51 Ark. 56 | Ark. | 1888
There are conflicting decisions in the courts of this country on the question. See 21 Am. Law Review, 901. The charge was, however, in accordance with the views announced by this court in Hempstead v. Johnson, 18 Ark., 123; Cornish v. Dews, Ib. 172, and Mandel v. Peay, 20 Ark., 325. These cases were followed by the supreme court of the U. S., and the rule they establish approved, in Emerson v. Senter, 118 U. S., 3. We are not at liberty to consider it an open question. The relation of the assignee to the contract of assignment is what gives rise to the difference of opinion on this question, If he is to be regarded as the agent of the assignor, or simply a volunteer, as some of the courts hold, why may not a creditor successfully pursue the property on showing that his debt was outstanding when the assignment was made and that the assignor was then insolvent, without regard to any special intent to defraud? But as all agree that this cannot be done, why should theassignor’s unaided and unknown design to defraud affect the validity of the instrument? The existing demands of the creditors are said by the courts in line with our own, to be a valuable consideration for the transfer; but the assignee is not treated as a purchaser in good faith in the sense of protecting his purchase against the prior equities of third persons, unless some further consideration enters into the contract. Bridgford v. Adams, 45 Ark., 136; Farguson v. Edrington, 49 Ark., 214; People’s Savings Bank v. Bates, 120 U. S., 556.
Practically the assignee is regarded as a purchaser by all the courts, else he would be treated as a volunteer subject to have his title defeated at the suit of any creditor; but as the creditors are in no worse condition than they were before the the deed and nothing of value has been parted with as a consideration, he is said not to be an innocent purchaser. It may be that the rule adopted by neither line of conflicting decisions is throughout a logical deduction from principle, but is rather in accordance with the courts’ varying ideas of policy. We adhere to the line previously marked out by this court. Nothing is decided in Hunt v. Werner, 39 Ark., 70, contrary to that rule.
The act does not affect the determination of this cause, and the court did not err in its declarations of law.
There is nothing in the record to impeach the validity of these debts. The findings of the court are sustained by the evidence, and the judgment must be affirmed. It is so ordered.