the 9th, or the 10th. It appears that the plaintiffs knew the price on the 9th, as they then state in their petition, the deficiency claimed by them.
It is evident, that the parties did not intend to make an exchange, nor an absolute sale, nor one wi|h the benefit of redemption. The transaction has not the essential qualities of either of such contracts. The plaintiffs say to the defendants, you have a certain amount in United States Bank notes, which you cannot or will not use at present; we can use them to advantage, and will return them to you when you want them, upon giving us five or six days notice. The defendants agreed to do so, in consideration of getting the use-of $10,080, in Louisiana bank notes, current at the time. The obligation was to return the same kind of thing.
These views of the case, bring us to the conclusion, that the plaintiffs had no right, after the defendants refused to receive the United States Bank notes, to sell them in the manner they did. They were not pledged to ihemj nor had they such rights as entitled them .to proceed as in a case of sale, a la folie enchere. They were not the vendors of the notes, and if they had been, they did not proceed with the sale in a legal manner.. They had no right to purchase the notes themselves, and thereby fix the deficiency. This doctrine has been well settled, since the cases
The judgment of the Commercial Court is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial, with directions to the Judge to conform on the trial thereof, to the principles herein expressed, and otherwise, to proceed according to law ; the plaintiffs and appellees paying the costs of this appeal.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John Egerton and another v. Henry S. Buckner and others
- Status
- Published