Sturdivant v. . Davis

31 N.C. 365 | N.C. | 1849

This is an action of debt brought 18 June, 1844, against the defendant, as executor of Isham Davis, deceased, on a bond given by him and Edmund McLindon for $100, dated 13 March, 1839, and payable one day after date. Pleas, former judgment and ne unques executor.

In support of the first plea the defendant gave in evidence a warrant issued by a justice of the peace on 14 June, 1841, against Edmund McLindon and the present defendant, as executor of Isham Davis, deceased, purporting to be on a bond for $100; that it was returned "executed" by the constable; and that the magistrate gave a judgment thereon in the following words: "10 July, 1841. Judgment against the principal, Edmund McLindon, for $81 with interest from," etc. The defendant also called the magistrate who gave the judgment, as a witness. But he stated that he had no recollection of what took place at the trial as to the defendant. The court held that it did not appear that there had been a former judgment between the present parties on this bond. *252

(366) In support of the second issue on the part of the plaintiff, he gave evidence that on 18 May, 1834, Isham Davis conveyed to his son, the present defendant, in fee, a tract of land containing 116 acres, being the land on which the father then resided and continued to reside until his death, and being all he had; and that the land was of the value of $700, and that the consideration expressed in the deed was fifty cents. And the plaintiff gave further evidence that on 5 November, 1839, by a deed, expressed to be made in consideration of the age and infirmities of himself and his wife, and their inability to attend to their own business, the said Isham conveyed to the defendant one bay horse, five head of cattle, twenty hogs, twenty-five sheep, his household and kitchen furniture, plantation tools, crops of corn, fodder, and other things (being all the property of the said Isham), in trust for the said Isham and his wife Elizabeth, and for their support at their usual place of abode. And it was thereby further agreed that the said Edmund should move, and live with his father and mother, and manage all matters and things relative to the property thereby conveyed for their support and benefit. And the plaintiff gave further evidence that Isham Davis died in 1841, and that, upon his death, the defendant held, used and enjoyed the said personal property as his own.

The counsel for the defendant insisted that there was no fraud in fact intended by the parties in the execution of the deed of November, 1839, and that it was the province of the jury to judge thereof; and prayed the court to instruct the jury that if they should be of that opinion, they ought to find for the defendant.

The presiding judge refused so to instruct the jury, but directed them that the said deed for all the personal (367) property of the father was fraudulent in law, and that, consequently, the plaintiff was entitled to recover. Verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed. There does not appear to be error in the opinion given by his Honor on either point.

Whatever may have been the intention of the magistrate at the time, it is certain that the judgment, as expressed, does not purport to be a termination between the plaintiff and the present defendant. Even if the defendant could be aided by evidence dehors the judgment, the witness produced by him and *253 examined, apparently without objection, gave none which could affect the case. Indeed, the defendant seems to have failed to give evidence even to the essential point, that the bond, on which the former warrant was brought, is the same now sued on.

Whether the defendant be answerable as executor de son tort was correctly made to depend on the question whether the conveyance under which he took and holds the personalty be fraudulent against the plaintiff as a creditor of the father; for that is the only way in which the creditor can, after the death of his debtor, reach chattels fraudulently conveyed by the debtor. Therefore, it has been long settled that the creditor shall have this action against a fraudulent donee. We hold that conveyance to be undoubtedly fraudulent, and that it was the duty of the presiding judge so to pronounce it. A deed is declared by the law to be fraudulent and void which is made with intent to defeat a creditor, or to hinder him, or delay him. Generally speaking, a deed made by one person to another simply and absolutely, is, prima facie, to be taken as bona fide and made upon due consideration, as expressed in the deed, and for the benefit of the person to whom it is made. But if it (368) was not in fact made for the benefit of that person, but for that of the maker of the deed, or, without any valuable consideration, for the benefit of some member of his family, it is obviously unjust and fraudulent if, thereby, a creditor, existing at the time, is prevented or delayed from obtaining satisfaction of his debt by process of execution. Ordinarily, the benefit intended for the donor and his family is not expressed in the deed, but rests in a secret confidence or trust; and the reason is that their interest may be concealed and the creditor thus deprived of evidence of its existence. In such cases the creditor is compelled to have recourse to such extraneous proof as he can make of the secret trust for his donor; and, of course, the question, thus depending upon proof by witnesses, must be left to the jury. But it is, then, only left to them as to the existence of the supposed trust, and not to the effect of it. For, if the jury find that this deed was not truly made for the benefit of the donee, as it purports to have been, but for that of the donor or his family, it is a matter of law that it is fraudulent, and the court is bound so to tell the jury. For, if the deed stand, the creditor cannot take the property upon execution, although his debtor have the whole benefit of it; and, therefore, he could not have any motive for thus parting with the legal title, but to create an impediment to the creditor. The case, then, plainly falls within the very definition of fraud. When, however, the parties do not even conceal the trust, but set it out in the deed *254 itself, there is nothing to be left to the jury. The deed speaks plainly the fact, which in the other case was a subject of inquiry for the jury, and on the finding of which the instruction followed, that the deed was fraudulent within the statute; and when the deed thus discloses the trust, it is alike the province and the duty of the judge to declare that in law it is (369) fraudulent. Gregory v. Perkins, 26 N.C. 50. It was said, indeed, at the bar that the defendant had no bad intent in accepting this conveyance, but, on the contrary, the pious and benevolent one of obeying and serving his parents; and, therefore, that he ought not to be branded with fraud, but his conduct left to the charitable construction of a jury. But that argument is founded on a misconception of the nature of fraud in the eye of the law. It is very certain that, in many cases, that which is deemed fraud in law is perpetrated upon motives much less base than it is in others; and the present may be stated as an example of conduct the least criminal in a moral point of view, among cases of this kind. Still, it is illegal and a prejudice to honest creditors, and to that extent, at least, immoral. For, it is a contrivance which, if successful, would protect the property from being reached by execution at law, although the owner of the legal title took no beneficial interest in the property, but the whole was secured to the debtor. It is true that by the act of 1812 such trusts may be sold on execution. Yet it may be a serious question whether the deed is not in all cases to be viewed as fraudulent when the trust declared is for the maker himself, although the judgment and sale under execution be in the debtor's lifetime, as the purchaser may be embarrassed in equity by accounts between the trustee and hiscestui que trust. But, however that may be, it seems certain that it may be so treated when the debtor is dead before judgment. For after the debtor's death the only way in which the debtor's property can be reached is by treating the trustee in possession as executor de son tort; because in no other way can a judgment be obtained establishing the debt and authorizing process against the property as that of the deceased debtor. So that, unless it can be reached in that way, upon the ground of the fraud, the creditor would be without any remedy at law in such case.

(370) It was further contended for the defendant that Laws 1840, ch. 28, sec. 4, restrains the court from pronouncing the deed fraudulent in law, and that in all cases the question is to be left as one of actual intent, to the jury. But that is only so when the donor is not indebted at the time of the conveyance, or retains property sufficient and available for the *255 satisfaction of all the creditors he then had. When sufficient property is thus retained, then the intent, as a matter of fact, is for the jury as to the creditors, as it is in all cases, by the second section, as to purchasers. But here the debt had been previously contracted, and the case states that the donor had no property, real or personal, but that conveyed to the son. The conveyances, therefore, cannot but be fraudulent under those circumstances.

PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.

Cited: Young v. Boone, 33 N.C. 350; Isler v. Foy, 66 N.C. 551;Burton v. Farinholt, 86 N.C. 267.

midpage