Sedgwick v. Stanton

By the Court, Bacon, J.

The facts found by the court, upon which the only questions arise, which counsel deemed it important to discuss in this case, are stated as follows: 1. That on the 14th day of October, 1851, the agreement, a copy of which is set out in the complaint, was duly executed by and between Joseph M. Trowbridge and Sidney Stanton, the defendant. 2. That prior to the making of said agreement, the defendant had claimed a pre-emption right to the lot in question, under the three hundred and forty-sixth chapter of the session laws of 1848, and had made efforts from time to time to have such claim allowed by the commissioners of the land office, who had hitherto declined to allow such claim, for the reason that canal commissioner Cook had suggested that the lot might be necessary for the use of the canal. 3. That after making such contract, the said Joseph M. Trowbridge took the necessary proceedings for satisfying the commissioners of the land office that the lot was not necessary for the use of the canal, and that Stanton was entitled to his pre-emption right; and for that purpose procured and laid before them the certificate of the division engineer that it was not wanted for the canals, and also the certificate of the salt superintendent that it was not necessary for the salt springs, and did all other things necessary for procuring the allowance of said Stanton’s claim, and duly performed all the stipulations and covenants on his part in said agreement to be performed. And that on the 24th day of June, 1853, the claim of said Stanton, in consequence of these proceedings, was formally allowed by the commissioners of the land office, and a resolution passed by them, directing the state engineer to issue to the defendant a certificate for said lot, upon the usual terms. 4. The purchase money to be paid for the lot was.$>680, and interest, of which one-fourth was to be paid down, being $170. This sum was paid by the de*478fendant, one half of which was repaid by Trowbridge to the defendant, and received by him. 5.. No certificate was issued by the state engineer,’under the resolution, to the defendant; but after-wards, and previous to the 21st day of July, 1853, it was concluded by the said Trowbridge and the defendant to pay up the whole amount to the state, and take a patent instead of a certificate, for the lot; that on that day the defendant went to Albany, paid the entire amount, and procured a patent for the lot in the usual form, which he now holds. 6. That after the defendant’s return from Albany, and on the 23d day of July, Trow-bridge paid to the defendant §350, being one half of the amount paid by the latter upon receiving the patent, and some §24.37 in addition, which was received by the defendant. 7. That on the 27th day of July, 1853, Trowbridge and wife executed to the plaintiff the trust deed, a copy of which is set out in the case, embracing the contract between Trowbridge and Stanton; and that before the commencement of this suit the defendant had been requested on behalf of both Trowbridge and the plaintiff to convey the one half of said premises, according to the stipulations in said contract, which the defendant declined to do. And upon the facts so found, the judge who tried the cause held and decided as matters of law, that the said contract was a good, valid and mutual contract, and one which ought to be specifically enforced against the defendant; that the aforesaid instrument or conveyance in trust to the plaintiff, conveyed to him all the right of Trowbridge in and to the contract, and in and to the lands and premises therein described, subject to the trust therein specified, and that the plaintiff was entitled to call for the specific performance of said contract, and to maintain this action, and that the defendant was bound to perform said contract specifically, and to execute to the plaintiff a conveyance in due form of law for an undivided half of the aforesaid premises.

To these conclusions of law, and the judgment directed to be entered in conformity therewith, the counsel for the defendant excepts, and insists,

I. That the agreement between Trowbridge and the defendant, by which the former, upon obtaining at his own expense a *479confirmation of the defendant’s title to the lot mentioned in the complaint, was to be entitled to a conveyance from the defendant of an undivided half thereof, was contrary to public policy, and therefore void. It was intimated, although not very seriously argued under this point, that the agreement in question was champertous, and therefore incapable of enforcement by the legal tribunals. It is sufficient to say, however, that the transaction in question does not come in any respect within the definition of this offense, as contained in the revised statutes. (2 R. S. 691, § 6.) Nor is it obnoxious to the common law inhibition of a stranger agreeing to assist in embroiling his neighbors in litigation, or in carrying their suits through the courts, upon a stipulation to share the fruits of the litigation as a reward for his mischievous interference. But the more serious inquiry is whether this agreement is against public policy.

The counsel for the defendant insists that the effect of this agreement, if upheld, is to bring to bear upon a public body charged with superintending and protecting the interests of the state in the lands owned by them, or which may be necessary for public purposes, an illegitimate and possibly a corrupting influence, and to prevent free, untrammeled and independent deliberation and action in respect to questions of this nature.

It is important to see, in the first place, what the object was to be effected through the agency of Trowbridge, and then to ascertain the means and appliances used for its accomplishment. The defendant was in the possession of a lot of land at Syracuse, the fee of which, as I understand, was in the state, but to which the defendant, under the law of 1848, had a pre-emptive right, by virtue of his possession, and the fact that he had made an improvement thereon of the value of $200. He made application for the title, but could not obtain it, for the reason that one of the canal commissioners supposed it might be required for the purposes of the canal enlargement. In this stage of the case the agreement in question was made, by which Trowbridge undertook to procure the necessary evidence of the defendant’s preemptive right, to satisfy the commissioners of the land office that the land was not required for canal purposes, to obtain at his *480own expense a title to the lot for the defendant, and to share equally the purchase money to be paid therefor. In consideration of all this, he was to be entitled to a conveyance from the defendant of an undivided half of the lot when the defendant should receive his deed. The court find all the facts stated in the complaint to be substantially proved, and that Trowbridge fully performed his agreement.

When we turn to the evidence, to see what were the means and appliances resorted to by Trowbridge, we find that he procured a certificate of the division engineer that the lot was not wanted for canal purposes, and also of the salt superintendent that it was not necessary for the salt springs ; carried on a correspondence in reference to the requisite proof with a clerk in the state engineer’s office; had interviews with members of the land office board; appeared before them and advocated the claim in their public session, and obtained the passage of a resolution by the board authorizing a conveyance of the lot to the defendant, and the same was subsequently made to, and received by, the defendant. There was also presented to the board, before their final action, a memorial, signed by several inhabitants of Syracuse, recommending that the conveyance be made to the defendant. These are the acts which it is insisted were unfavorable to the exercise of a fair and independent judgment cn the part of the public officers charged with the duty of acting upon the application; and the tendency to such results, it is urged, should induce the courts to frown upon all such agreements, and pronounce them invalid, as contravening public policy. And the recent case of Harris v. Roof's Executors (10 Barb. 489) is invoked as a decisive authority on this point. I do not desire to be considered as dissenting from the opinion of Justice Hand in that case. I concur fully in its high-toned morality, although, it has perhaps carried the principle supposed to be involved to the extremest point—" usque ad apicem juris.” There were, however, certain features in that case which served to throw great discredit upon the transaction, and cast upon the acts resorted to, to bring about the desired result, the stigma of indirection, if not the odor of possible corruption. The claim which the plain*481tiff in that case undertook to lobby through the legislature was a very antiquated and stale one ; it was for a pretended interest in lands granted a century ago, and of which none of the parties pretending to have an interest therein had ever been in possession. The business of the plaintiff seems to have been to hang around the purlieus of the capítol, to labor privately with the members and the attorney general, to mouse among the public documents for papers to which he should not have been allowed private access, to have the matter referred “ under his charge,” and to get up a report for the committee. In view of developments of this character, I find no great difficulty in saying with Justice Hand, that “ such practices would have a tendency to prevent free, honorable and correct deliberation and action of this most important branch of sovereignty,” and that good public policy does not require our courts to enforce contracts of this nature.

To stigmatize, however, the end to be effected by the acts of Trowbridge and the means resorted to, to accomplish them in this case, as equally obnoxious to censure, is, it seems to me, to confound all just distinctions. It is not questioned on any side that the claim in this case was a just and meritorious one. To secure its approval, it was only necessary to present to the public officers the proper and authentic evidence that the defendant was entitled to the pre-emption claimed, and that the land was not needed for any purposes inponsistent with the right of the defendant, which it was conceded was paramount to all but that of the public. This evidence was obtained from proper sources, and we are bound to suppose, in the absence of all evidence to the contrary, by lawful means. It was openly and publicly used; information was communicated to the board; the claim advocated before the body, and their action invoked and obtained on a subject on which it was their express duty to act. JSTow to insist that a party, having such a claim before a public body, whose action is necessary and should be an informed and intelligent action, shall employ no agent, furnish no documents, engage no counsel, or, if he does, stipulate for no remuneration whatever, is to hold a rule far more stringent than any princi*482pie of public morality requires, and much beyond what any adjudicated case has yet sanctioned. It is restricting the right of the applicant for justice unreasonably, and depriving him of aid which, properly employed, may be essential to his success, and it is casting an imputation upon bodies charged not less to protect the interests of the public than to confirm the citizen in his established right, which I should hesitate to sanction. It is supposing them to be peccable, and open to .influences which all upright men hold in utter abhorrence. When all is said and done, confidence must be reposed somewhere; and while all proper shields and protections should be thrown around the action of public men, we should not exclude them from all access to the light, lest perchance it might, in some supposable case, shine too brightly around them. Upon the whole, therefore, I see nothing in the case before us that requires the court to pronounce the agreement void as against public policy. It has been strictly performed by the party who made the contract; the defendant has had the full benefit of his services, he retains the money he has received, and he holds the land for which one half the purchase money has been advanced by Trowbridge; and in violation of his agreement, and, as I think, of good conscience, he refuses to acknowledge his obligation, and sets the plaintiff at defiance. The law ought not to aid such a defense, unless the reasons of public policy that command it are controlling and overwhelming. I see in this case no such reasons, and I am unwilling to countenance private dishonesty upon the pretended plea of a scrupulous regard for public morality, and a tender solicitude for the reputation of our public men. In view of such an interposition, from such a quarter, well might the latter exclaim,

“Non tali auxilio,

Neo defensoribus istis nos eget.”

II. It is urged, in the second place, that the plaintiff in this suit, who is the assignee of Trowbridge, has no right to ask for a specific performance of the contract; that the assignment to him conveyed nothing but a power in trust, which extended no farther than to authorize him to sell the contract, and gave him *483no remedy upon it. It seems to me, however, that this is not a fair interpretation of the assignment. It purports to convey to the plaintiff, among other things, the contract in question in this case, upon certain trusts, to wit, to take into his possession the property thereby conveyed, and sell and dispose of and convey the same, on such terms as he shall deem best, and pay certain demands; full power being given him to sell the property for cash or upon credit, and to convey or assign the same by proper and sufficient instruments of conveyance. By this assignment, the plaintiff was invested with all the rights of Trowbridge in the contract, and he was entitled to enforce it in the same manner that Trowbridge could have done, had it remained in his hands. It is an express trust, fully authorized by the 55th section of the act in relation to uses and trusts, (1 R. S. 728,) and vested the whole estate in the trustee, subject to the execution of the trust. (1 R. S.729, § 60.) The plaintiff could only execute the trust by obtaining title to the lands, and then disposing of them and applying the proceeds as directed by the assignment. A sale of the contract, simply, would give the vendee no greater right than the assignee; and if he has no power to call for a specific performance of the contract, then the defendant could forever escape from its obligations. But it was properly held by the court, that the conveyance in trust, to the plaintiff, conveyed to him all the right of Trowbridge in the contract, and to the lands therein described, subject to the trust, and authorized him to demand a specific performance of the contract.

[Onondaga General Term, October 2, 1854.

It results, therefore, that the judgment of the special term must be affirmed.

Hubbard, Pratt and Bacon, Justices.]