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case comes within the principles of the one just decided, and that the judgment of the Circuit Court holding the bonds void must be

Mr. Alfred Ennis for plaintiff in error.

Mr. A. L. Williams for defendant in error.

Affirmed.

THE ELIZA HANCOX v. LANGDON.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA.

No. 36. Argued November 9 and 10, 1875.- Decided November 15, 1875.

The decree below is affirmed on the facts.

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the court. This is one of a class of cases in admiralty, in which appeals are taken to this court upon questions of fact when there have been two concurring opinions in the court below. We think the finding below, as to the culpable fault of the Hancox, was clearly right, and are not satisfied that, as to the damages, it was wrong. The decree of the Circuit Court is

Affirmed.

Mr. E. C. Benedict and Mr. Robert Failigant for appellant.
Mr. Rufus E. Lester and Mr. William U. Garrard for appellee.

TURNER v. WARD.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN.

No. 129. Argued and submitted January 31, 1876. Decided February 14, 1876.

In a suit in equity to set aside a sale of personal property as induced by false representations, a decree in favor of the plaintiff will be sustained if the representations proved are of the same general character as those averred in the bill, though not in its precise language.

THE case is stated in the opinion.

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the court. This case presents for our consideration little else than a question of fact. The plaintiffs charge in substance that they were induced by false representations to sell the defendants certain goods, and asked to have the contract of sale rescinded, and their goods restored. The testimony is all embraced in the depositions of one of the plaintiffs and one of the defendants and an agreed statement. There is some discrepancy between the statements of

the two witnesses, but it is apparent from the testimony of the defendant, who made the representations complained of, that he himself had been deceived in respect to the pecuniary condition of his firm. It would be but natural, therefore, that he should. mislead the plaintiffs. He supposed the firm had stock on hand to the amount of twenty or twenty-five thousand dollars, and owed from five to eight thousand. According to his own statement, he so told the plaintiff. In point of fact, he was mistaken, and his statement was untrue. The firm was largely in debt, and in less than sixty days it failed and made an assignment. Before this, however, it executed two chattel mortgages upon the stock, each purporting upon its face to secure the payment of ten thousand dollars, though it appears that the amount actually owing to the mortgagees was not so much.

The representations proven are not in the precise language of those averred in the bill, but they are of the same general character, and in our opinion, sufficient to justify the decree rendered in the court below, and it is, therefore, Affirmed.

Mr. Charles P. Crosby, Mr. J. M. Carlisle and Mr. J. D. McPherson for appellants.

Mr. Ashley Pond and Mr. Henry B. Brown for appellees.

CRARY v. DEVLIN.

ERROR TO THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK. No. 527. Submitted January 31, 1876. - Decided February 21, 1876.

Dismissed on the authority of Mining Co. v. Boggs, 3 Wall. 304.

The finding by a state court that the facts on which a party relies to bring his case within a statute of the United States do not exist is no decision against the validity of that statute.

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the court. The motion to dismiss this cause is granted upon the authority of Mining Co. v. Boggs, 3 Wall. 304. There could have been no decision of the Court of Appeals against the validity of any statute of the United States, because it was found that the facts upon which the defendants below relied to bring their case within the statute in question did not exist. The judgment did not deny the validity of the statute, but the existence of the facts necessary to bring the case within its operation. Dismissed.

Mr. Edward T. Wood, Mr. Lyman Elmore and Mr. M. H. Carpenter for plaintiffs in error.

Mr. R. Fendall for defendant in error.

ATHERTON v. FOWLER.

ERROR TO THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA.

No. 648. Submitted November 15, 1875.- Decided December 6, 1875.

Atherton v. Fowler, 91 U. S. 143, followed.

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the court. The motion to dismiss this cause for want of jurisdiction is denied for the reasons stated in the opinion just read, Atherton v. Fowler, 91 U. S. 143. The cases are in all material respects Motion denied.

identical.

Mr. M. Blair for plaintiffs in error.

Mr. M. A. Wheaton for defendants in error.

MEAD v. PINYARD.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN.

No. 754. Submitted January 20, 1876. Decided February 7, 1876.

The proof does not make out a case that calls upon this court to overrule the judgment of the trial court on questions of fact.

THE case is stated in the opinion.

MR. JUSTICE HUNT delivered the opinion of the court.

The appeal in this case is based chiefly upon alleged errors of the court below in determining the facts. The points of fact most strongly presented, in which it is alleged that the error was committed, are the following:

1. The finding that the contract held by Collins was assigned and delivered by him to his sister, Mrs. Gamble, in November, 1862; 2. The finding that Willard did not, in June, 1861, convey by deed to Collins, the property described in his contract; and 3dly, The denial of the statement that Willard, after having held his deed unrecorded for about a year, returned it to Collins and had another deed made to Mrs. Gamble. The importance of these propositions of fact is undoubted.

If title had been vested in Collins by the delivery of a deed from Willard, it could not be devested, except by a deed signed and sealed by Collins. Handing back the deed received by him would not produce that result. A new deed, therefore, from Willard to Mrs. Gamble, would be entirely ineffectual. Nothing would pass by it. The performance of the contract on his part by Pinyard,

and which performance must be made out to enable him to sustain this action, depends upon the validity of the deed from Collins to Mrs. Gamble. The fact disputed is, therefore, the point upon which the case turns.

We do not, however, agree with the appellants in their estimate of the testimony. Willard and Collins are the only persons who could certainly know how the fact was. They were both called as witnesses, and testified on the subject. Collins testified positively and explicitly, as of his own knowledge and recollection, that the assignment to Mrs. Gamble was made at its date, in 1862; that no deed was ever made to him by Willard or to his wife, but that the deed was made to Mrs. Gamble in 1863. He denies that he ever made any statement to the contrary to John R. Parsons.

Willard testifies that he gave a deed to Collins, which was afterwards returned to him, and a deed made, at his request, in the name of Mrs. Gamble. Parsons testified that Collins told him, in December, 1862, that he had a deed of the premises, and that he received them free and clear.

There are many circumstances connected with the evidence of the witnesses to which it is not necessary to allude. It may, however, be mentioned that Mr. Willard admits that he afterwards gave a third deed of the same premises to Mr. Parsons. Mr. Parsons is one of the prominent actors in the drama throughout, and a party defendant in the suit. Again, no trace or memorandum is pretended to be found of the existence of the deed said to have been given to Mr. Collins. Mr. Willard was a business man, a real estate dealer; he always made duplicates of his contracts and preserved all his papers, occasionally overhauling them and burning up. It would be quite likely, if such a prior deed had been made, that there would have been some sign of it remaining. This witness testifies, after the lapse of ten years, (as all of them do,) after having suffered severely from malarial fever, from cerebro-spinalmeningitis, which affected him so seriously that a commission of lunacy was issued against him, and his property was given in charge of a commission.

We certainly do not see a case that calls upon us to overrule the judgment of the court trying the cause, upon these questions of fact.

It is strenuously insisted again, by the appellants, that Pinyard never performed that part of his contract where he agreed that "the title to the premises deeded to Spallinger should be perfected and the mortgage settled between A. M. Collins and Parsons." If

it became clear that the Parson mortgage was invalid, and if the possession of the premises was placed in Spallinger, as his assignee, and that the title was completed to their satisfaction or that their conduct was such as to create a satisfaction in law of their rights under this covenant, the mortgage will be deemed to have been "settled."

The court below found as a fact, and we believe correctly, that when Collins gave the mortgage referred to he had no title to the premises mortgaged, either legal or equitable. As he never received a deed to himself from Willard he never had the legal title. His equitable title was based upon the contract of purchase and sale executed to him by Willard, but this he had assigned to Mrs. Gamble in November, 1862, while his mortgage to Parsons was not executed until a period subsequent to that date. When he executed the mortgage to Parsons he had no title to the premises mortgaged, either legal or equitable. There was nothing to settle.

This property in question under the mortgage to Parsons was the same that was conveyed by Willard to Mrs. Gamble. She conveyed to Pinyard and Pinyard to Spallinger, in performance of the contract to enforce which this suit is brought. As has been stated, Collins having no title, legal or equitable, made a mortgage upon the same to John R. Parsons. A contest arose between Parsons and Spallinger which became the subject of a foreclosure suit, an ejectment and a forcible entry and detainer. This was while Spallinger was the owner under his deed from Mrs. Gamble, and he was the party to these contests against one Hubbard, in possession under Parsons, who defended the suit. Spallinger was at first unsuccessful, but finally regained possession, moving upon the premises, as Collins testifies, with his wife, children and furniture. Spallinger continued in possession until he left for parts unknown. While having the title and being thus in possession he settled the difficulties with Hubbard and sold to the defendant the Reed contract for the farm he had previously sold to Pinyard, and disappeared.

This seems to dispose of the difficulty. Spallinger settled his controversies with Hubbard and Parsons as he thought best, and if the defendants are his representatives by assignment or otherwise, settlement is conclusive upon them. If Spallinger made no transfer of his contract with Pinyard, as we understand to be the fact, then no one represents him, and the difficulty is settled by the acquiescence of the only person interested. Neither Mr. Mead, Mr. Parsons, Mr. Gates or Mr. Bill had anything to do with the mat

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