Black, as agent for the owners, contracted to sell a large
quantity of land in Maine, which contract was assigned by the
vendee until it came, through mesne assignments, into the hands of
Miller and others.
Payments were made from time to time on account, but at length,
in consequence of a failure to make the payments stipulated in the
contract and by virtue of a clause contained in it, the contract
became void.
In this State of things, Miller employed one Paulk to ascertain
from Black the lowest price that he would take for the land and
then to sell to others for the highest price that he could get.
Paulk sold and assigned the contract to Davis for $1,050.
Upon the theory that Paulk and Davis entered into a fraudulent
combination, still, Miller and others are not entitled to demand
that a court of equity should consider Davis as a trustee of the
lands for their use. They had no interest in them, legal or
equitable, nor anything but a goodwill, which alone was the subject
matter of the fraud, if there was any.
But the evidence shows that this goodwill did not exist, for
Black was not willing to sell to Miller and others for a less price
than to any other person.
Although Paulk represented himself to be acting for Miller and
others when in reality he was representing Davis, yet he did not
obtain the land at a reduced price thereby, but on the contrary at
its fair market value.
The charges of fraud in the bill are denied in the answers, and
the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the allegations.
The appellants were complainants below, whose bill was dismissed
under the circumstances stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 56 U. S. 276
MR. JUSTICE CURTIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of Maine dismissing the
complainants' bill. The substance of the bill is that John Black as
agent for the trustees under the will of William Bingham on the
17th of February, 1835, contracted in writing with Charles Ramsdale
to sell to him a township and adjacent tracts of land in that
state, containing twenty thousand eight hundred and four acres, for
the price of three dollars per acre, payable one fifth in sixty
days, and the residue in four equal annual payments -- the contract
of sale expressly providing that in case of failure to make either
of these payments, the contract was to be void. That on the 1st day
of April, 1835, Ramsdale assigned these contracts to Nathaniel
Norton and Jairus Keith in consideration of their agreement to pay
to him the sum of two dollars for each acre of the said lands, and
that at a still further advance of one dollar on an acre, the
contracts of Black came to the complainants and one Herman Norton
by assignment in November, 1835.
That Ramsdale made the first and the complainants some other
payments, amounting in the whole to about forty thousand dollars,
but failed to pay the residue. That subsequent to the year 1840
nothing was done by them concerning the lands until after July,
1844, when one of the complainants received from Black a letter
stating that though all their rights were terminated many years
since, he desired to know whether they wished to do anything
respecting the payments for the lands. That thereupon, Miller, one
of the complainants, employed Ephraim Paulk, one of the defendants,
to negotiate with Black, and finally instructed him to ascertain
from Black the lowest price at which he would let the complainants
have the land and then to sell the complainants' rights and
interests under the contracts for the highest price he could obtain
-- the supposition of the complainants being that Black would sell
the lands to them for much less than he could obtain from others by
reason of their having already paid a large sum towards the
purchase money under the contracts above mentioned. The bill
further states that Paulk sold and assigned the contracts to Davis
for the sum of $1,050, and it charges that before doing so, he
entered into a fraudulent combination with Davis and the other
defendants to obtain from the complainants an assignment of these
contracts for a trifling sum, and then to negotiate with Black as
if for the complainants, and thus defraud the complainants of what
Black should be willing to discount from the fair value of the
lands, on account of their peculiar equities; that he, in
combination
Page 56 U. S. 277
with the other defendants, actually executed this scheme and
obtained the lands from Black for a much less price than could have
been got from others, by reason of Black's belief that he was
abating the price for the benefit of the complainants. And the bill
prays that the defendants may be treated as trustees of the
complainants in respect to these lands, and for an account and for
other relief.
So far as respects the title to these lands or any claim of the
complainants to have them charged with a trust in their favor, we
think the complainants, upon the statements in their bill and upon
the proofs, have made no case. They had no legal or equitable title
under their contracts with Black. Being in default for more than
seven years, and about four years having elapsed since anything had
been done by them under these expired contracts, they were not in a
condition to insist on any rights or claims to the land; and as
will be presently more fully stated, Black did not treat with them
or their agent upon the basis of any legal or equitable right, nor
is it alleged that they had any intention or took any measures to
acquire the lands. In consequence chiefly of Black's letter of the
22d of July, 1844, inquiring what they wished to do about the
payments, they conceived that Black might be willing to sell the
lands to them for less than he would sell them to others, and that
this goodwill might be a valuable subject of sale. To dispose of
it, they employed the defendant Paulk. If they have been defrauded
in its sale by the defendants, they are entitled to relief, but in
the lands themselves they had no interest, and did not intend, by
Paulk's agency, to acquire any, and if all the fraud charged in the
bill was perpetrated, it affected not any title of theirs to the
land or any negotiation for its acquisition, but solely the
compensation which they might otherwise have obtained for Black's
goodwill towards them as the holders of the expired contracts. This
was the only subject matter upon which the alleged fraud could
operate.
To this subject matter our inquiries must be limited. To entitle
themselves to relief, the complainants must prove fraud and damage
or, to state the principle less abstractly, they must show that
their agent disposed of what he was employed to sell for less than
its value and that he did this fraudulently.
The value of the complainants' interest is alleged by the bill
to have consisted in the intention of Black to sell the lands to
the complainants for less than their fair value, and this intention
is alleged to have been actually executed by Black by a sale to the
defendants at a price far less than he could have obtained from
others, under the belief that this abatement of price was for the
benefit of the complainants. If this were so,
Page 56 U. S. 278
it could not be doubted that the complainants' interest was a
valuable one and that its value was capable of being precisely
ascertained, for it would then amount to the sum which Black thus
abated from the market price of the lands.
But the proofs not only fail to show that Black intended to
abate anything from the price, but they leave no doubt that he
actually sold the lands for their fair market value, without any
abatement whatever. The complainants have taken his testimony, and
he declares that he did not consider the complainants had any legal
or equitable claims originating from the contracts; that he never
intended to make them any allowance or consideration on the renewal
of the bonds or contracts; that when he sold the lands, he did not
consider that he had made any deduction on account of any claims of
the complainants; that if any other person had offered him more for
the lands than Paulk did, he should have sold them to such other
person; and if Paulk had not taken the lands at $30,000, he should
have sold at that price to anyone who offered it. So far,
therefore, as respects the motives of Black and his own views of
the nature of the transaction, his testimony is in direct conflict
with the allegations in the bill. And so far as it tends to prove
that he did not sell the lands for less than he could have obtained
from others, but demanded and received the fair market price for
them, it is corroborated by every witness who has been examined
concerning its value. Dwinal and George N. Black, two of the
complainants' witnesses, say $30,000 was a fair price for the
lands, and Addison Dodge, who is proved to be a person of uncommon
experience and judgment concerning the timber lands of that country
and whose testimony was taken by the defendants, explored these
lands in 1843 for Black and reported to him that $30,000 was all
they were worth, and he testifies that this was his opinion formed
from a careful examination. Though Black does not so state, there
can be no doubt that he fixed this price in consequence of Dodge's
report to him, for he employed Dodge to make the examination, and
he expresses in his deposition entire confidence in his skill and
integrity. It follows from this as well as from what Black directly
testifies to that the price at which the lands were actually sold
was fixed as the fair market value of the lands for which Black as
an agent to sell, was willing to sell them to anyone, though he
preferred to sell to the complainants, if no one should offer
more.
It is true Black at first demanded of Paulk $43,206 for these
lands. This was before the sale by Paulk to Davis of the
complainants' interests, and it has been argued that, as the lands
were actually obtained for $30,000, this proves that Davis was
Page 56 U. S. 279
benefited by the acquisition of the complainants' interest to
the extent of $13,000. If Davis, when he purchased the
complainants' interests, had been aware that Black asked $43,000
for the lands and had been willing to acquire the complainants'
interest to endeavor thereby to get them for a less sum, this would
have a tendency to prove that he was willing to give somewhere
about $43,000, and that any reduction below that sum might be
treated as the value of the complainants' interests. But it is
explicitly denied by the answers of Paulk and Davis, and there is
nothing in the case to control that denial, that Davis knew when he
negotiated with Paulk that Black asked $43,000 for the lands.
We think the fair result of the evidence is that Paulk concealed
this fact from Davis, and that Davis believed he could get the
lands for one dollar per acre. So that he actually paid the fair
value and something more than he expected to pay.
Upon these facts, we are unable to come to the conclusion that
when the complainants parted with this expectancy of goodwill from
Black for $1,050, they received less than they could have justly
obtained, or that when Davis purchased, he got any appreciable
pecuniary advantage from representing the complainants.
Upon this ground, therefore, the case fails.
But inasmuch as there are charges of fraud contained in the bill
we think it proper briefly to examine them.
As respects the two defendants McCrillis and Pickering, they
were not connected with the purchase from Paulk by Davis. They came
into the purchase subsequently in the manner stated in their
answers, which it is unnecessary to detail, and there is no
evidence which tends to show that they were guilty of any
fraud.
In reference to Paulk and Davis, there are circumstances which,
if unexplained, would certainly be fraught with much suspicion, to
say the least.
After the sale by Paulk to Davis of the complainants' interests,
Paulk continued to act in the negotiation with Black, and it is
admitted that he received $1,500 from Davis. But the explanation
offered is that from the necessity of the case, Paulk must continue
to negotiate with Black as if for the complainants; that they
understood he was to do so; that only in this way could their
expectancy of favor from Black be sold; and that no contract was
made or understanding had with Davis by Paulk, save what appears on
the face of the papers, that Davis was to pay him for his services
subsequent to the assignment. That when Davis gave his notes to
Black, the latter required a surety, and the parties being at
Ellsworth,
Page 56 U. S. 280
Davis for the first time requested Paulk to sign the notes. That
Paulk at first declined, saying he was insolvent, but at last
consented on being assured that Davis would pay him what Pickering,
a mutual friend, should say was proper, and Pickering afterwards
fixed the sum at $1,500 for all his services. The answers of both
Davis and Paulk deny with clearness and precision every charge of
fraud, and especially negative the fact that this payment of $1,500
had any connection with or influence upon the sale by Paulk to
Davis of the complainants' interest. Their account of the matter
may be true. There is no evidence to prove it is not so, and, grave
as the causes of suspicion may be, they are not sufficient to
overcome these precise and clear statements in the answers.
The letters of Paulk to the complainant Miller and his failure
to give him notice of an inquiry by Black what was the most they
could afford to pay, are relied on to show that Paulk kept Miller
in ignorance of the material facts and pressed him to a sale in
undue and unnecessary haste and with unfair intentions.
In his note of the 24th of October, 1844, Paulk tells Miller
that "what is done with Col. Black must be done this week." It does
not appear affirmatively that Black had said so, and he does not
remember saying so. But after the lapse of six years, he might have
forgotten it, if he did say so, and he testifies that he does not
recollect the particulars of the different conversations with
Paulk. But however this may be, the negotiations actually went on
until the 16th of November, before a sale was made by Paulk, and
upon learning from Miller that he thought he could effect something
by personally visiting Black, he wrote to Miller informing him he
had sold the bonds for $1,050, but that he had obtained the consent
of the purchasers to suspend the transfer until the 25th of
November; that they were not willing to wait longer, because they
desired to operate on the lands the coming winter, and in order to
do so the matter must be decided on immediately; and he then
strongly urges Miller to come at once to Bangor in season to avail
himself of the contract he had made, if he should find that to be
most for his interest. This letter he sent to him by express to
ensure its reception in season.
This can hardly be reconciled with the charges in the bill, or
the deductions made by the complainants from some of the
circumstances, that Paulk had unduly hastened the transfer and
intended to keep Miller in the dark and to sell to Davis for less
than he might have obtained from another.
Upon consideration of the charges of fraud in the bill and the
answers denying those charges and the proofs in the case, we are of
opinion that the complainants have failed to make
Page 56 U. S. 281
out the fraudulent combination between Paulk and Davis which
they have alleged, and that upon this ground also the bill must be
dismissed.
The decree of the circuit court is affirmed with
costs.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Maine, and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof, it is
now here ordered, adjudged, and decreed by this Court that the
decree of the said circuit court in this cause be and the same is
hereby affirmed with costs.