9 Ala. 704 | Ala. | 1846
There” can be no question but it is competent for a mortgagee with a power to take possession of and sell personal property, upon the mortgagor’s default, when the property is levied on after the forfeiture of the mortgage, to interpose a claim and try the right as the statute provides. [Planters’ and Merchants’ Bank of Mobile v. Willis & Co. 5 Ala. Rep. 770.] Yet it by no means follows,
Where, in the language of some of the books, there is a cloud hanging over the title of lands, which would prevent it from selling for a fair market value, Chancery frequently entertains suits to adjust the pretensions, or settle the priorities of conflicting claimants. The object of the complainant’s bill proposes nothing more.
Although Hooks is made a trustee by the deed of Harris as it respects Stocks, and could perhaps have been treated as such by the Bank, had it asserted a right to the security, yet he is, so far as it provides an indemnity for him, a mortgage with a power of sale. The deed preferred him to Stocks, and even if the latter had been a bona fide creditor, whose demand was not controverted, it would still have been competent for Hooks to have sought a decree of foreclosure in equity. So that in any view in which the cause can be considered, the bill is not obnoxious to the objection, that it does not disclose a case for equitable interposition'.
The second section of the statute of frauds, in declaring that every, gift, grant or conveyance of lands, tenements, or hereditaments, goods or chattels, or of any rent common, or profit out of the same, by writing or otherwise, had or made and continued of malice, fraud, <fcc;, to the intent or purpose to delay, hinder, or defraud creditors, shall be utterly void, &c., is but declaratory of the common law. The introduction of the term “purpose” into the act, does nót impartió it any additional potency. It is only the synonym for design,
In respect to the indebtedness of Harris to the Bank, and the suretyship of Hooks as stated in the deed, so far from being disproved, or rendered doubtful, it is abundantly apparent from the evidence in the record; and if the purpose of the deed was to secure its payment directly to the Bank, or to provide Hooks with the means for that purpose, it would be confessedly unobjectionable. But it is supposed, that as the object of the deed was to provide for a simulated debt, ■which was a fraud upon the creditors of the grantor, it cannot be recognized for any purpose, but must fail in toto.
It was said by Lord Hobart, in Norton v. Simmes, (Hob. Rep. 12 c. page 48,) “that the státute is like a tyrant, when he comes he makes all void; but the common law is like a nursing father, makes void only that where the fault is, and preserves the rest.” See also Maleverer v. Redshaw, 1 Mod. Rep. 35. This remark of Lord Hobart has been often quoted to prove, that a contract void in part by statute, is void in toto, but it establishes no such principle. It is a mere declaration as applied to the case then under consideration, that where a statute prescribes the form of an obligation, and enacts, that one taken in any other form shall be void, if the terms of the statute are departed from, no obligation is incurred by the party undertaking to bind himself. Thus far, there can certainly be no objection to it.
In Kenison v. Cole, 8 East’s Rep. 236, the instrument in question was a bill of sale and mortgage of a ship, which by statute was declared to be “ utterly null and void, to all intents and purposes.” In the writing was a covenant to repay the money lent. Mr. Justice Lawrence remarked, that the decision of Lord Hobart did not apply to different and independent covenants and conditions in the same instrument, which may be good in part and bad in part, and that the undertaking to repay the money, was good as a personal covenant.
Lord Chief Justice Gibbs, addressing himself to the consideration of the argument, that if a deed be void in part, it must
Prince v. Shepard, 9 Pick. Rep. 176, if not identical in its facts to the present, is strikingly analagous in principle. The court there said, where property is assigned by a debtor to two persons, by one instrument, to “ hold to them respectively, in the proportions in which the debts due to them respectively bear to each other,” and the assignment is prov
We need add nothing to these citations. They show the law to be well settled, that although a deed may be void in part', by a statute, yet it will be valid for the residue, unless the statute avoids it for all purposes. The statute of frauds merely declares, that the “ gift, grant, or conveyahce,” if made with the intent or purpose to defraud creditors, is “ clearly and utterly void.” Now a single deed may evidence a gift, grant, or conveyance, to different individuals, and of distinct objects, and may be invalid as to one of the grantees without affecting the other. In respect to the consideration, they may be wholly disconnected, so that the fraud of the one could not implicate the other in any dishonesty of purpose. The facts of the present case do not as we have seen, show that Hooks lent himself to Harris, to enable him to defraud his creditors; and he cannot be prejudiced, because the deed for his indemnity, makes provision also for the pretended debt to Stocks.
Hooks, then, for any thing appearing to the contrary, being a bona fide mortgagee, without notice of an intended fraud, cannot be divested of his surety by the malafides of Harris, the mortgagor. To make a grantee answerable for the covinous intention of the grantor, it must appear that he participated in it. [Stover v. Herrington, et al, 7 Ala. Rep. 142.] The embarrassment of Harris, his relationship to Hooks, and the contiguity of their residences, are not sufficient, under the circumstances, to warrant the imputation of fraud to Hooks.
This view is decisive of all the points raised at the bar, and the consequence is, that the decree is affirmed.