6 Watts 247 | Pa. | 1837
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The chattels sold to the lessee prior to, or at the time of the lease, are not involved in the trespass complained of, which was done to the subsequent produce of the farm; and the direction prayed in respect to retention of possession of them, was impertinent to the issue. Had it been unfavourable to the defendant, therefore, it would not have been assignable for error. The true foundation of the defence was the imputed fraudulency of the lease; for if fair, it gave the produce to the lessee, and if destitute of a fraudulent badge, it cannot be a subject of exception to the action of the court.
That a transaction may be actually tainted and yet display no badge, is indicated by the common law maxim that fraud must be proved, not presumed; and it would seem, that previous to 13 and 27 Eliz., questions of fraud were always for the jury: consequently it may still happen that a conveyance shall be infected with actual fraud, and yet be, as to the indices of proof, within the purview of neither of them. As remarked by an eloquent writer, these statutes produce their most beneficial effects by placing parties under a disability to commit fraud, in requiring for the characteristics of an honest act such circumstances as none but an honest intention can assume; and they seem to have been expressed in general terms purposely to leave room for a large interpretation by the judges who, in accordance with the spirit rather than the words, have engrafted on them such artificial presumptions and legal intendments as are ordinarily subjects of judicial construction. Such appears to be the interpretation put on them in Burrel’s Case, 6 Rep. 72, b, and Beverly v. Gatacre, 1 Roll. Rep. 305. In fact,
Appertaining to conveyances of chattels, the features of fraud were depicted in Twyne’s Case, decided on 13 Eliz., ten years after its enactment, and reported with slight variations in 3 Rep. 8O and Moore 638, but without distinguishing betwixt such as create legal presumptions and cast the burthen of proof on the other side, and such as i re to be left for what they are worth to a jury. Thus, the generality of the gift in that case; the antedating of the deed, with direction to the attorney to take special pains to prevent it from being frustrated; the sealing of it in the absence of the donee; the recital that it was made honestly; the agreement to keep it secret; the custody of it by the donor’s brother; the assessment of the goods by the donor, as his own; and the extent levied of them, as the donor’s property by the donee, were, separately, circumstances of strong suspicion, and aggregately of convincing proof, that the transaction was colourable, but still no more than evidence of actual fraud, and not distinctive tests, entitled to an artificial force to be graduated by the court; at least I have seen no case in which they have been so applied. But other badges were indicated, which have since been circumstances of legal, instead of common presumption. Pendency of an action at the time of the conveyance, or retention of possession after it, has always created an inference of fraud to induce the necessity of explanation.
In respect to the first, there was no direction prayed for or given; nor is the subject comprised in the assignment of error. It is insisted, however, that the lease is fraudulent against .creditors for retention of possession; but nothing appears on the face of it, or in the circumstances, to raise an inference of retention. The mansion, with certain privileges of pasturage, fodder and stabling for cows, sheep and swine, was reserved; and the residence of the lessor on a part of the premises thus excepted, is accounted for as well in consistency with local usages, as with the terms of the lease, while the interference of his family, if the evidence be true, is proved to have been in the capacity of labourers and agents, and if untrue, the matter was for the jury. It is well established that, where land is conveyed, want of correspondent possession is less evincive of fraud than where a chattel is sold, because the title to the former is evidenced by possession, not of the thing, but of the tide deeds which, like manual occupation in the case of a chattel, is the criterion. But the court explicitly charged that concurrent possession would avoid the transfer; and the defendant has no room for complaint on that head. As to the secreting of property not involved in the trespass, and the lessor’s acts of ownership acquiesced in by the lessee, these, though powerful evidence that the whole was a contrivance to elude this particular creditor, were certainly not badges to raise a legal presumption under the statute.
Judgment affirmed,