THE COURT. It is clear that opinions of counsel cannot be considered as of authority in any strict sense of the word: but in this day when the limits of technical precedent have been a good deal broken down, they may be used by the court, at its discretion, to assist its researches and judgment. Lord Holt. Lord Kenyon and Chief Justice Marshall, all of them men of Strict minds, have severally referred to the statements of counsel made arguendo. Fisher v. Wigg, 1 Ld. Raym. 622, 631; Sadgrove v. Kirby, 6 Term R. 483, 486; Sexton v. Wheaton, 8 Wheat. [21 U. S.] 229, 243. Lord Talbot in 1734, referring to a case decided by Lord Macclesfield, mentions it as a circumstance of weight that “Mr. Vernon had always grumbled at the determination of that case, and never forgave it to Lord Macclesfield.” Jones v. Marsh, Cas. t. Talb. 64. Subsequently, as appears from the Reports of Sir John Comyns, an opinion of Mr. Vernon was read before the barons of the exchequer, and appears to have been heard respectfully; since the reporter notes that the decree was “agreeable to this opinion.” St. Amand v. Countess of Jersey, 1 Comyns, 255, 256. In 1790 Lord Kenyon quoted an opinion of Mr. Fazakerley and D. Ryder, and spoke of it as containing as much good law as if it had the authority of all tb.e judges in England. Alpass v. Watkins, 8 Term R. 516, 519. The work called “Cases and Opinions” was cited more lately, both before Sir T. Plumer and Sir Lancelot Shadwell, vice chancellors, (Simpson v. Gutteridge, 1 Madd. 609, 616, or Amer. Ed. 1829, pp. 327, 330; May v. Roper, 4 Sim. 360, 362;) in the last instance by Sir Edward Sugden: and in another case, before V. C. Sir John Leach, a detached opinion of Serjeant HUI was‘quoted at the bar. and is given at large by the reporter, (Forth v. Duke of Norfolk, 4 Madd. 503, 504, or Amer. Ed. 1S29, pp. 266, 268.) In all these instances, however, with the exception of that in Comyns, (an exception which might be excused only in favour of so great an equity lawyer as Mr. Vernon,) the opinion was given on a case other than that before the court, nor were the counsel in practice. I think that if opinions of this sort are cit
In the argument of the principal subject, it was said, against the settlement: that sustaining it would be without any foundation in precedent. The settlement is voluntary: it is made by a person in debt: the debts are wholly unsecured either by the settlement itself, or by any lien independent of it: the settler was in trade: his bounty is in favour of a bastard child: he- himself has failed, and the party opposing it is a creditor, fio case has gone so far as to support such a settlement. In Holloway v. Millard, 1 Madd. 414, or Amer. Ed. 1829, p. 225, though a mother’s settlement was upheld in favour of her natural child; there was no debt, nor was the settler in trade. In Battersbee v. Farrington, 1 Swanst. 106, the settler was not in debt, and the beneficiaries of the trust were a wife and children. Sexton v. Wheaton, 8 Wheat. [21 U. S.] 229, was without debt, and in favour of a wife. And though in Stephens v. Olive, 2 Brown, Ch. 90, there were debts, yet it is made an important fact that they were secured by mortgage; and the settlement was in favour of a wife. Even in the case of C. E. ft., on which counsel’s opinion is quoted, (if such citation is to be answered,) existing debts were all secured, and the settler was neither in trade nor contemplating it. An examination of the cases subsequent to those here cited wiE prove, that although voluntary settlements have, at times, been sustained, they have never been settlements so surrounded with bad circumstances as this is. If the specific debts which existed at the date of this settlement, were yet unpaid, there is no doubt that the settlement could be set aside. Reade v. Livingston, 3 Johns. Ch. 481, 494. The result ought not to be altered because the debts have shifted. There has been nothing beyond shifting. Payment there has been none. Creditors may have changed, but indebtedness has remained: and it carries along with it the original taint. Suppose that the existing creditors were the same persons as were creditors at the date of the settlement; holding mere renewals of tneir original debts; — renewals by successive notes, perhaps. Could not such creditors se£ aside this settlement? The character of the beneficiary of this trust is an argument. The consideration arises ex turpi causa. It is uncleanly. To sustain it is to encourage licentiousness and, indeed, to “render adultery respectable.” Throw upon every part of such vice not only the stain of disgrace, but also the sting of disability, and you do much to prevent it. The less that is done to elevate iEegitimate children to the rank of those bom in wedlock, the better certainly for the cause of morals. Something was also argued from the settler’s having been in trade; and reliance was had upon the remarks on this point of Judge Duncan in Thompson v. Dougherty, 12 Serg. & R. 448, 457, and of other judges in different cases; not of sufficient moment to be recorded.
I was inclined, on first view, to connect this settlement with the marriage; but though we may perceive in the proximity of the two, a motive for the settlement, there is not enough in the case to prove that the transaction was in consideration of marriage. It must, therefore, be considered as a voluntary settlement; and if sustained must bo sustained on the principle that it was made under circumstances which do not impair its validity when so considered. And, in the first place, I take it to be now settled, that the fact of a conveyance being voluntary is not, of itself, enough to impair its validity. Stephens v. Olive, 2 Brown, Ch. 90; Battersbee v. Farrington, 1 Swanst. 106; Sexton v. Wheaton, [supra.] Points less settled in this country are those which arise from (1) the party’s having been somewhat indebted at the time; (2) his having been in irade, and (3) from the beneficiary of the trust being a bastard child.
Let these matters be examined. The whole doctrine on the subject of voluntary settlements rests, I take it, on this principle: that a man being the absolute owner of what is his own, may do with it what he pleases, provided he does not injure the existing or expected rights of others. And hence with regard to debts created subsequently to the settlement, the matter must generaHy resolve itself into a question of fraudulent intent: This fact or that fact is accordingly unim--portant except in so far as it bears upon this question of design. The common law being a system buEt up as cases arise which it is to settle, its principles are developed in so close connexion with facts, that we are apt to mistake for essential that which is but accident. Thus, advancing a step beyond first principles, cases say that a settlement by one indebted is good provided there be provision in it, or otherwise, for existing debts, (Stephens v. Olive, 2 Brown, Ch. 90, 92; George v. Milbanke, 9 Ves. 194;) others rely on the fact that the settler was not in trade, (Holloway v. Millard, 1 Madd. 419, or Amer. Ed. 1829, p. 228;) others that the whole of the estate was or was not settled; others that debts were or were not contracted immediately after the settlement, (Walker v. Burrows, 1 Atk. 93;) and others upon facts of different sorts which I need not particularize. But in no case at all fully reported, (no case at least that I have been able to find,) are these facts relied on as facts, or otherwise
(His honour then examined the facts of the case, as already presented, and ended in a conclusion that actual fraud could not be presumed from them.) On the contrary, the motive of the settlement seems to have been a good one. The party was father to a bastard child. In this he' had undoubtedly been guilty of an act both sinful and shameful. He was about to form a new and “hon-ourable” connexion; but his former course of living had fastened upon him obligations easy to be perceived, and permanent both on his feelings and providing cpre; obligations which were all the more coercive over him because they would be rejected by every one besides. What then was more decent, or more according to the suggestions of an enlightened conscience or a refined mind, than to make some arrangement by which this offspring of a strumpet’s bed should not become a charge upon her whom he was about to make the wife of his bosom ? There may, however, yet be some rule or principle of law which, superiour to the settler's intent, subverts his act. Thus, it is urged that the party was in debt at the time, and that the taint of this indebtedness was not destroyed by specific securities as in Stephens v. Olive, [supra.] But if you are unembarrassed by the debt, considered as an evidence of fraud, (and as such we have already considered and disposed of it,) its effect, I think, is destroyed. Mr. M. was clearly solvent in the spring of 1S33: that is enough. His debts, it is true, were not secured by specific pledge; but certainly they were secured; of which the best evidence is, that they have all. long ago, been paid.
In reply to this it is argued, that although creditors have changed, indebtedness has remained; an argument which, in connexion with the facts of the present case, is rather specious than solid. Suppose, that just before the settlement, and with a view to it, Mr. M. had run off $1700 of his property, and with the proceeds paid those debts which he then owed, or that he had transferred the property itself in satisfaction of those debts: it will be admitted that, on this score of indebtedness, the settlement would be free from objection. Yet he would only have credited one account by debiting another; discharging debts, but reducing assets in exactly the same amount. He might have gone into debt again, in the same hour in which he made the settlement; purchasing or taking back the same property, perhaps; and, may be, from the same person to whom he had transferred it, and for the same price, and the identical moneys. A matter so purely formal as this would be, a mere transposition of items in account, cannot be important in itself; nor important at all, except as evidence of fraud; a point of view in which we are not, here, considering it. Solvency, it must therefore be, which is of the essence of the inquiry, and so are the authorities. Lush v. Wilkinson, 5 Ves. 384, 387; Jacks v. Tunno, 3 Desaus. 1, 5; Salmon v. Bennett, 1 Conn. 525, 548; Sexton v. Wheaton, [supra;] Hopkirk v. Randolph, [Case No. 6,698;] Van Wyck v. Seward, 6 Paige, 62, 68; and see, also, Huston v. Cantril, 11 Leigh, 136, 159.
The argument derived from publiek morals, savours too much of severity. Would it not force us to avoid the contracts of these unfortunate persons? to place them under every disability? and to reduce them at once to the state of the ancient excommunicate? All their senses have but human conditions; and it is enough to leave upon them that stain of their birth, which neither their own innocence, nor a life of virtue, nor the compassion of society, nor any earthly law hath power to take away. Indeed, it would be quite as much against publiek policy, in one way, to relieve a man against acts done according to his duty, as, in another way, it can be against that policy to sustain them. And a conseiencious chancellor,
[See note at end of case.]
Sir Peter King.
Lord Cowper, Fursaker v. Robinson, Prec. Ch. 475.