5 Gill 449 | Md. | 1847
delivered the opinion of this court.
By the act of Assembly, of 1763, ch. 13, it is declared, that no negro or other slave, whereof the donor shall retain the use and possession, shall be transferred to any donee unless the gift be by writing, under the hand and seal of the donor, and acknowledged and recorded, as therein prescribed ; with the proviso, that nothing contained in the act shall be construed to make void any parol gift of any negro or other slave, where there shall be an express delivery of such slave in pursuance of such gift, and where the sale, use and possession of the same shall be transferred to the donee.
In the case of Coale against Harrington, 7 H. & John. 156, the Court of Appeals held, that:
“By the act of 1763, ch. 13, a gift of negroes is only required to be by deed, acknowledged and recorded, where the donor retains possession; that solemnity not being authorized, or required by law, when the possession passes to the donee, by delivery, at the time, and in pursuance of the gift, an office copy in such case of a bill of sale, is not competent evidence to prove title in the donee.”
We have not been able to discover in this record any evidence even tending to prove that there was an express delivery of these slaves by James Shipley to his daughter at the time and in pursuance of the verbal gift alleged to have been made in the life-time of Mrs. Shipley; and we have referred to the act of 1763, and quoted the construction placed upon it, by the Court of Appeals, for the purpose of showing, that the parol gift asserted to have been made in this case, cannot be maintained ; and that the title of the appellee to the slaves in controversy, must depend entirely upon the validity of the bill of sale of the 3d August, 1841.
It cannot be denied, that there has been some diversity of judicial opinion both in the English courts and in the tribunals of this country, with respect to the exposition of this statute, as applied to a voluntary conveyance from a father to his child, when attempted to be impeached by an antecedent creditor.
This subject was considered by the Supreme Court of Connecticut, in the case of Salmon against Bennett, decided in 1816, 1 Connec.: 525; and we refer to the opinion as enunciating, what we consider to be the true interpretation of the statute of 13 Eliz. ch. 5: a construction which is certainly in accordance with the doctrine upon this point, as it is now established, by an almost unbroken series of modern decisions in England, and in the United States.
At page 542—the court say:
“ Fraudulent and voluntary conveyances are void as to creditors ; but in the case of a voluntary conveyance, a distinction is made between the children of the grantor and strangers. Mere indebtedness at the time will not, in all cases, render a voluntary conveyance void as to creditors where it is a provision for a child in consideration of love and affection; for if all gifts by way of settlement to children, by men in affluent and prosperous circumstances, were to be rendered void upon a reverse of fortune, it would involve children in the ruin of their parents, and in many cases might produce a greater evil than
This question came before the Supreme Court, in Hinde’s Lessee against Longworth, 11 Wheat. 213, in 1826. It was the case of a voluntary conveyance by a father to his son, and impeached by antecedent judgment creditors, as fraudulent under the statute of 13 Eliz. Upon this point, Mr. Justice Thompson, in delivering the opinion of the court, said
“ A deed from a parent to a child, for the consideration of love and affection, is not absolutely void as against credilors. It may be so under certain circumstances; but the mere fact of being in debt to a small amount, would not make the deed
The question with respect to the true construction of the statute of 13 Eliz. was considered by Lord Langdale, in 1840, as the master of the Rolls, in Townsend against Westacott, 2 Beavan Rep. 345. He said:
“ There has been a little exaggeration in the arguments on both sides as to the principle on which the Court acts in such cases as these: On the one side it has been assumed that the existence of any debts at the time of the execution of the deed would be such evidence of a fraudulent intention as to induce the Court to set aside a voluntary conveyance, and oblige the Court to do so under the statute of Elizabeth. I cannot think the real and just construction of the statute warrants that proposition, because there is scarcely any man who can avoid being in debt to some amount; he may intend to pay every debt as soon as it is contracted, and constantly use his best endeavors, and have ample means to do so, and yet may be frequently, if not always indebted in some small sum; there may be a withholding of claims, contrary to his intention, by which he is kept indebted in spite of himself; it would be idle to allege-this as the least foundation for assuming fraud, or any bad intention. . On the other hand, it is said that something amounting to insolvency must be proved to set aside a voluntary conveyance; this too is inconsistent with the principle of the act, and with the judgments of the most eminent judges.”
In the late case of Gale against Williamson, 8 Mees. & Wels, 409. The same doctrine was held in the Exchequer, by Lord Jlbinger Rolfe Baron.
Rolfe—B. at page 410, says:
“ It is a mistake to suppose that the statute, (13 Eliz.) makes
The same proposition is declared by the Lord Chancellor and by Eyre Baron, in the case of Jones vs. Boulter, 1 Cox Rep. 288. 1 Story Eq. Sec. 364, (note) Lord Chancellor B. Skinner is reported to have used this language: H There is no mention in the act (Stat. 13 Eliz.) of voluntary conveyances; and the question has always been, whether in the transaction there has been fraud or covin. There were creditors at the time, and this is said always to have been a badge of fraud. It is true that this circumstance is always strong evidence of fraud. But if there be other circumstances in the case, that alone will not be sufficient.” And Lord Mansfield, in Cadogan vs. Kennett, decided in 1776, Comp. 434, held:
“ That a voluntary conveyance may be good against creditors, notwithstanding its being voluntary. The circumstances of a man being indebted at the time of his making a voluntary conveyance is an argument of fraud. The question in every case is, whether the act done is a bona fide transaction, or whether it is a trick and contrivance to defeat creditors.”
In considering this subject, it is to be remarked as already stated, that the word “voluntar]if is not to be found in the statute. Deeds founded upon a good consideration, if made bona fide, arc expressly excepted from its operation; and it is perfectly clear, from the preamble of the statute, that its provisions were pointed not at voluntary conveyances as such, but against transfers
Yet the construction put on the statute, by those who held that an indebtedness at the time of the conveyance conclusively fastens upon the instrument a fraudulent character, as an inference of law, practically and necessarily plaGes voluntary conveyances and fraudulent conveyances, in the same predicament. Upon this construction, every voluntary conveyance' must be a fraudulent conveyance with respect to the antecedent creditor.
A proposition of this kind cannot be maintained, and with great respect for the judgment of the eminent Judge, who delivered the opinion, in Reade against Livingston, 3 John. Ch. Rep. 481, we think, he erred in the exposition which he has given to the statute of 13 Eliz.
We therefore consider it as now established, at least by a decided preponderance of authority, and upon principles alone consistent with a just and rational interpretation of the statute, that an indebtment at the time of the voluntary conveyance, is prima facie only, and not conclusive evidence of a fraudulent purpose, even with respect to a prior creditor; and that this presumption may be repelled by showing that the grantor or donor at the time of the gift was in prosperous circumstances, possessed of ample means to discharge all his pecuniary obligations, and that the settlement upon the child was a reasonable provision, according to his or her station and condition in life.
Testing the voluntary conveyance in this case, by the rule thus announced, there can be no doubt that it must be pronounced fraudulent and void. The donor at the period of its execution was literally loaded with debt; was involved in embarrassments approximating to insolvency, and the owner of an estate, so far as it was unincumbered, certainly not adequate to the payment of the claims against him.
It is clear upon all the cases, that a voluntary conveyance made under such circumstances cannot be upheld against a prior creditor’s seeking to impeach it.
As the appellee failed to establish a valid title to the slaves
A decree will be signed reversing the decree of the Chancellor, and dismissing the complainant’s Bill.
decree reversed and bill dismissed.