Louisiana. The defendants in error, merchants in New York,
agreed with the plaintiffs in error, H. & G., merchants in New
Orleans, that endorsed notes should be given by H. & G., for a
certain sum, being the amount due by H. & G. to B. & Co.,
and other notes or drafts of H. & G., payable in New York,
which endorsed notes were to be deposited in the hands of L., to be
delivered to B. & Co., on their performing their agreement with
H. & G.; part of which was to take up certain drafts and notes
given by H. & G., and payable in New York. The notes, endorsed
according to the agreement, were drawn and delivered to L. B. &
Co. performed all their contract, excepting the payment of a draft
for two thousand dollars, and a note for one thousand five hundred
and sixty-eight dollars and seventy-four cents, which, from
inability, they did not pay, and the same were returned to New
Orleans, and were there paid, with damages and interest, by H.
& G., at great loss and inconvenience. The notes deposited with
L. amounted to upward of seven thousand dollars beyond the draft
for two thousand dollars, and the notes for one thousand five
hundred and sixty-eight dollars and seventy-four cents. B. &
Co. filed a petition according to the Louisiana practice, praying
for a decree by which the endorsed notes in the hands of L. should
be delivered to them, equal to the balance due to them. The
district judge gave a decree in favor of B. & Co., in
conformity with the petition.
Held that the decree was
erroneous, and the court reversed the same, and ordered the case to
be remanded, and the petition to be dismissed with costs by the
Circuit Court of Louisiana.
The Supreme Court has no authority, as an appellate court, upon
a writ of error, to revise the evidence in the court below in order
to ascertain whether the judge rightly interpreted the evidence or
drew right conclusions from it. That is the proper province of the
jury, or of the judge himself, if the trial by jury is waived and
it is submitted to his personal decision. The court can only
reexamine the law, so far as he has pronounced it, upon a state of
facts, and not merely upon the evidence of facts found in the
record in the making of a special verdict, or an agreed case. If
either party in the court below is dissatisfied with the ruling of
the judge in a matter of law, that ruling should be brought before
the Supreme Court by an appropriate exception in the nature of a
bill of exceptions, and should not be mixed up with the supposed
conclusions in matters of fact.
The contract between B. & Co. and H. & G. was what the
French law, the basis of that of Louisiana, calls a commutative
contract, involving mutual and reciprocal obligations, where the
acts to be done on one side form the consideration for those to be
done on the other.
Upon principles of general justice, if the acts are to be done
at the same time, neither party to such a contract could claim a
fulfillment thereof unless he had first performed or was ready to
perform all the acts required on his own part.
When the entire fulfillment of the contract is contemplated as
the basis of the arrangement, the contract, under the laws of
Louisiana, is treated as indivisible, and
Page 41 U. S. 170
neither party can compel the other to a specific performance,
unless he complies with it
in toto.
Booraem & Company, merchants of New York, agreed with Hyde
& Gleises, merchants of New Orleans, who were indebted to them,
to give them an extension of time for the payment of the amount due
by them, if they would give their notes, payable at subsequent
periods, for a certain sum, the notes to be endorsed, and deposited
with H. Locket, and to be delivered to them, on their having paid
certain engagements, due in New York, the amount of which was
included in the amount of the notes deposited in the hands of H.
Locket. The notes were given and deposited in pursuance of this
agreement, and Booraem & Co. performed all the matters
contained in the agreement, excepting that they did not pay a draft
for $2,000 and a note for $1,568.74, due and payable in New York;
being unable to pay the same. The draft and note were returned to
New Orleans, and Hyde & Gleises, at great inconvenience and
loss, paid the same.
Booraem & Co., proceeding according to the practice in
Louisiana, filed a petition in the district court, then exercising
the powers of a circuit court of the United States, asking that the
notes of Hyde & Gleises, in the hands of H. Locket, taking from
the same a sufficient amount to repay to them, Hyde & Gleises,
the amount of the $2,000 draft, and the note for $1,568.74, should,
by a decree of the court, be ordered to be delivered to them. After
a full hearing of the case, on the petition, answer and testimony,
the district court gave a decree in favor of the petitioners, and
the defendants prosecuted this writ of error. The case is fully
stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 41 U. S. 172
STORY, JUSTICE, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is the case of a writ of error to the Circuit Court of the
Eastern District of Louisiana. The original suit was brought,
conformable to the Louisiana practice, by petition, in which
Booraem & Co., the original petitioners, state, that two of the
original defendants, Hyde & Gleises, merchants of New Orleans,
being indebted to the petitioners in a considerable sum, did, in
April 1837, deliver to the petitioners certain promissory notes,
to-wit, three notes drawn by Hyde & Gleises, to the order of,
and endorsed by, T.R. Hyde & Brothers, dated 6 April 1837, at
six, twelve and eighteen months, amounting to $5,000; and three
notes drawn by the same makers, to the order of, and endorsed by,
William T. Hepp, dated on 6 April 1837, at seven, eleven and
fifteen months, amounting to $5,000,
Page 41 U. S. 173
and three notes drawn by the same makers, to the order of
Booraem & Co., dated 6 April 1837, at nine, thirteen and
seventeen months, amounting to $2,750.64. The petitioners then
state, that on receipt of the notes, they, the petitioners, agreed
to extinguish any and all demands which they had against Hyde &
Gleises, or for which the petitioners had become responsible, by
account, note or acceptance, previous to 6 April 1837, and which,
including interest and exchange, amounted to $11,798.64. The
petitioners then aver that they did pay and extinguish the said
demands, with the exception of a draft for $2,000, and a note for
$1.568.74, which they were unable to provide the means of taking
up, and which have since been taken up by Hyde & Gleises. The
petition then goes on to state that these notes were left in the
hands of H. Locket, Esq., the other defendant, at New Orleans, who
had been notified not to dispose of them to the prejudice of the
rights of the petitioners; that they had demanded the delivery of
five of the notes, to-wit, three endorsed by Hepp (the others drawn
to the order of, and endorsed by, Hyde & Brothers, being
omitted in this part of the petition, by mistake), and a balance in
cash of $469.12, according to the account annexed; that they had
also demanded a delivery of the same five notes, from Locket; but
he had refused to deliver the same. The petitioners therefore
prayed that they might have a judgment of the court decreeing a
delivery to them by Locket of the three notes drawn by Hyde &
Gleises, to the order of T.R. Hyde & Brothers, and two of the
three notes drawn to the order of William T. Hepp, one at eleven
months for $1,500, and the other for $2,000 at fifteen months, and
decreeing Hyde & Gleises to pay the said balance of $469.12,
and they also prayed for further relief.
Such is the substance of the petition, which does not seem to be
drawn with entire accuracy and precision. Annexed to the petition
is a receipt, signed by Booraem & Co., acknowledging the
receipt of the nine notes described in the petition, and
Page 41 U. S. 174
that they are given for the purpose of extinguishing the demands
against Hyde & Gleises, before 6 April 1837, as stated in the
petition, and then adding the following clause:
"Should Joshua B. Hyde, of the firm of Hyde & Gleises, now
in New York, have settled for the draft of $2,000, paid by Booraem
& Co., on 15 March 1837, or for the sum of $2,128.36, by notes
or otherwise, the said Booraem & Co. are bound to take them up
at maturity, and are included in said arrangement herein first
specified."
Hyde & Gleises, in their answer, admit the making and
endorsing of the notes and aver that they were prepared for
delivery to the petitioners, according to the receipt, which
contains stipulations binding upon the petitioners, and forming
conditions precedent to the delivery of the notes; that to secure a
compliance with the agreement, it was mutually agreed, that the
notes and receipts should be deposited in the hands of Locket, to
be delivered to the petitioners, when the several conditions
mentioned in the receipt were performed, and only in that event
were to be delivered; that the petitioners totally neglected and
refused to perform the conditions, and in consequence of such
omission and neglect, the defendants, Hyde & Gleises, were
forced to pay and did pay a note of $1,564.74, and an acceptance of
$2,000, with costs and damages, both of which the petitioners had
assumed to pay; that the friends of the defendants, Hyde &
Gleises, were induced to endorse the notes, by the reasonable
expectation that the defendants would be enabled to meet the notes
from the profits of their business, and save their endorsers from
loss, if the extensions stipulated in the receipt were granted upon
all the demands of the petitioners; that by reason of the failure
of the petitioners to comply with the agreement, and the payments
they were forced to make, they exhausted their resources and
credit, and their business was destroyed, and their ability to
protect their endorsers was utterly at an end, and they conclude,
by denying their indebtment, in the manner stated in the petition,
and pray that the petitioners may be cited to answer in
reconvention, and be condemned to pay the amount of $5,000 to the
defendants as damages.
Page 41 U. S. 175
The defendant, Locket, by his answer, asserted, that the notes
were deposited in his hands by the joint consent of the petitioners
and Hyde & Gleises, to be delivered to the petitioners by him,
when all the conditions in the receipt were fulfilled by the
petitioners, and he avers that the agreement never was fulfilled on
the part of the petitioners, and that they are not entitled to the
notes.
The endorsers also filed a petition of intervention in the
cause, which, however, was afterwards withdrawn. The petitioners
replied to the plea of reconvention, denying their indebtment.
Upon this state of the pleadings, the cause came before the
circuit court for decision, without the intervention of a jury, by
the consent of the parties, and the final decision was made by the
district judge, upon an examination of the evidence offered by the
parties. The decree was, in effect, that the defendants ought to
pay to the petitioners, out of the notes, the balance of
$11,789.64, after deducting the amount of the note of $1,567.74,
and of the acceptance of $2,000 paid by the defendants, and the
interest thereon, and that for this purpose, four of the notes in
the possession of Locket, to-wit, two drawn by Hyde & Gleises
to the order of T.R. Hyde & Brothers, of 6 April 1837, one for
$2,000, payable in eighteen months, and the other for $1,500,
payable in twelve months, and two other notes drawn by Hyde &
Gleises to the order of W. T. Hepp, dated 6 April 1837, one for
$2,000, payable in eighteen months, and the other for $1,500,
payable in eleven months, amounting in all to $7,000, to be
delivered by Locket to the petitioners, or their attorney, and that
the remaining five notes be delivered to Hyde & Gleises, and
that judgment be for the petitioners against Hyde & Gleises for
the remaining unsatisfied sum due to the petitioners, of $776.90,
with interest from the decree. It is from this judgment that the
present writ of error is brought; the district judge having, at the
request of the defendant's counsel, made a statement of the facts
on which he relied,
Page 41 U. S. 176
and the record containing, at large, the whole evidence at the
hearing.
One of the embarrassments attendant upon the examination of this
cause in this Court, is from the manner in which the proceedings
were had in the court below. We have no authority, as an appellate
court, upon a writ of error, to revise the evidence in the court
below, in order to ascertain whether the judge rightly interpreted
the evidence, or drew light conclusions from it. That is the proper
province of the jury, or of the judge himself, if the trial by jury
is waived, and it is submitted to his personal decision. We can
only reexamine the law, so far as he has pronounced it upon the
statement of facts, and not merely a statement of the evidence of
facts, found in the record, in the nature of a special verdict, or
an agreed case. If either party in the court below is dissatisfied
with the ruling of the judge in a matter of law, that ruling should
be brought before this Court by an appropriate exception, in the
nature of a bill of exceptions, and should not be mixed up with his
supposed conclusions on matters of fact. Unless this is done, it
will be found extremely difficult for this Court to maintain any
appellate jurisdiction in mixed cases of the nature of the present.
The same embarrassment occurred in the case of
Parsons v.
Armor, 3 Pet. 413, and was there rather avoided by
the pressure of the circumstances, than overcome by the decision of
the court. Taking this case, then, as that was taken, to be one
where there is no conflict of evidence, and all the facts are
admitted to stand on the record, without any controversy as to
their force and bearing in the nature of a statement of facts, and
looking to the allegations and prayer of the petition, and the
facts stated by the judge, the question, which we are to dispose
of, is whether, in point of law, upon these facts, the judgment can
be maintained? We are of opinion that it cannot be, and shall now
proceed to assign our reasons.
In the first place, it is a material circumstance, that the
petition is not to recover pecuniary compensation or damages for
any supposed benefit conferred upon Hyde & Gleises under the
agreement; but it is in the nature of a bill for a specific
performance of that agreement, by a delivery up of a part of the
notes deposited in the hands of Locket, not upon the ground of an
entire performance of the agreement on the part of the
petitioners;
Page 41 U. S. 177
but confessedly, upon the admission, that they have not
performed it, except in part, and therefore, seeking a part
performance only,
pro tanto, from the other side. Now the
present being what in the French law, which constitutes the basis
of that of Louisiana (Code of Louisiana, art. 1760-63), is called a
commutative contract, involving mutual and reciprocal obligations,
where the acts to be done on one side form the consideration for
those to be done on the other, it would seem to follow, upon
principles of natural justice, that if they are to be done at the
same time, neither party could claim a fulfillment thereof, unless
he had first performed, or was ready to perform, all the acts
required on his own part. And this accordingly will be found to be
the rule of the Civil Code of Louisiana (art. 1907), where it is
declared that in commutative contracts, where the reciprocal
obligations are to be performed at the same time or the one
immediately after the other, the party, who wishes to put the other
in default must, at the time and place expressed in or implied in,
the agreement offer or perform, as the contract requires, that
which on his part was to be performed, or the opposite party will
not be legally put in default. And again (art. 1920 and 2041), on
the breach of any obligation to do or not to do, the other party in
whose favor the obligation is contracted is entitled either to
damages or, in cases which permit it, to a specific performance of
the contract, at his option, or he may require the dissolution of
the contract. But it is nowhere provided that the party who has
omitted to perform the acts which he has contracted to perform can
entitle himself, if the other party has been in no default, either
to a specific performance or to damages or to a dissolution of the
contract. That would be to enable the party committing the default
to avail himself of his own wrong to get rid of the contract.
But it is supposed that where a party has performed his contract
only in part, he may nevertheless be entitled to a performance
pro tanto from the other side, although it has been by his
own default that there has not been an entire performance. And
certain cases in the Louisiana reports have been relied on to
establish this doctrine. But these cases, when examined, will not
be found to justify any such broad and general conclusion. They
establish no more than this -- that where in a commutative contract
there has been a part performance on one side from
Page 41 U. S. 178
which a benefit has been derived from the other side, the other
party is compellable to make compensation in pecuniary damages to
the extent of the benefit which he has received, deducting
therefrom all the damages which he has sustained by the want of an
entire performance thereof. There is nothing unreasonable in this
doctrine, and although it may not be in many cases recognized and
acted upon in the common law, it is often enforced in equity. But
this doctrine is not applicable to all cases of commutative
contracts generally, but only to cases where the contract is
susceptible, from its nature and objects, of divisibility, and
where not a specific performance but a mere pecuniary claim in the
nature of a
quantum meruit is sought to be enforced. Thus
in the case of
Loxeau v. Declonat, 3 La. 1, where A.
agreed to build a sugar house for B. for a certain price and B. was
to pay for it when the work was completed and to furnish materials,
it was held that if A. failed to complete the work in the manner
stipulated, yet if B. used the sugar house, he was bound to pay for
it in money, the value of the labor he had expended upon it -- that
is to say the value of the benefit he had derived from the labor --
for the Civil Code of Louisiana (art. 2740) contemplates that B. in
such a case is entitled to damages for the losses sustained by him
from the want of a due fulfillment of the contract. The same
decision was made under similar circumstances in the case of
Entre v. Sparks, 4 La. 463.
But where the entire fulfillment of the contract is contemplated
by the parties as the basis of the arrangement, the contract is
treated as indivisible, and neither party can compel the other to a
specific performance unless he complies with
in toto.
Thus, if A. should agree to sell B. a ship for $10,000 or a horse
for $500 and B. should pay a part only of the purchase money, as
for example, a fifth or tenth part thereof, it would hardly be
pretended that he would be entitled to a specific performance
pro tanto by a conveyance of a fifth or tenth part of the
ship or horse. And on the other hand the vendor would have no
pretense to require that if he had a good title only to an
undivided fifth or tenth of the ship or horse, the purchaser should
be compellable to take that part and pay him
pro tanto the
purchase money. In every such case it would be manifest the
contract of sale would be indivisible, and that
Page 41 U. S. 179
each party would have a right to insist upon an entirety of
performance. Now that is precisely the ground applicable to the
present case. The contract between the parties was, from its
character and object, entire and indivisible. Hyde & Gleises,
and their endorsers, entered into the new agreement and gave the
notes upon the faith and confidence that the petitioners would
punctiliously perform the whole of it on their side. The object was
to procure a prolonged credit and delay of payment to Hyde &
Gleises for all their debts contracted with the petitioners, and
thus enable them to retrieve their affairs, rescue themselves from
impending ruin, and to make their endorsers safe. This could be
only by the petitioners' taking up all the notes and acceptances
already given by Hyde & Gleises according to the stipulations
of the petitioners, and thus enabling them to carry on their
operations in business, and it seems to have been contemplated on
all sides that by the omission, Hyde & Gleises might be
compelled to stop, and their endorsers be brought into peril, and
indeed the record shows that the event actually occurred. If then
Hyde & Gleises have failed to realize the benefits contemplated
by the arrangement by the default of the petitioners, what ground
is there to assert that they or their endorsers ought to be
compelled to a specific performance of a contract
pro
tanto when the consideration was a punctilious performance of
the entirety? The most that could, under such circumstances, be
contended for would be to say not that Hyde & Gleises should be
compelled to give up any part of the endorsed notes, but that they
should be bound to repay to the petitioners in money the amount
paid by them for Hyde & Gleises, deducting all damages
sustained by the latter by reason of the nonperformance of the
contract, as in the cases already cited. But that is not the object
or the prayer of the allegations in the present petition.
In the next place, there is another view of the case still more
striking and conclusive. It is not true, as the petition supposes,
that there was any actual delivery of the notes to the petitioners
(which might have presented another question), but in point of
fact, as the evidence fully establishes, the notes were deposited
in the hands of Locket, to be delivered over to the petitioners
only upon their full performance of the stipulations on which they
were
Page 41 U. S. 180
to have effect. It is admitted that those stipulations have
never been performed. Upon what ground, then, can the petitioners
now demand a delivery of any of the notes, they not having
fulfilled the conditions of the deposit? It has been said that
here, by the giving up of the new notes, the old debts due by Hyde
& Gleises have been extinguished by novation, and therefore
their sole remedy lies upon the new contract and notes given in
pursuance thereof. But that doctrine is by no means true as it is
attempted to be applied to the circumstances of the present case. A
novation will, indeed, if it be absolute and unconditional, amount
to a direct extinguishment of the original debt by substituting the
new contract in its place. This is sufficiently apparent from the
language of the Civil Code of Louisiana, 2181-94. But no
extinguishment is wrought if the arrangement is conditional and the
conditions are not fully complied with. Pothier, on Obligations
550-551, states this in the most clear and explicit terms. "It
follows," says he,
"that if the debt of which it is proposed to make a novation by
another engagement, is conditional, the novation cannot take effect
until the condition is accomplished."
Therefore if there is a failure in the accomplishment of the
condition, there can be no novation, because there is no original
debt to which the new one can be substituted;
vice versa
if the first debt does not depend on any condition, but the second
engagement, intended as a novation, is conditional, the novation
can only take effect by the accomplishment of the condition of the
new engagement, before the first debt is extinct.
Now that the giving of these notes, by way of novation for the
old debts, was conditional is apparent from the fact that they were
not delivered to the petitioners, but were deposited in the hands
of Locket "subject to the provisions of the receipt," and to be
delivered over by him only when these conditions were complied with
by the petitioners. So all parties must have understood the
transaction, and the deposit in any other view would be as
unaccountable as it would be unmeaning. The petitioners have never,
as they admit by their petition, complied with these conditions.
How then can they, consistently with all rules of law, insist upon
the transaction being a complete and absolute novation, entitling
them to the delivery of the substituted securities in lieu of the
old debts?
Page 41 U. S. 181
Nor is the consideration to be lost sight of that the
arrangement does not merely limit itself to the immediate interests
of the debtors and the creditors. The endorsers have rights also,
which must have been intended to be provided for and secured by the
deposit, to which, in reason, they must be presumed to have been
parties and given their assent. We have no right to presume that
they would have endorsed these notes without the entire confidence
that the new arrangement would be carried out and fulfilled with
the most scrupulous punctuality. Their own recourse over against
Hyde & Gleises might otherwise be most materially and
injuriously affected. Their object must have been, by securing to
Hyde & Gleises the prolonged credit, to have enabled them to
meet the new payments, and thereby exonerate themselves from
ulterior responsibility. If, therefore, we were to give effect to
the present suit, the conditions of the novation not having been
fulfilled, we should either deprive the endorsers of all the
benefits and securities contemplated in the arrangement or, at all
events, leave them exposed to a responsibility as endorsers from
which, by the very deposit, they meant guard themselves.
There are other embarrassing difficulties in the frame of the
decree as to the manner in which it disposes of the notes and
divides the responsibilities of the respective endorsers without
their consent, and proceeding to adjudge money to the petitioners
for the balance. But it is unnecessary to dwell on them, for, upon
the grounds already stated, we are of opinion that the judgment
ought to be
Reversed and the cause remanded with directions to the court
below to dismiss the suit with costs for the original
defendants.