30 N.C. 124 | N.C. | 1847
Debt on a bond, and plea of a certificate of bankruptcy (126) to the defendant as a voluntary bankrupt, granted by the District Court of the United States. The plaintiff replied that, at the time the defendant exhibited his petition in bankruptcy, he was seized of a certain tract of land specified, and owned certain slaves also specified, and that he did not set forth the same as a part of his property in the petition, or any inventory annexed thereto, but fraudulently and willfully concealed the same, and by means of such fraudulent and willful concealment of the said land and slaves procured the said court to declare him a bankrupt and decree him the certificate of his discharge.
Under these pleadings the parties drew up a case agreed, stating the following facts: Mary Boyd owned the land and negroes specified in the replication, and intermarried with Smallwood, the defendant, on 17 October, 1835; but, before the marriage, by a deed of marriage settlement made by and between herself, Smallwood and George Boyd, she conveyed the land in fee, and the slaves to George Boyd as a trustee, in trust for herself until the marriage, and afterwards in trust to and for her separate use, free and clear of any interest, control or power of the intended husband, and in trust to convey the same to any persons she might appoint in her lifetime, or by her last will, as if she were sole, and in case she should fail to make an appointment of any part of the property, then in trust as to it for her *100 next of kin. The deed was proved before the clerk of the County Court, 16 November, 1835, and registered the same day. The defendant did not include in his inventory any part of the land or negroes mentioned in the deed, and omitted, failed, and neglected to set out or disclose the same in any part of the proceedings in bankruptcy.
It was agreed between the parties that if the court should, upon these facts, think the plaintiff was entitled to recover, judgment should be entered for the principal money mentioned (127) in the bond, and interest; and if otherwise, then judgment for the defendant.
The court was of opinion with the defendant, and gave judgment accordingly, and the plaintiff appealed.
The deed was not properly proved before the clerk, and, not being duly proved according to the directions of the act, it was void as against the husband's creditors. Sandersv. Ferrill,
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
Cited: Knabe v. Hayes,
(133)