3 Ala. 428 | Ala. | 1842
The question to be determined in this case is, whether the maker of a note given on the purchase of a slave at a sale made by an administrator, can set up as a de-fence a fraud in the sale, when sued on the note by a succeeding administrator, who sues as administrator, de bonis non.
If the administrator who made the sale, and to whom the note was given was the plaintiff, no doubt could be entertained that the defence could be made. Fraud vacates all contracts, whether made by the personto be interested thereby, or by an agent. Where the agent is not only the fraudulent actor, but is the holder of the legal title, and attempting to enforce it, it could not be tolerated that he should resist the defence on the ground that the benefits of the fraud were to go to others; and that redress must be sought in another action against him. Paley on. Agency, 325.
How then is the case varied, because the suit is not brought by the fraudulent actor, but by those who have, by operation of-law, acquired the right to bring the suit.
The note taken by a former administrator, is merely assets of the estate, and cannot stand on higher ground than a note taken by the intestate in his lifetime in his own name, and yet
It is probable, the opinion of the Court, proceeded on grounds of public policy, and that it was necessary to uphold such sales, by making the actor alone responsible. But we cannot conceive that public policy should require a fraudulent sale to be affirmed. The general, we might say, the universal rule of law is, that fraud vacates all acts; even the solemn judgment of a Court, is a nullity if obtained by fraud. To turn the defendants round to seek redress from the original actor in the fraud, might, in its results, be to them a denial of justice. We are, for these reasons, of opinion that the Court below, erred in refusing to permit the defendants below to prove the sale fraudulent; and its judgment is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded.