23 Barb. 498 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1857
Previous to "November, 1835, Peter, John, Thomas and Collin Mitchell, Richard Camochan, Thomas Yermilyea, B. W. Rogers, John Graham and Benjamin Marshall were interested in lands in Florida, known as Forbes & Co.’s purchase, and amounting to about 1,200,000 acres. Their title had been in dispute, but was confirmed by a decision of the supreme court of the United States. On the 28th of November, 1835, they agreed that each proprietor should vest, by regular deeds, the whole title to the .lands, legal and equitable, in three trustees, and that the affairs of the company should be conducted by six directors, whose powers and duties were regulated by the articles of association. The land thus conveyed was to be represented by scrip to be issued by the trustees to each proprietor in proportion to his interest in the land ; each share to consist of 500 acres, and the whole number of shares to be 2400; saving shares enough to satisfy a mortgage upon the land “ so that the entire title” (to the land) “ unincumbered, in law and equity, shall be fully, absolutely and unconditionally vested in the said trustees, that they may immediately make legal titles to all purchasers, and divide the proceeds among the stockholders.” The land was to be conveyed to Louis McLane, Charles Augustus Davis and Joseph M. White, to hold to them, their successors and the survivor of them in trust for the benefit of the proprietors, and in trust to convey the same in the manner prescribed in the articles. Contracts for the sale of the lands were to be made by the board of directors, and notes and bonds to be taken by them, payable to the trustees; and deeds of conveyance were to be executed by the trustees, or any two of them. The trustees were to hold their
Subsequently, on the 27th of Nov. 1843, the articles were again amended, by the concurrence of at least two-thirds in value of the share owners. The secretary of the company, the case says, testified that the several amendments were signed by two-thirds of the stockholders in value; he did not know if they were two-thirds in amount. If they were two-thirds in value they must have been two-thirds in interest, and the secretary must have meant, by two-thirds in amount, two-thirds of the number of the stockholders. They were again amended June 26, 1845. The conveyance to Curtis and Griswold must have been known to the shareholders, and also the subsequent one to Curtis and Delafield. These amendments recognize and ratify these conveyances. The amendments of 27th Nov. 1843 refer to the original articles and their amendments, and renew and continue in force the said articles of association for one year from the 28th of Nov. 1843, and appoint Delafield and Curtis trustees ; the former in the place of Griswold, “ who is directed to convey to Delafield and Curtis the legal estate, so
The object of the association was to transfer the legal title to trustees, so that they could sell and give a good title to purchasers, without the intervention of the proprietors, and notwithstanding any change in the ownership of the shares. To effect this, it was necessary that the fee should pass to the trustees. If the original deed failed to give them the fee, for want of words of inheritance, a court of equity would have reformed it in that respect. The parties, in effect, did the same thing. The original trustees having conveyed to the second set of trustees with words of inheritance, two-thirds in interest of the shareholders, under the power in the original articles to alter and modify those articles, directed Griswold to convey the legal estate to Curtis, as trustee in his place, and Griswold accordingly conveyed to Curtis, with words of inheritance. The like two-thirds in interest of the shareholders, who must be assumed to have known the nature of the con
The trustees, therefore, can give a good, legal and equitable title to a purchaser, unless it be affirmatively shown that there was some defect in the original title of the proprietors ; or that any parcel of land is incumbered; or that the trust deed is void.
The cause was tried at special term, and the facts tending to show the objections to the title there proved. The only evidence of a defect in the title of the trustees related to a portion only of the lands ; and showed that the city of Apalachicola brought ejectment, in the spring of 1848, against Day <fc Co., in place of whom Curtis and Griswold, as such trustees, as before mentioned, were admitted to defend, as the landlords; that the premises then in controversy were lands lying at the foot of Florida promenade, bounded on the sides by wharf lots Nos. 6 and 7 ; at the foot of Leslie street, bounded on the sides by wharf lots Nos. 12 and 18; and at the foot of Center, Chestnut, Palmetto, Cypress, Juniper, Fulton, Monroe, Franklin and Jefferson streets ; each lot bounded on the sides by wharf lots of certain numbers; the land at the foot of Palmetto street being bounded on the sides by wharf lots Nos. 28 and 29; and that the city, on a trial upon the merits, recovered those lands, and was put into possession of all except the lands held by the plaintiff. Part of the evidence in the case is given in the record of that trial. Among the evidence was the above deed to the original trustees, and the deed from them to Curtis and Griswold, and a deed from the two last trustees to Notase and
The plaintiff, also, in his complaint, had specified the defects in the company’s title, on which he relied—that the associates of the company could not convey a good title by reason of mortgages and other liens or estates outstanding in said lands. The term “outstanding in the lands,” and the connection of it with the words '■'•mortgages and liens? shows that the defects intended were incumbrances on the land, and not a total want of title. The plaintiff’s objections should be confined to those, unless he clearly made out an actual want of title, and in suph a way as not to surprise the defendants.
The next question is as to the validity of the trust deed. As already stated, there is some proof that the deed was held to be valid by the laws of Florida, in the ejectment suit. The broad proposition has been pressed on the court that the law of our own state is. to be deemed the law of other states, unless proof to the contrary be shown; and that this is so, even as to our statutes, and even as to those relating to titles to lands a.nd to trusts. If that were so, the proof in the ejectment suit would change the burthen. But the rule is too broadly stated. The true rule assumes to be founded on a probability that it will lead to the actual truth, and is not a technical rule forced upon courts against their conviction of what is right. Until the contrary is proved, it is more likely to be true than false, that the laws of another state are the same as ours, as to contracts relating to personal estate, and as to commercial matters particularly; and that when the common law is known to prevail it is construed there as it is with us, whether relating to lands or personal property. So also, interest is now considered as much an incident to a loan of money as rent is to the letting of a house or of lands. It is therefore an assumption most compatible with truth, that interest at some rate is allowed in every state. Although the rate of interest, therefore, is fixed by statute, yet as some rate is universal, our courts must allow some rate; and if the parties furnish no better guide to the truth, the court assumes ours to be the legal interest, in computing the amount to be recovered. But when we introduce what we know to be a new law, (as is our statute respecting trusts,) it would be a perversion of reason to pretend to infer that as soon as we placed the new law on our statute book, every other state in the union and' in the world would adopt the same law. Slavery was abolished here in 1826. It would be a bold proposition that we should infer that it was thenceforth abolished in
The eases quoted are generally consistent with the above principles. In Dollfus v. Frosch, (1 Denio, 374,) it was said that we must presume -that the law of France allows three days of grace on bills of exchange. In Leavenworth v. Brockway, (2 Hill’s Rep. 201,) the same principle was applied, and it was held that it was to be presumed that the law of Ohio, as to the steps necessary to fix an indoiser of a note was the same as the law of this state. (So also Brown v. Gracey, 16 Eng. Com. Law. Rep. 426 ; 2 Dowl. & Ry. 41 in note.) See, however, the note to 2 Hill, 202, which shows that in Illinois (in Mason v. Wash, Breese’s Rep. 16,) inasmuch as a statute of Illinois required things to be done to charge an indorser, more than the common law requires, the court there inferred that the laws of this state conformed to the Illinois statute; and that in South Carolina it was held, in Allen v. Wilson, (2 Hill’s So. Car. Rep. 319, 322,) that the plaintiff could not recover money won at a faro table, as gambling was unlawful by the statutes of South Carolina. And see also Harris v. Allnut, (12 Loui. Rep. 465,) there referred to. The case in South Carolina is analogous to one that had been decided in England, and may be reconciled on the idea that gambling is immoral, and injurious to the community, and that therefore the courts of any state which condemns it, cannot sanction a recovery on such a consideration.
In Thompson v. Ketcham, (8 John. 189,) which was an action on a promissory note made by the defendant, an infant under 21 years of age, in the island of Jamaica, the court refused to take notice of what the law of that island was, as to infancy, and did not assume that it was the same as ours; the court saying that it lay with the defendant to show that his plea of infancy was good by the law of Jamaica, and that the court are not to know that fact without proof; that it is “ the duty of the party who interposes a defense to a contract otherwise binding, to prove every thing requisite to the validity of the defense.”
In Robinson v. Dauchy, (3 Barb. S. C. Rep. 29,) an action claiming to recover goods on account of fraudulent representations of the purchaser, the court said “prima facie the law of Massachusetts, where the fraud was committed, is like our own, and when no proof is given on the subject, our courts will act on their own laws.” So far as relates to the effect of fraud, at common law, this was undoubtedly correct, as we know that the common law prevails in that state.
In Abell v. Douglass, (4 Denio, 305,) the plaintiff sued to recover moneys paid by him to the defendant. One objection to his recovery was that they were paid voluntarily, with a full knowledge of all the facts of the case. The defendant and others had joined in a purchase of lots at Erie, Pennsylvania, with a view to speculation. The title was taken in the name of McCluer, who held it for the benefit of, and under a trust (probably secret and not in writing) for, those who advanced the purchase money. The plaintiff, after this, bought (by verbal
But if our statute law were to prevail, the result would
There is another answer to the plaintiff’s objection to the title of the trustees. He made his written contract to purchase from the company in Oct. 1841, and whether he took possession before or after that time, he has held under the company ever since, and show's no other title under which he pretends to hold. The
The plaintiff objects that the agreement with him was signed not by the board of directors, but by Delafield whom they had appointed their agent, and that they had no power to appoint an agent with power to contract to sell. If this be so, and the plaintiff is not bound by the contract, then he can come into court only on the ground that neither he nor the company
The plaintiff also claims that he is entitled to an account of the general proceeds of sales. This has been given in general terms, in the evidence at special ternr; it being shown that such accounts have been rendered periodically, and that the expenses and payments exceeded the amounts received. Generally, the question whether a good title can be made is to be passed upon before a referee, and so also is an account to be taken before him. But the parties may, if they choose, and the court consent, have the same matters inquired into by the court. This course was adopted in this case.
The plaintiff had been sued upon some of the notes given for the installments yet unpaid. Costs were incurred in those suits, and they were stayed by injunction in this action. The merits of the defense in those suits were necessarily gone into, on the trial of this action, and were found'against the defendant. This court was bound to decide on what terms the plaintiff was entitled to the specific performance for which he asked. Certainly he was to pay the notes, and interest thereon, and also the costs unnecessarily caused by him in those actions, before he could he entitled to a deed. These are the terms imposed by the special term, with this addition only, that it is made imperative on the plaintiff to pay those notes, as it is also on the trustees to convey the lands to him by a
With the views before stated, it is not necessary to notice the claim of Mr. Berrien to hold the notes as a bona fide purchaser. He received them, as he says, before maturity, in satisfaction of a debt previously due to him by'the associates, for counsel fees. His counsel insists that the rule in Coddington v. Bay, (20 John. 637,) and in Stalker v. McDonald, (6 Hill, 96,) only applies -where a note is taken as collateral security for an antecedent debt, and riot where it is taken in payment, or satisfaction, of such debt. Such was not the opinion of the chancellor, in the last case. (See particularly, 6 Hill, 102.) The reason of the rule applies equally to each case. It is that the receiver of the note is to be protected only when he has lost his property or security by reliance on the note, without notice of any defense of the maker, to it. As soon as it should be ascertained that such defense existed, the receiver of the note would be restored to his original cause of action against his debtor, and so would sustain no loss, beyond that which would result from delay; for which the maker of the note should not be accountable. Youngs v. Lee, (2 Kern. 551,) professed to be in accordance with those cases. It did not intend to overrule them, or to give a new interpretation of them, and therefore, if not in accordance with them, is an accidental omission to apply the principles of those cases, but not a reversal of them. But in this case, if the title to the lands should fail, it does not appear but that the plaintiff has received a full equivalent for the notes given by" him, in the use and enjoyment of the lands, the possession of which he still retains. He cannot, therefore, resist the payment of the notes.
The parties have chosen (probably because they relied on certain points of law as clearly in their favor,) to leave several matters of fact in comparative obscurity which might be easily cleared up. Among these, is the law of Florida as to, trusts, and as to the words necessary to create an estate in fee ; and
The attention of the plaintiff is drawn to the fact that he has made no formal case: that he has not excepted to the finding of the special term, and has not procured there any finding of the facts and the law.
The judgment of the special term should be affirmed, with costs.
Mitchell, Roosevelt and Davies, Justices.]