33 N.C. 347 | N.C. | 1850
This action is trover for a parcel of blacksmith's tools, (348) and the plea "not guilty." The plaintiff claims under a deed of trust made to him by Thomas McNeily, on 2 February, 1849, and registered the same day. The deed conveyed to the plaintiff a piece of ground near Mocksville, containing sixteen acres, known as the factory lot, on which are situated the cotton-factory building and other outbuildings, together with the steam engine, grist-mill, three wool-carding machines, and all the cotton machinery, consisting of four cotton cards, pickers, drawing frames, two speeders, one card grinder, four frames containing 504 spindles, four reels, one banding machine, one yarn press and all the battins, one turning lathe with all its tools, and a variety of other tools, all the raw cotton on hand, and all the factory wood on hand; also a lot adjoining, containing one acre; also another lot, on which there is a blacksmith's shop, with all the smith's tools, and one new wagon partly ironed; one house and lot, wherein McNeily resided, and his storehouse and lot, and all his household and kitchen furniture and library, and three horses and another wagon and gear, four head of cattle, all his corn, wheat, oats, hay and fodder, and four slaves; and the deed further assigned to the plaintiff all debts owing to McNeily by bond, note account or otherwise, and all other property whatsoever, whether real or personal, to *254 which the grantor was in anywise entitled: upon trust that the whole or such parts of the property as should remain undisposed of on 1 January, 1850, should, after due notice, be sold by Young at public auction to the highest bidder upon a limited credit, and that, in the meanwhile, any part of the property might be sold at private sale, should a reasonable price be offered; and that, until such public sale, McNeily should remain in possession and management of the property as the agent of the trustee, and might also make private sales thereof as aforesaid, and that he should, "as early as (349) practicable," make out a complete list of all the judgments, bonds, notes and other debts of every description belonging to him, for the said Young; and that, out of the proceeds of such sales, and with the sums collected on the debts, all necessary expenses of executing the trusts should first be paid by the said Young, and then certain enumerated debts for which persons were bound as sureties; and, thirdly, certain other debts specified, and also all others which the said McNeily then owed, whether particularly mentioned therein or not — the said debts to be fully paid, if the fund should be sufficient therefor, and, if not, they should be paid pro rata. The deed then adds: "It is understood and agreed that the said McNeily is to support his family upon the property hereby conveyed, until this trust is closed by a sale of the property."
A short time after the execution of the deed a judgment was rendered by a justice of the peace for one of the debts mentioned in the deed, and an execution issued thereon, under which the defendant purchased the tools for which the action is brought. The question on the trial was whether the deed of trust was fraudulent as against the creditors of McNeily existing at the time. It was admitted by the defendant that the debts mentioned in the deed were just and true, and that the property and effects assigned were not sufficient for their discharge, and also that there was no evidence of any actual fraud in the object of the deed; but it was insisted on the part of the defendant that the deed was fraudulent in law, from the stipulations on its face. By the agreement of the parties, a verdict was thereupon rendered for the plaintiff, subject to the opinion of the court upon the question, as a point reserved, whether the deed was or was not thus fraudulent. The court afterwards set aside the verdict and gave judgment of nonsuit, and the plaintiff appealed.
Without the admission on the part of the defendant that there was no actual fraud intended in the execution of the deed, the Court would hold the judgment to be erroneous. It is exceedingly difficult to find fraud, as a matter of law, unless it be so plain and express in the deed as to constitute fraud in itself, without any inference of one fact from another, and thus appear so distinctly as to admit of no explanation from extraneous circumstances. Where the conveyance is in trust for the maker merely, or, upon no valuable consideration, in trust for his family, it has always been considered as constituting fraud, thus incapable of explanation. Sturdevant v. Davis,
PER CURIAM. Judgment reversed and judgment upon the verdict for the plaintiff according to the agreement.
Cited: Hardy v. Simpson,
(353)