Cotton seized under color of the Act of March 12, 1863, c. 20,
was by A., the Deputy General Agent of the Treasury, consigned,
subject to freight and charges, to B., Supervising Special Agent of
the Treasury at New Orleans. It was there received by a firm who
paid the charges on A.'s order, to hold "the amount against the
cotton." Shortly thereafter, A. directed B. to deliver the cotton
to C., the claimant, upon his giving a bond of indemnity. C. gave
the required bond to save harmless the government, the seizing
agent, and the officers and agents of the Treasury on account of
the seizure and detention of the cotton, and, on paying freight and
charges, he, by order of B., received the cotton. He subsequently
sued the firm for the amount so paid and recovered judgment, which
a member of the firm paid, and then brought this action against A.
for the money.
Held:
1. That A., being neither a party nor a privy to the suit of C.
against the firm, and it not appearing that notice of its pendency
was ever given to him or any agent of the government, he is not
bound by the judgment there rendered.
2. That the court below having in this action given a
certificate of probable cause, as provided by sec. 989, Rev.Stat.,
it appears that A. could have successfully defended the suit
brought by C., and been protected by the bond given by the
latter.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 105 U. S. 719
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought in the Sixth District Court for the Parish
of Orleans, in the State of Louisiana, by Seelye, the defendant in
error, against Flanders, the plaintiff in error, in November, 1871,
and was removed by certiorari, before issue joined, into the
Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Louisiana.
In his petition filed in the state court, Seelye claimed to recover
from Flanders the sum of $6,233.61, with legal interest from
judicial demand. The grounds of the claim, as set forth in the
petition, were that in March, 1866, 178 bales of cotton were
delivered at the pickery of the firm of Seelye & Atwood in New
Orleans, of which firm Seelye was a member, under the instructions
of Flanders, who was at that time acting supervisor and special
agent of the Treasury Department of the United States; that the
firm received from Flanders, at the same time, a written order to
pay the charges on the cotton, amounting to $5,907.45; that the
firm, in obedience to those instructions, received the cotton and
paid the charges; that in April, 1866, the firm received an order
from one Burbridge, supervisor and special agent of the Treasury
Department of the United States, directing them to deliver said
cotton to one Harrison, but to retain the charges and expenses on
said cotton; that in obedience to said order, the firm delivered
the cotton to Harrison, and received from him the amount of charges
originally paid by them, and their own charges for storage of the
cotton, being in all $6,063.81; that the amount was paid by
Harrison under protest, and he subsequently sued Seelye and another
person, as composing the firm, and recovered a judgment against
them in the circuit court of the United States, for $4,661.45, with
interest from June, 1866, to July, 1871, and costs, making in all
$5,891.44; that that sum was paid by Seelye to Harrison in
satisfaction of that judgment; that he also paid, as costs of court
in that suit $92, and for counsel fees in defending the suit $250,
and that these sums, with the amount of the judgment, make the
$6,233.61. The petition alleges that all that Seelye so did in the
premises, and all that he was so finally compelled to pay, was the
direct result of the written orders received by the firm
Page 105 U. S. 720
from Flanders, and claims that Flanders is bound to reimburse to
him the entire amount so paid, either in direct obedience to his
orders or as the necessary result of that obedience. In January,
1872, Flanders filed exceptions in the circuit court to the
petition, which were overruled by the court in April, 1872. These
exceptions raised the questions that Seelye had no right of action
alone, and that the court had no jurisdiction. After the overruling
of these exceptions, Flanders filed a pleading combining exceptions
with an answer. The exceptions related to the defenses of
prescription and want of jurisdiction. The answer set up that when
Seelye received the cotton from Flanders and paid the charges, he
knew that Flanders had taken the cotton in his said official
capacity acting under the Act of Congress of March 12, 1863, c. 20,
12 Stat. 820; that the charges directed by Flanders to be paid were
a legal charge on the cotton under the provisions of said act; that
they were refunded by Harrison to the firm as an admitted claim;
that Harrison then brought the said suit to recover back the amount
he had so allowed and paid; that the
brk:
defendants in said suit set up in their answer therein that they
received the cotton from Flanders, acting as such special agent,
and paid by his orders the charges thereon, and the same were
lawful charges thereon, and were acquiesced in by Harrison and
reimbursed to them; that after judgment in the suit, the defendants
in it sued out a writ of error to this Court, which writ they
failed to prosecute, and it was therefore dismissed by this Court
in December, 1870; that in July, 1871, they voluntarily paid the
judgment; that the defense set up in the suit was, if founded in
fact, a good and valid one, and their neglect to prosecute it
cannot be allowed to operate to the prejudice of Flanders; that the
circuit court had no jurisdiction in the suit; that Seelye lost all
recourse against Flanders, if any he ever had, by reason of his
failure to plead to the jurisdiction of the circuit court in the
suit and because of his failure to prosecute said writ of error;
and that Flanders is not responsible for the costs incurred by
Seelye in the suit or for his counsel fees therein. The answer
concluded with these words:
"And for all such matters and things in plaintiff's petition
contained as are not herein replied to, respondent for answer
pleads the general
Page 105 U. S. 721
issue, and prays to be hence dismissed with costs."
The suit was tried by a jury in the circuit court in April,
1873. On the 19th of March, 1874, the court set aside the verdict
and granted a new trial. On the 27th of March, 1874, an exception
was filed, alleging, as a peremptory exception to the petition and
the action, that the allegations in the petition, if true, as
pleaded, are insufficient in law to entitle the plaintiff to any
recovery against the defendant, "for the same do not disclose any
cause of action in behalf of said plaintiff against said
defendant." The suit remained in this condition for nearly five
years, when, in January, 1879, the defendant pleaded all applicable
prescriptions as a peremptory exception. Then the parties filed a
written stipulation agreeing to waive the intervention of a jury,
and submitting the cause to the court "upon the issues of fact as
well as of law." The findings and the judgment of the circuit court
are embraced in one paper. It states that the court, "having heard
the evidence and the arguments of counsel, overrules all the
exceptions taken by defendant to the plaintiff's petition." It then
specially finds the facts and awards judgment to the plaintiff for
$6,233.61, with interest and costs. It also grants a certificate of
probable cause for the seizure of the cotton, and for all the
doings of Flanders in the premises, as deputy general agent of the
Treasury Department of the United States, and directs that no
execution shall issue on the judgment. There is no bill of
exceptions in the record. As the findings are special, the review
by this Court may extend to the determination of the sufficiency of
the facts found to support the judgment.
The following facts were found by the circuit court, only those
being stated here which are material in the view we take of the
case, although some others were found:
The 178 bales of cotton while in the possession of Harrison
were, under color of the above-cited act, seized by an assistant
special agent of the Treasury Department of the United States. They
were shipped from Shreveport, consigned to one Burbridge,
supervising special agent of the Treasury Department at New
Orleans, subject to charges and freight amounting to $5,907.45.
Seelye's firm received the cotton from a steamboat and gave a
receipt for it, which stated that they held it subject to the
Page 105 U. S. 722
order of the collector of the port of New Orleans. The firm paid
the amount of freight and charges to the steamboat on an order
signed by Flanders, as deputy general agent, reading thus: "Seelye
& Atwood's press will pay the within charges and hold the
amount against the cotton." This was in March, 1866. On the 18th of
April, 1866, Flanders, as such deputy general agent of the Treasury
Department, issued an order to Burbridge, as such supervising
special agent, directing him to release the cotton to Harrison on
his giving a bond in $25,000, to save harmless the government of
the United States for seizure, detention, or damage. On the same
day, Harrison executed his bond in that amount, in which he bound
himself to save harmless the seizing agent, and all other agents
and officers of the Treasury Department, and also the government of
the United States on account of the seizure and detention of the
cotton and on account of any damages they might sustain by reason
of said seizure. On the next day, Burbridge issued an order,
directing Seelye & Atwood to deliver the cotton to Harrison on
his paying all proper and legitimate charges, including the charges
for transportation to Shreveport. The firm delivered the cotton to
Harrison on the 23d of April, and he then paid them the $5,907.45,
claimed as charges on the cotton, and they gave him a receipt for
it, which stated that he reserved "all rights or claims not
relinquished under order of the Treasury agent who released said
cotton to him." Shortly afterwards, Harrison sued the firm in a
court of the state to recover back the amount so paid by him. The
firm removed the suit into the circuit court of the United States
and filed their answer, averring that they received the cotton by
order of Flanders, special agent of the Treasury Department, and by
the order paid the charges on the same, which were reimbursed to
them by Harrison on the delivery of the cotton, and that the same
were lawful charges on the cotton, acquiesced in and paid by
Harrison on the delivery of the cotton, and further pleading a
general denial. In February, 1868, a final judgment was rendered in
favor of Harrison against the firm for $4,661.45, from which the
firm sued out a writ of error to this Court, which was, in
December, 1870, dismissed, with costs, for want of prosecution. In
July, 1871, Seelye paid, out of his individual
Page 105 U. S. 723
means, to Harrison, $5,891.44, in full satisfaction of said
judgment and costs. In defending the suit, Seelye paid, from his
individual means, $92 costs and $250 counsel fees.
As grounds for reversing the judgment below, the counsel for the
plaintiff in error contends in his brief that there is nothing to
show that Harrison could have regained the cotton except upon the
very conditions which he accepted -- namely, that he would receive
it at New Orleans and defray all charges connected with its having
been carried thither; that except the redelivery of the cotton, the
record shows nothing to defeat the presumption, arising from the
time and place of the seizure, that the cotton was properly
captured and might have been held; that the judgment obtained by
Harrison was
res inter alios as against Flanders; that
Seely cannot recover in this suit without showing that he could not
have successfully resisted the suit by Harrison; that the agreement
of Harrison to hold the United States harmless on account of the
seizure required him to repay to the United States any money which
they had already paid upon that account, as well as any which they
might thereafter pay because of obligations then existing; that the
question in its present form is not affected by the fact that
Harrison paid Seelye without waiting for the United States to pay
Seelye and then demand repayment from Harrison; that, in point of
right, Harrison, by paying Seelye, paid his own debt; that his
accepting from Burbridge an order for the cotton, on paying all
proper and legitimate charges, including the charges for
transportation to Shreveport, is a contemporaneous interpretation
of what was meant by saving the United States and their agents
harmless; that originally, Seelye & Atwood might have recovered
from the United States, or perhaps from Flanders, for the freight
and charges paid on the order of Flanders, but the acceptance of
payment from Harrison, who acted in the matter substantially as an
agent of the United States, ended the original obligation, and that
no subsequent transaction between Harrison and Seelye, whether
voluntary or involuntary on the part of Seelye, could revive such
obligation or impose any new duty in the premises on either the
United States or Flanders.
It is manifest that the judgment rendered against Flanders
Page 105 U. S. 724
in the present suit is founded on the fact that Harrison
recovered his judgment against the firm, and that Seelye paid to
Harrison the amount of that judgment, and also paid the expenses of
defending the suit in which the judgment was recovered. The
petition shows this, and so do the findings and judgment. The
amount claimed by Seelye in the petition and the amount recovered
by him is the exact amount of the Harrison judgment recovered July
13, 1871, and of the costs and counsel fees paid by Seelye. Prior
to the bringing of the suit by Harrison, the firm had been fully
reimbursed by Harrison for the charges which they had paid and
incurred on the order of Flanders. Although that judgment, and the
payment by Seelye of its amount and of the expenses attendant on
the defense of the suit, are the sole ground of the claim made in
the present suit and the sole foundation of the judgment recovered
in it, yet Flanders was neither a party nor a privy to the suit
brought by Harrison, and it is not alleged in the petition nor
found as a fact by the circuit court that Flanders, or the
government of the United States, or any officer or agent of the
government, had any notice of the bringing or pendency of the suit
brought by Harrison, or any opportunity to assume or control or
take part in its defense. The recovery in the present suit is, by
the operation of the certificate of probable cause granted by the
circuit court, under sec. 989 of the Revised Statutes, made
substantially a recovery against the government, to be paid out of
the Treasury. All relationship between Seelye and his firm, on one
side, and the government and its agents and officers, on the other
side, ceased entirely when the firm was reimbursed by Harrison and
the cotton was delivered to Harrison. The firm held the cotton, by
authority of Flanders, as security for the charges which they paid
by his order, and they held it as security also for their storage
charges. They parted with the cotton because all their claims
against it were reimbursed, and with the closing of that
transaction, their agency and that of Seelye as representing the
government or Flanders in any capacity in connection with the
transaction entirely ceased. Neither the firm nor Seelye had any
such representative capacity in defending the suit brought by
Harrison. There is not in the petition any allegation of any fact
which
Page 105 U. S. 725
tends to show that the government or Flanders is bound by the
judgment in the suit brought by Harrison, nor is any such fact
stated in the findings made by the circuit court. The petition
merely alleges that all that Seelye did, and all that he was
compelled to pay, was the direct result of the orders of Flanders,
and that Flanders is bound to reimburse to him the amount so paid,
either in direct obedience to his orders or as the necessary result
of that obedience. The payment of the Harrison judgment was,
however, in no proper sense the result of any obedience to any
order of Flanders. Not only is there not in the special findings
any finding of any facts which tend to make the Harrison judgment
of any binding or probative force as against Flanders as a party or
a privy to it, but the finding in regard to the Harrison bond is
conclusive to show that no judgment in favor of Harrison against
Seelye & Atwood can be used to aid in establishing the present
claim against Flanders and the government, unless it appears
affirmatively that they had notice of the Harrison suit and an
opportunity to defend it. The answer of Flanders in the present
suit alleges that the charges which he directed Seelye & Atwood
to pay were legal charges on the cotton under the act of Congress
referred to, and that they were refunded to them by Harrison, "as
an admitted claim." It also alleges that Seelye & Atwood,
in
brk:
their answer in the Harrison suit, averred that the charges
which they paid were lawful charges on the cotton, and were
acquiesced in by Harrison and reimbursed to them. Proof of such
admission of and acquiescence in the claim by Harrison was
therefore admissible, and was made by proving that Harrison gave at
the time the bond referred to. In view of the provisions of that
bond, it is difficult to see why, as against Flanders, Harrison is
not debarred from saying that he did not admit and acquiesce in the
lawfulness and propriety of the charges which he paid to Seelye
& Atwood. His bond was given to save harmless the government
and the agents of the Treasury Department, "on account of the
seizure and detention of said cotton, and on account of any damages
they might sustain by reason of said seizure." The charges
reimbursed to Seelye & Atwood by Harrison grew directly out of
the seizure and detention of the cotton, and any amount which might
be
Page 105 U. S. 726
paid on the recovery in the present suit would be covered by the
terms of the bond. The bond covers not merely damages for taking
and keeping the cotton, but the agreement is to hold the government
and Flanders harmless on account of the seizure and detention. This
covers the expenses attending the removal and keeping of the
cotton. The act of 1863 expressly makes the expenses of
transporting and disposing of captured property a charge upon its
proceeds even where a claimant establishes a right to such
proceeds. In any event, therefore, before the recovery by Harrison
against Seelye & Atwood can be made the foundation of a cause
of action or a recovery by Seelye against Flanders, it must appear
that he had a fair opportunity to set up as against such recovery
by Harrison the said matters of defense to his claim. Proving in
the present suit the giving of the bond by Harrison was proving
that Flanders had a good defense to the suit brought by Harrison
against Seelye. Such proof, having been given, must be regarded as
having been properly given, under the answer. It was proof of the
admission by Harrison of the claim of Seelye & Atwood, as is
alleged in the answer. It does not appear that Flanders had any
notice of the Harrison suit, or any opportunity to make therein the
defense referred to. It was necessary that it should so appear, the
existence of such defense being established. It is not for Flanders
to show that he had no notice by proving a negative.
Our attention has been called to the provisions of articles 378,
379, 382, and 388 of the Code of Practice of Louisiana as having a
bearing on this case. They are as follows:
"Art. 378. The obligation which one contracts to defend another
in some action which may be instituted against him is termed
warranty. The one who has contracted this obligation is called the
warrantor."
"Art. 379. . . . Personal warranty is that which takes place in
personal actions; it arises from the obligation which one has
contracted to pay the whole or a part of a debt, due by another to
a third person."
"Art. 382. The defendant wishing to call one in warranty may, in
his answer, pray the court to decree against his warrantor the same
judgment which may be rendered against him on the principal action;
such prayer will be considered as a demand in warranty. "
Page 105 U. S. 727
"Art. 388. The defendant, though he has not called his warrantor
to defend the suit brought against him, does not lose on that
account his action in warranty unless the warrantor prove that he
had means for defending the action, which were not used owing to
the defendant having failed to call him in warranty, or having
neglected to apprise him of the suit having been brought."
In
Sterling v. Fusilier, 7 Mart. (La.) 442, the Supreme
Court of Louisiana, in reference to provisions of the Civil Code
like those just cited, says that the neglect of a person sued in
failing to call in his warrantor to defend the suit has no other
effect, in a suit afterwards brought by such person against his
warrantor, than to cause the warranty to cease, on proof, in the
latter suit, that the warrantor had sufficient grounds or means of
defense to have obtained a judgment in his favor, of which he could
not avail himself for want of having been called on, and that that
species of defense must be pleaded and proved. Assuming that
Flanders was still a warrantor to Seelye & Atwood when the suit
by Harrison against that firm was brought, we are of opinion, for
the reasons before stated, that it appears in this case that
Flanders had a sufficient defense to have obtained a judgment in
his favor if he had been called in warranty in the Harrison suit or
been notified of the bringing of that suit, and that he could not
avail himself of that defense in the Harrison suit, for the reason
that he was not called in warranty or notified of the bringing of
that suit. That defense is not only proved in this suit, but is
sufficiently pleaded, as is before shown. There is nothing in
article 388 of the code which requires Flanders to prove anything
more than he has proved in this suit. The existence of the defense
being proved, the presumption is that it would have been proved and
availed of in the Harrison suit by Flanders if he had been called
in warranty or been notified of the bringing of the suit, and it is
then for the plaintiff in this suit to rebut such presumption,
which has not been done.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded with directions to
award a new trial.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD, MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, and MR. JUSTICE WOODS
dissented.