273 F. 67 | 2d Cir. | 1921
The appellant was a jobber and a dealer in secondhand bags and burlap at Atlanta, Ga. The Hartenfeld Bag Company was in business in Chicago, 111., as a dealer in secondhand bags and' burlap. Its business was collecting secondhand bags, cleaning and repairing them, and reselling them to the bag trade. The appellant had previously, during the course of several years, purchased bags in considerable amounts from the Bag Company. Very frequently the business was conducted as follows: The appellant would secure orders from its customers, and then buy the secondhand bags and burlap necessary to fill such orders from the Bag Company. Payment was
On August 29, 1918, while this condition of affairs existed, the Bag Company sold to the appellant a carload of bags and burlap for shipment to Atlanta for $9,225. The appellant did not pay in advance for these goods, but purchased on open account, payable in 90 days. The carload was shipped to Atlanta on August 30, 1918, and on the same day, the Bag Company assigned the 90-day account against the appellant for $9,225, the purchase price of this car, to the Commercial Credit Company of Baltimore. This company makes a business of loaning money on the purchase or discount of accounts receivable. The matter of this assignment was unknown to the appellant until September 24, 1918, following. The unsatisfactory deliveries and replacement of shortages and defective bags continued until September 24, 1918. On that date, the parties met in Chicago, and it was then stated by the president of the Bag Company that he could not make some of the deliveries or replacements to which the appellant was entitled, and it was finally agreed that for such nondeliveries, shortages, and defective deliveries the Bag Company owed the appellant $11,951.41. This adjustment did not take into consideration the open account, which was assigned as aforesaid. The Bag Company was unable to pay the $11,951.41 in cash, and it was finally agreed that the Bag Company should pay the appellant $2,726.41, and give notes for $9,225, making together the $11,951.41 debt, and that the appellant should give fi> the Bag Company its notes for $9,225 in payment of the car of August 29, 1918, which had been sold under 90 days credit, and which account had been assigned to the Commercial Credit Company. Notwithstanding such assignment, the appellant agreed to give notes for it.
The appellant disclaims knowledge of such assignment to the Commercial Credit Company. When the parties started to draw the notes, it was then recalled that there was another small debt from the Bag Company which had been overlooked. So this indebtedness was deducted from the appellant’s notes, and on September 14, 1918, the appellant gave the Bag Company one note for $4,650 due December 18,
The following transaction then' took place: A contract was drafted, by which it was made to appear that the Bag Company should sell and deliver to the appellant merchandise therein specifically amounting to $22,100, a little more than enough to pay the appellant in full, and provided as follows: “Which the American Mills Company agrees to pay cash upon the conditions that this contract is completed within 75 days after date.” It provided that the Bag Company would secure a good surety company bond guaranteeing the performance by the Bag Company. At the time it was very apparent that the president of the appellant did not go to Chicago for any purpose other than to adjust the indebtedness then owing. Nothing indicates a desire 'to buy other merchandise. No satisfactory explanation is given why another purchase of bags should have been made under the circumstances. Later there was substituted in the contract the following words:
“The amount of this contract is $22,100, paid, to H. B. C. [Hartenfeld Bag Company] upon the execution of this agreement, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged. In the event that the said H. B. Co. shall not make delivery of the said bags on or before 75 days after the date hereof, said H. B. Co. shall retain of said $22,000 only so much thereof as will pay at the contract rate for such bags, if any, as have been delivered and accepted by A. M. Co. [American Mills Company], and said H. B. Co. shall at the expiration of 75 days immediately return to A. M. Co. the difference between said $22,000 and the price of the bags delivered.”
The trial judge concluded that the contract in question was a mere blind or fraud to conceal the real agreement, and that the form in question was adopted to conceal the real transaction under the guise of a sale in good faith with an advance payment. Its purpose was plain. It was intended to induce a surety to execute a bond, and by its bond become liable for the payment of a debt then due and to be assumed from the Bag Company to the appellant. It was clear to the trial judge, as it is to us, that the purpose of the parties was to exchange this unsecured claim, which the appellant had of $12,000, plus the $9,225 indebtedness of the appellant to the Credit Company, by virtue of the assignment of the claim, into a claim of merchandise, or money if the merchandise was not delivered in 75 days, and to secure it by a bond of a surety company. What took place at the time of the execution of this contract, together with the explanations as disclosed by the record, satisfy us of the correctness of this finding in the lower court. The appellee executed this bond. After its execution, the correspondence between the parties and their course of conduct verifies the conclusion that it was a fraud attempted to be perpetrated to secure payment to the appellant.
But the validity of the decree below is attacked upon the ground that the District Court did not have jurisdiction. It appears that, after a default was made by the Bag Company in carrying out this contract, the appellant sued the Surety Company in the Illinois state court on the bond, together with the Bag Company, and served both defendants. A few days later it sued in the state courts in Georgia. Process was ■ served only on the appellee, because it could not be served upon the Bag Company in that state. Before answer in either suit, the appellee brought a suit in the New York Supreme Court, alleging fraud in obtaining the execution and delivery of this bond, and asking for its cancellation and surrender. Because of diversity of citizenship, the appellant moved the case to the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. The appellant thereupon interposed an answer, alleging that equity had no jurisdiction, because it had an adequate remedy at law, maintaining that, in actions at law pending, in tlie courts of the states of Illinois and Georgia, it could defend upon the ground of fraud. The appellant also pleaded a counterclaim upon a cause of action at law, and claimed breaches against the appellee, and asked for judgment for $21,050. This was the same sum as
“Wherefore defendant demands judgment dismissing the complaint, with costs, and for affirmative judgment against the plaintiff on defendant’s counterclaim for the sum of $21,050, with interest thereon from the 14th of December, 1918, with costs.”
A reply was interposed by the appellee to the material allegations of the counterclaim and separate defenses thereto were interposed. A motion was made for judgment on the pleadings, which was denied without prejudice to renewal at the trial. Another application was made for a final decree on the pleadings, on the ground that the admissions in the appellant’s answer entitled the appellee to the relief sought. In opposition to this motion, the appellant moved for a dismissal on the ground that equity had no jurisdiction, because the appellee had an adequate remedy at law. This motion was denied without prejudice. On the trial, at the close of the appellee’s case, the appellant called witnesses and endeavored to establish the allegations of the counterclaim. At no time during the trial was the application to dismiss renewed upon the ground that the appellee had an adequate remedy at law. The court thereupon indicated its determination to decide in favor of the appellee and against the appellant on the facts, and stated that the only question which it desired to have argueu was on the question of law. Thereupon the appellant urged that there was no equitable jurisdiction, for the reason that the appellee had an adequate remedy at law, and the court ruled that, since the counterclaim was interposed and the appellant asked affirmative relief, it had submitted itself to the jurisdiction of a court of equity, and gave a decree against the appellant.
“But ‘a court of equity ought to do justice completely, and not by halves,’ and a cause once properly in a court of equity for any purpose will ordinarily be retained for all purposes, even though the court is thereby called upon to determine legal rights that otherwise would not be within the range of its authority. Camp v. Boyd, 229 U. S. 530, 531.”
“It is undoubtedly true that a suit in equity cannot bo maintained when there is a plain, adequate, and complete remedy at law. Such is the mandate of Revised Statutes, § 723, as well as the general rule in equity. Lewis v. Cocks, 23 Wall. 466; Killian v. Ebbinghaus, 110 U. S. 568; Litchfield v. Ballau, 114 U. S. 190; Allen v. Pullman’s Palace Car Company, 139 U. S. 658. It is also true that this objection need not always be raised by some pleading, but may be presented on the hearing, even in the appellate court, and if not suggested by counsel, may be enforced by the court on its own motion. See authorities just cited. But, on the other hand, it is equally true that where the objection that the plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law is not made until the hearing, and the subject-matter is of a class over which a court of equity has jurisdiction, the court is not necessarily obliged to entertain it, even though, if taken in limine, it might have been worthy of attention. Wylie v. Coxe, 15 How. 415, 420; Reynes v. Dumont, 130 U. S. 354, 395; Kilborn v. Sunderland, 130, U. S. 505, 514; Brown v. Lake Superior Iron Company, 134 U. S. 530; Insley v. United States, 150 U. S. 512, 515; Perego v. Dodge, 163 U. S. 160, 164; 1 Daniell’s Chan. Pl. & Pr. (4th Ed.) p. 555.”
At do time did the appellant raise the objection until after it had pleaded its counterclaim, and while a motion to dismiss the bill was made and denied in advance of trial, this was done without any prejudice to a renewal. In place of renewing at the commencement of the trial, the appellant proceeded with the trial, and offered proof of its counterclaim, and asked for judgment. When it observed that judgment on the facts was going against it, then for the first time during the course of the trial it insisted that the appellee had an adequate remedy at law. We think this conduct at the trial was tantamount to invoking the aid of a court of equity to exercise its jurisdiction in this case. Offering proof before the court, without a jury, waived any objection to the jurisdiction of the court in equity to try and dispose of the suit. Merchants’ Heat & Light Co. v. Clow & Sons, 204 U. S. 286, 27 Sup. Ct. 285, 51 L. Ed. 488. In that case the court said:
“But by setting up its counterclaim the defendant became a plaintiff' in its turn, invoked the jurisdiction of the court in. the same action and by invoking submitted to it. * * * There is some difference in decisions as to when a defendant becomes so far an actor as to submit to the jurisdiction, but we are aware of none as to the proposition that when he does become an actor in the proper sense ho submits. * * * As we have said, there is no question at the present day that, by an answer-in recoupment, the defendant makes himself an actor, and, to the extent of his claim, a cross-plaintiff in the suit.’.’
“The answer must state in short and simple form any counterclaim arising* out of the transaction which is the subject-matter of the suit, and may, without cross-bill, set out any set-off or counterclaim against the plaintiff which might be the subject of an independent suit in equity against him, and such set-off or counterclaim so set up shall have the same effect as a cross-suit, so as t® enable the court to pronounce a final judgment in the same suit both on the original and cross claims.”
“In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved.”
Decree affirmed.