8 Mo. 346 | Mo. | 1844
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action of trover brought by the defendant in error, Paul C. Bowles, to recover the value of a negro girl, alleged to have been converted by the defendant to his use.
On the trial, the plaintiff produced a deed of trust from Stephen Bowles, of Amherst county, Virginia, granting to him the slave in controversy, in trust for the daughter of the grantor, Elizabeth Ryan, during her life, with remainder to her children living at the time of her death; and authorising the trustee to hire out the said slave, or permit Mrs. Ryan to remain in possession of her, as he should deem most to the interest of the said Elizabeth, but in no wise to suffer the husband of the said Elizabeth to exercise any control over the slave. This deed was duly executed, acknowledged and recorded, in pursuance of the laws of Virginia regulating such conveyances. The title of Stephen Bowles, the grantor in the deed, at the time of its execution, was also established.
The defendant claimed by virtue of a sale made by Ryan, the husband of the cessui que use, who removed from Virginia to Missouri shortly after the execution of the deed, and whilst here sold the slave to defendant for three hundred and fifty dollars.
The defendant offered to prove that Ryan was in possession of said negro for eight or nine months; that he exercised acts of ownership over the said slave; that defendant had no notice of the claim of said Paul C. Bowles; that said Bowles kept his claim secret from defendant, and that the possession by Ryan of this slave was with the knowledge and consent of said Bowles. This evidence was rejected by the court.
The defendant also offered to prove, that the conveyance of the slave from Stephen Bowles to the said Paul C. Bowles was a feigned and pretended sale, and that the same was fraudulent and void; but the court refused to permit the defendant to give this proof.
The judge instructed the jury, that if the said Ryan was merely entrusted with
The plaintiff had a verdict and judgment for the value of the slave.
To reverse this judgment, it is relied, that the court erred in its instructions, and in excluding the defendant’s testimony.
This was a contract executed in Virginia, where all the parties resided; and it is conceded that its acknowledgment was in due form, and that, by the laws of Virginia, it was good against creditors and purchasers.
It is a settled maxim, that personal property has no visible locality, but is subject to the law which governs the person of the owner, both with respect to the disposition of it inter vivos, and its transmission, either by succession or the act of the party. (Sill vs. Wenwick, 1 H. Bl., 690.) If any question had arisen in relation to. the construction of this contract, and there was a conflict between the law of Virginia and the law of this State on that subject, the former, as the lex loci contractus, would prevail. But it is not seen, that any question of this character has been raised. We are not apprized of any different construction prevailing in Virginia from that which would govern the construction of the contract in this State.
If this conveyance be within the meaning and provisions of our statute of frauds, and requires recording to be available against purchasers and creditors, the claims of the creditor or purchaser will not be affected by the circumstance that the deed was made in another slate. When citizens of other states remove to this state, their personal rights and duties, whilst within its jurisdiction, must be regulated by its laws, and not by the laws of the state from which they emigrated.
It becomes, then, material to inquire whether the defendant was protected in his purchase by our statute.
The 4th section of the act concerning frauds provides, that voluntary conveyances of slaves, &c., are void against creditors and purchasers, where possession does not bona fide accompany such gift or conveyance, unless the deed be recorded.
The defendant here purchased, not from any of the parties to the conveyance, but from a person to whom the law, and not the deed, had entrusted the possession of the property. If the statute be construed to protect such purchasers, it might be very well doubted whether it would not itself become an instrument of fraud.
The statute was designed to protect against the frauds of the donor or donee, vendor or vendee, and could not intend to place the estate at the mercy of third persons, not parties to the deed; We are the more confirmed in this impression by observing this has been the uniform construction of the statute in Kentucky, where cases similar to the present have occurred frequently, and been passed upon by their courts.
In the case of Forsyth vs. Kreakbaum, 7 Mon. Rep., 79, the court declared, that where the property was held by a person as the mutual guardian or fiduciary of a
In this case the court held the possession of the father to be the possession of the child, and the father being neither the borrower nor the lender, grantor or grantee, the estate was held not subject to his debts or sales.
The same principle was maintained by the same court in Kenningham vs. McLaughlin, 3 Mon. Rep., 31. That was a case where the grandfather had given a slave to his grand child, and the creditors of the father sought to make it liable to his debts. The court held the case not within that section of the statute which vitiates loans and grants for more than five years, where the reservation of title is not made in writing, or possession does not accompany the grant. And it is worthy of observation, that this clause of the act (which in our statute is the 5th section,) in terms, protects the creditors and purchasers of the party in possession. But the court said, “This is not a grant from the father to the child, he remaining the ostensible owner. It is neither a loan nor a gift from the grandfather to the father, but a positive gift to the grandchild. Neither the creditors of the grandfather nor of the grandchild have disturbed the title, but the creditors of the father, to whom the slave was never given or loaned, but in whose custody the slave remained, from necessity, as the natural guardian of the child, who was not able to protect her own interests. The possession of the father must, then, be considered the possession of the child; and although this possession, being apparently in the father, might give him a delusive credit, yet, subjecting the slave to his debts would punish the child for an offence in which she had no participation, and present the absurdity of taking her property from the custody of him to whom the law gave it for her, and subjecting it to his debts.”
In Orr vs. Pickett, 3 J. J. Marshal, 280, the court further held, that where the title was not in the infant, but in another who was bound to hold the title for the infant, the possession should still be considered as in the infant as cessui que use, although the father was entitled in law to the possession.
In principle, it is difficult to see any distinction between the cases cited, and the case now under consideration. The rights, powers and liabilities of a married woman are more restricted, and her interests as much protected by the law as those of an infant. It might well be questioned, then, whether the possession of the husband is not to be regarded in such cases as the possession of the wife, as much as the possession of the father is the possession of the child.
We deem it unnecessary, however, to determine, whether the possession of Mrs. Ryan, in this case, was such an one as would be sufficient, under the 4th section of our act, to supersede the necessity of recording.
As to the instructions which the defendant asked of the court, the principles asserted in them were unquestionably correct, but not applicable to the case before the jury.
The maxim of law, that possession is prima facie evidence of title to personal property, is very much misconceived, if it be supposed to sanction the idea, that In general, and without reference to special statutory enactments, a possessor of such property can, by a breach of faith, transfer a title which he has not himself. Such a deduction would destroy all confidence in society, and place the prudent and cautious upon a footing with the fraudulent or careless. It would subvert the maxim of caveat emptor, which has been held applicable to personal as well as real property, and which, whilst it requires a suitable vigilance on the part of the purchaser in relation to the quality of the thing purchased, enables him at all times to rely on the vendor-for his title. . The possession of personal property, instead of being prima facie, would be conclusive evidence of title, if the possessor, by casualty or in a fiduciary character, can mala fide convert that’ possession into-title; and, as was observed by Judge Trimble, in the case of Chism vs. Woods (Hardin) “many legislative enactments to prevent frauds were mere supererogations, and the action of warranty of title to personal'goods, so frequent in the'books, could only have been necessary where a felony had been committed by some one through whose hands the goods had passed, or where, in reality, there had been a loss and a finding.”
Judgment affirmed.