38 Tex. 245 | Tex. | 1873
This is an action upon a promissory note given for the purchase of property at an administrator’s sale in 1863. The first question presented in the record which requires' notice is the defense that by an express agreement the note was to be paid in Confederate money, and therefore illegal and void. This defense has been held, in repeated decisions by this court, to be as a general rule a complete bar to an action. But an exception to this general rule has been recognized, when a party brings suit in a fiduciary capacity, and when the real parties interested cannot be chargeable with a participation in the illegality of the contract. This doctrine was clearly announced in Hamilton v. Pleasants, 31 Texas, 641, which has been closely followed in Trammell v. Philleo, 33 Texas, 395, and in Morgan v. Benson and several unpublished decisions.
In view of the injustice which may result to parties who have purchased property at administrators’ and executors’ -sales, and sales made by persons acting in a fiduciary capacity, with the distinct understanding and agreement that such contracts of purchase, etc., were to be discharged in Confederate money, and thereby were induced to agree to pay for such property a greater sum or price than it was worth in lawful money, this court, in the case of Thompson v. Bohannon, decided but a few days ago, so changed the rule heretofore adhered to, as to allow the defendant in such cases, under proper pleadings, to allege and prove the actual value, in lawful currency, of the property or other consideration for which the note or other contract was executed; and to restrict the plaintiff in his recovery to the actual value thus proven.
On the trial of the case at bar, there was proof going to show that at the sale of property for which the note sued on was given, it was the understanding and agreement
There is error in the second charge of the court to the jury, where it says, the suit of “plaintiff, at the time of the sale made by Samuel Hancock to J. M. & M. H. Hancock, is constructive notice to J. M. & M. H. Hancock of the indebtedness of Samuel Hancock.” We think this is carrying the doctrine of Us pendens to an extent not authorized by the authorities. Where suit is brought for the recovery of, or in relation to, a specific property, or right in equity, that suit may operate as constructive notice to all the world of the claim set up in relation to the particular property or equity; but such constructive notice is not to be extended beyond the immediate subject matter of the suit. (Edmonds v. Crenshaw, 1 McCord’s Ch. R., 264; 2 Johns. Ch. R., 158.)
This suit was originally brought on a simple note of hand, and the suit most certainly could not operate as constructive notice of anything not set up or claimed by the plaintiff. At the time of the sale of the property in controversy by Samuel to J. M. and M. H. Hancock, there was no pretense of a claim for anything but the money due on the note, and particularly none upon the land sold, and we have been unable to discover any principle of law or equity which would prevent Samuel Hancock from selling the land, or J. M. and M. H. Hancock .from purchasing, provided the sale was tona fide, and
We think the subsequent clauses of the charge also erroneous. The sale of property by the father to the son, or by the son to the father, cannot in itself be considered as ;a badge of fraud. That fact, in connection with the indebtedness of the father and other circumstances, might very properly have been submitted to the jury for their -consideration in determining the question of good or bad faith. The father may have been involved, and may have sold to his sons in perfect good faith, notwithstanding they had full knowledge of his embarrassment, and, therefore, neither of these facts can properly be considered as badges of fraud.
The instructions also give too great a prominence to the Intent of the father in making the conveyance to his sons. If the father was justly indebted to his sons at the time of the sale, and if they purchased, at full consideration, with the sole object and purpose of securing them debt, then it was quite immaterial whether they knew of his ■embarrassments or not, and it would also be immaterial what was the intent of the father.
It is an elementary principle that a person in failing circumstances may prefer one creditor to another, and may prefer relatives or sons to strangers. There can be no ■doubt that Samuel Hancock had full power and right to sell the land in controversy to his sons at the time he executed the deed, provided the sale was made tona fide, for a fair consideration paid, or made in liquidation of a previously existing debt, and the sale would be equally good and binding whether the debt was barred by limit
The statute does not compel a party to accept the benefits which would arise from limitation unless he chooses so to do; and though a debt may have been barred for years, yet it may, under our statute, be revived by a simple acknowledgment and payment or promise to pay in writing. The main questions for the jury in this cause were in relation to the intent of the parties in the sale of the land. If the sale of the land was made to J. M. and M. H. Hancock for the purpose of paying a pre-existingdebt due from the father to the sons, and if in the purchase by the sons they paid an adequate consideration— and further, if that sale was made to the sons before the levy of the attachment, then their title is complete, beyond the reach of the plaintiffs below by means of this suit; and the intention of Samuel Hancock to hinder and delay his creditors, so far as this land is concerned, cannot affect the vested rights of the sons. Nor would the knowledge on the part of the sons that the father was in debt, and that the sale to them would hinder and delay creditors, affect their title, if their object in making the purchase was to protect their own interest and secure their debt.
But if the objects of the father and sons in making the transfer of the land were to cover up and conceal the real title, and thereby hinder and delay the creditors of Samuel Hancock, then the whole transaction was fraudulent, null and void, and the sons now have no right to complain of the verdict rendered by the jury. There is, however, an error in the verdict of the jury in finding for the plaintiffs and against Samuel Hancock for the amount of the note and interest. His discharge in bankruptcy has freed him from all responsibility in relation to his former debts.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.