O'Neale v. Thornton, 10 U.S. 53 (1810)
U.S. Supreme Court
O'Neale v. Thornton, 10 U.S. 6 Cranch 53 53 (1810)O'Neale v. Thornton
10 U.S. (6 Cranch) 53
Syllabus
The act of assembly of Maryland which authorized the commissioners of the City of Washington to resell lots for default of payment by the first purchaser contemplates a single resale only, and by that resale the power given by the act is executed.
By selling and conveying the property to a third purchaser, the commissioners precluded themselves from setting up the second sale, and the second purchaser, by making this defense, affirmed the title of the third purchaser.
Error to the Circuit Court of the District of Columbia, sitting in Washington, in an action of assumpsit upon a promissory note dated August 6, 1800, payable in nine months thereafter and given by O'Neale to William Thornton, surviving commissioner of the City of Washington, for the purchase money of lots No. 1 and 2 in the square No. 107 in that city.
The defense set up by O'Neale was that there was no consideration for the note, inasmuch as the superintendent of the city, who, by virtue of the Act of Congress passed 1 May, 1802, entitled "An act to abolish the board of commissioners in the City of Washington, and for other purposes," vol. 6, p. 126, succeeded to all the powers, duties, and rights, of the late commissioners, whose office was abolished by that act, had abandoned or rescinded the contract of sale, by having sold and conveyed the same lots to another person in fee simple.
The bill of exceptions taken at the trial stated in substance the following case.
The States of Virginia and Maryland having, in the year 1789, offered to the United States a cession of territory ten miles square for the permanent seat of government, the United States, by the Act of Congress of 16 July, 1790, vol. 1, p. 132, entitled "An act for establishing the temporary and permanent seat of the government of the United States," accepted the same and authorized the President
to appoint certain commissioners for the purpose of carrying the act into effect. In the summer of 1791, the greater part of the proprietors of the land included within the present bounds of the City of Washington conveyed the same to Thomas Beall, son of George, and John M. Gantt, in trust, to be laid out as a city, and that after deducting streets, avenues, and public squares for the use of the United States, the residue should be equally divided, one moiety to be reconveyed to the original proprietors and the other to be "sold at such time or times, in such manner, and on such terms and conditions as the President of the United States, for the time being, shall direct," the purchase money to be paid over to the President as a grant of money, and to be applied for the purposes mentioned in the Act of Congress of 16 July, 1790. The lots so sold were to be conveyed by Beall and Gantt to the purchasers.
"And because it might so happen that by the death or removal of the said Thomas Beall and John M. Gantt, or from other causes, difficulties might occur in fully perfecting the said trust by executing all the said conveyances, if no eventual provision should be made, it was therefore agreed and covenanted between all the said parties that the said Thomas Beall and John M. Gantt, or either of them, or the heirs of either of them, lawfully might, and that they, at any time, at the request of the President of the United States, for the time being, would convey all or any of the said lands which should not then have been conveyed in execution of the trusts aforesaid, to such person or persons as he should appoint, subject to the trusts then remaining to be executed, and to the end that the same may be perfected: * "
The Legislature of Maryland, by an act passed at its November session, 1791, c. 45, subjected all the lands in the city belonging to absentees, minors, married women, and persons non compos mentis to the same terms and conditions as are contained in the deeds of trust from the other proprietors, and vested the legal estate thereof in Beall and Gantt, and after declaring the manner in which a division of the property should be made between the original proprietors and the commissioners, it declared that
"All persons to whom allotments and assignments of lands shall be made by the commissioners shall hold the same in their former estate and interest and in lieu of their former quantity, and subject in every respect to all such limitations, conditions, and encumbrances as their former estate and interest were subject to, and as if the same had been actually reconveyed pursuant to the said deed in trust."
By the 4th section, it is further enacted that
"All squares, lots, pieces and parcels of land, within the said city which have been or shall be appropriated for the use of the United States, and also the streets, shall remain and be for the use of the United States, and all the lots and parcels which have been or shall be sold to raise money as a donation as aforesaid shall remain and be to the purchasers according to the terms and conditions of their respective purchasers."
The same section then proceeds to quiet the titles of all persons claiming by purchase from or under original proprietors who have been in possession in their own right for five years before the passing of the act.
By the Act of 1793, c. 58, § 1, the Legislature of Maryland further provided that
"The certificates granted or to be granted by the said commissioners, or any two of them, to purchasers of lots in the said city, with acknowledgment of the payment of the whole purchase money and interest, if any shall have arisen thereon and recorded, shall be sufficient to vest the legal estate in the purchasers, their heirs
and assigns, according to the import of such certificates without any deed or formal conveyance."
By the 2d section of the same act, it is enacted that
"On sales of lots in the said city by the said commissioners or any two of them under terms or conditions of payment being made therefor at any day or days after such contract entered into, if any sum of the purchase money or interest shall not be paid, for the space of thirty days after the same ought to be paid, the commissioners, or any two of them, may sell the same lots at vendue in the City of Washington at any time after sixty days' notice of such sale in some of the public newspapers of Georgetown and Baltimore town, and retain in their hands sufficient of the money produced by such new sale to satisfy all principal and interest due on the first contract, together with the expenses of advertisements and sale, and the original purchaser or his assigns shall be entitled to receive from the said commissioners, at their treasury, on demand, the balance of the money which shall have been actually received by them or under their order on the said second sale, and all lots so sold shall be freed and acquitted of all claim, legal and equitable, of the first purchaser, his heirs and assigns."
On 29 September, 1792, the President of the United States, by his order in writing, directed that the sale of lots in the City of Washington to commence on 8 October then next, should be of such lots as the commissioners or any two of them should think proper. That the sale should be under their direction and on the terms they should publish. And it was on the same day further ordered by the President that any lot or lots in the City of Washington might, after the public sale which was to commence on 8 October, 1792, be sold and agreed for by the commissioners or any two of them at private sale at such price and on such terms as they might think proper.
On 24 December, 1793, after the passing
of the above recited Act of the Maryland Legislature of November session, 1793, c. 58. Robert Morris and James Greenleaf entered into a contract with the commissioners for the purchase of six thousand lots in the City of Washington, payable in seven annual installments, the lots to be selected by Morris and Greenleaf in the manner described in the contract. They selected, among others, the two lots sold afterwards to O'Neale, and for the purchase of which by O'Neale the note was given upon which the present suit was brought.
Morris and Greenleaf received conveyances for all the lots which they paid for under their contract, but having failed to pay some of the installments, the commissioners, by virtue of the Act of Maryland, 1793, c. 58, duly advertised for sale a large number of the lots contracted for by Morris and Greenleaf including the lots in question. The terms of sale were, that the purchase money should be paid in three, six, and nine months and secured by good negotiable paper endorsed to the satisfaction of the commissioners. At this sale the defendant O'Neale purchased lots No. 1 and 2 in the square No. 107 at a price considerably greater than the amount due thereon from Morris and Greenleaf and gave his promissory notes therefor, upon one of which the present suit was brought.
By the act of Congress passed on 1 May, 1802, vol. 6, p. 126, it is enacted
"That from and after the first day of June next, the offices of the commissioners appointed in virtue of an act passed on 16 June, 1790, entitled 'An act to establish the temporary and permanent seat of the government of the United States,' shall cease and determine, and the said commissioners shall deliver up to such person as the President shall appoint in virtue of this act all plans, drafts, books, records, accounts, deeds, grants, contracts, bonds, obligations, securities, and other evidences of debt in their possession which relate to the City of Washington and the affairs heretofore under their superintendence
or care."
And it was further enacted
"That the affairs of the City of Washington which have heretofore been under the care and superintendence of the said commissioners shall hereafter be under the direction of a superintendent to be appointed by, and to be under the control of, the President of the United States, and the said superintendent is hereby invested with all powers and shall hereafter perform all duties which the said commissioners are now vested with or are required to perform by or in virtue of any act of Congress or any act of the General Assembly of Maryland or any deed or deeds of trust from the original proprietors of the lots in the said city or in any other manner whatsoever."
And it was further enacted
"That the said superintendent shall, prior to the first day of November next, sell under the directions of the President of the United States all the lots in the said city which were sold antecedent to the sixth day of May, 1796, and which the said commissioners are authorized by law to resell in consequence of a failure on the part of the purchasers to comply with their contracts."
Under this act, Thomas Munroe was appointed superintendent, and having given the notice required by the act of Maryland, 1793, c. 58, and O'Neale having failed to pay his notes, the superintendent proceeded to sell again the lots No. 1 and 2 in the square No. 107, and one Andrew Ross become the purchaser for a sum less than the amount due thereon from Morris and Greenleaf the first purchasers. Ross assigned his interest in the lots to James Moore to whom the superintendent afterwards conveyed the lots in fee simple, by a deed which recites the contract between Morris and Greenleaf and the commissioners for the purchase of six thousand lots, the selection of lots No. 1 and 2 in square No. 107 as part thereof; the failure of Morris and Greenleaf to pay the purchase money therefor; the sale by the superintendent to Ross, and the assignment by Ross to Moore, but takes no notice of the intermediate sale to O'Neale. The money received
upon the sale to Ross was by the superintendent applied to the credit of Morris and Greenleaf, the original purchasers.
The first resale of lots by the commissioners for default of payment by purchasers took place on 2 May, 1797. Another resale of other lots took place on 28 August, 1797. At these resales none of the lots contracted for by Morris and Greenleaf were resold, and in every instance except one the lots produced at such resale as much as was due thereon from the first purchaser, with interest and expenses of sale. On 18 October, 1797, the first resale of Morris and Greenleaf's lots commenced, and the commissioners then laid it down as a rule, and from which they never afterwards departed during the existence of their offices, that no lot should be resold for less than the amount due thereon from the first purchaser, with interest and expenses of sale.
The commissioners, at the time of their resale to O'Neale, had a right to resell the lots for the default of Morris and Greenleaf. The notes given by O'Neale for the purchase money, were endorsed by Basil Wood, but he endorsed only as security, and the only consideration for the notes and the endorsement was the sale of the lots.
Upon second resales of lots, it was the universal practice of the commissioners to apply the money actually received therefor to the credit of the account of the first purchaser, taking no notice of the intermediate purchaser, and they always sold as for the default of the first purchaser, and all the deeds which they made to purchasers at such resales recited the first contract only for the purchase of the lot, and the default of the first purchaser as the only cause of such resale, wholly pretermitting all intermediate purchasers.
Upon this statement of the evidence, the defendant moved the court to instruct the jury that if it
should find from the evidence that the bargain between the plaintiffs and defendant for the sale of the two lots was understood and made by the parties to be upon the condition and contingency that if the promissory notes given for the purchase money should be punctually paid, it should become an absolute sale to the defendant, but if the promissory notes should not be punctually paid, the commissioners should have the option of annulling the bargain for the sale and of reselling the lots as for the original default of Morris and Greenleaf the first purchasers. And if the jury should further find from the evidence that the superintendent, in reselling to Ross and conveying to Moore his assignee, did so resell and convey the lots as for the original default of Morris and Greenleaf in disaffirmance of the bargain to sell them to the defendant and in pursuance and exercise of such option reserved to the commissioners, the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover the said purchase money in this action.
Which instruction the court refused to give.
The defendant then prayed the court to instruct the jury that upon the evidence offered as above, if believed by the jury, the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover any part of the purchase money bidden by the defendant for the lots as above mentioned. But the court refused this instruction also, whereupon the defendant took a bill of exceptions and sued out his writ of error.