108 Ala. 98 | Ala. | 1895
The debt due the appelees from the grantor, to the payment of which it is sought to subject the lands, existing at and prior to the sale and the conveyance to the appellant, the burden of proving that the conveyance is supported by a valuable consideration rests on the appellant. The recital of the consideration in the conveyance, in this controversy, is deemed the mere declaration or admission of the grantor, which, however binding on him, cannot be employed as evidence to affect his existing creditors. — 3 Brick. Dig. 520, § 173.
. The grantee is not, as seems to be supposed, limited to evidence of the precise or particular consideration expressed. Any kindred consideration — any valuable as distinguished from a'good consideration — may be proved. The payment of money to the grantor; the payment of debts of the grantor , to third persons ; or the payment of debts, or the discharge of legal or equitable
The negotiations terminating in the sale of the land to the appellant, were conducted by her and tlie grantor in the presence only of their mother. That the appellant is now the only witness by whom the sale which preceded the conveyance, its consideration, and the attendant circumstances can be shown, is a necessity not of her creation, nor attributable to her laches. It originates in the unexplained delay of the appellees, for more than thirteen years to assail the validity of the sale or of the succeeding conveyance, though during the entire period the remedy they are now pursuing, and other remedies, were, open to them; the death of the grantor and of the mother intervening. This unexplained delay is not without much of significance in support of the transaction. It is not matter of inference only, but of direct admission by the appellees, that they had knowledge of facts and circumstances, which would have put a creditor of ordinary care and vigilance oit inquiry, and that inquiry would have led to a knowledge of the sale and of the succeeding conveyance, while all the facis were recent, and the witnesses from whom evidence of them was attainable were in life and accessible. Immediately on the sale the grantor yielded possession, leaving the State, declaring his purpose to take up his residence in another State. The appellees knew of his departure; knew that he had ceased to be an occupant of the lands on which had been his home and residence for many preceding years, and that the appellant and her mother, who had been his co-tenants, were in the exclusive occupancy and possession of them. It is singular, if those facts did not excite the vigilance and provoke inquiry by the appellees. In a liitle more than three months after the departure of the grantor from the State, the conveyance now assailed is spread on the records of the proper-court of probate, on its face describing the grantor as a resident of a particular county in the State of Texas which was the place of its execution. True, the appellees say they had no knowledge or information of the conveyance until some years later. The want of information or of kqovyledge
We extract the evidence of the appellant as to the sale, its consideration, and attendant facts : “The deed referred to does not express its true consideration. The circumstances lea ling up to the purchase of my brother’s interest in the farm, were substantially as follows : For at least three years in the early seventies, my brother had control of the farm, and my father, mother and myself were, living in the town of Jacksonville. My brother collected and appropriated to his own use, nearly all the rents, incomes and profits of said farm during those years, and never accounted to me for my share in them. And during almost the whole of the year 1878, he was talking about selling his interest in the farm, with, the view of going to Texas. In the latter, part of the year 1878, he told me he had decided to sell his interest in the farm, and if I did not purchase it, he -would have to sell to some one else, and that he was going to leave immediately for Texas and never iniencled to put his foot on Alabama soil again. Then he and I tried to agree on the price I was to pay for his interest, but we could not come to any definite conclusion or understanding. We finally, however, agreed to submit the matter to our mother, and she decided that in consideration of his having used my part of the rents of the place, and as she had allowed him to draw several hundred dollars in excess of what I had drawn, at one time, besides other sums of money he had drawn at different times ; tli it it would be just for me to pay off a balance due by him to Ledbetter & Co.
If .the sale and conveyance had been assailed by the appellees in a reasonable time after the notice of them, or of the facts putting them on inquiry, which if pursued would have led to notice ; or while the mother and the grantor were in life, it may be, fuller, more definite proof of the liability of the grantor to the appellant, which formed, it seems, the greater part of the actual consideration, would have been exacted. Certainly it would have been exacted, if the appellant had known, or had notice of facts putting her on inquiry, that the grantor was involved in debt. But from whom can this fuller and more definite proof be now obtained? Who" can now itemize, or approximate more nearly than the appellant the amount of the moneys belonging to her, and the grantor had appropriated? The grantor who appropriated, the mother consenting to the appropriation, are dead; and it was not until their deaths, the appellees were quickened into a contestation of the sale and conveyance. The lapse of time, the death of witnesses, the unexplained laches of the appellees, if there be a want of fullness and definiteness of the proof of the consideration, must now supply it.
What would have been the effect of the payment of the cash consideration, if the appellant had known the grantor was involved in debt, or had information which ought to have put her on inquiry as to the existence of the fact, it is needless to consider. There is a want of all evidence that she had knowledge or reason to believe that he was indebted otherwise than to herself, except the
The grantor after remaining in-Texas about one year, returned to Alabama. There is much of evidence, consisting principally of his verbal declarations, which, if made, were unknown to the appellant, introduced for the purpose of showing that while in the occupancy of the lands, or a part of them, he claimed to hold in his own right, and of his exercise of acts of ownership. Whether these declarations were admissible, is not now matter of consideration, for they appear to have been received without objection. The failure to object to their introduction, cannot add to their force and effect as evidence, and that is now the only matter of just consid ir-ation. They are of a species of evidence which, it is observed by Mr. Greenleaf, and the observation has been of frequent repetition, ought to be received with great caution. And he adds : “The evidence, consisting as it does in the mere repitition of oral statements, is subject to much imperfection and mistake; the party himself either being misinformed, or not having clearly expressed his own meaning, or the witness having misunderstood him. It frequently happens, also, that the witness, by unintentionally altering a few of the expressions really used, gives an effect to the statement completely at variance with what the party actually did say.” — 1 Green. Ev., § 200 ; Garrett v. Garrett, 29 Ala. 439 ; Wittick v. Keiffer, 31 Ala. 199. The facility with which such evidence may be fabricated, and the difficulty, if not impossibility, of disproving it, when the pirty to whom the declarations are imputed is dead, or incapable of testifying, necessarily leads the judh-ial trier of facts to a distrust of their reliability. But, as is said by Mr. Green-leaf, when such declarations are admissib'e, and are shown to have been deliberately made, and when they are precisely identified, they may become evidence of the most satisfactory nature.
The rule that possession remaining with a vendor, after an absolute sale, is, as to his existing creditors a sign or badge of fraud, of which there must be explanation, has never been applied to sales and conveyances of lands. —Bump on Fraud, Con. 121 ; Noble v. Coleman, 16 Ala. 77 ; Paulling v. Sturgus, 3 Stew. 96 ; Tompkins v. Nichols, 53 Ala. 197. As is shown by the authorities cited in Noble v. Coleman supra, a long continued possession, unexplained, may become evidence of fraud. Here, there was no retention of possession by the vendor. Concurrently with the saló, he yielded possession, and the possession of the vendee and her co-tenant became exclusive. The subsequent occupancy by the vendor, as matter of law would not be deemed in hostility, but would be referred to the title. Independent of this consideration, it is shown, that this occupancy was permissive, that of a tenant paying rent.
If the demand of the appellees be not stale in the contemplation of a court of equity, nor barred by the statute of-limitations, questions in regard to which we do not deem it necessary to express an opinion, our conclusion is, that the evidence does not justify the vacation of the sale and conveyance as fraudulent.
Let the decree of the chancery court be reversed, and a decreó rendered dismissing the bill at the costs of the appellees in the court of chancery and in'this court.