Boyd v. . Hawkins

17 N.C. 329
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 17 N.C. 329 (Boyd v. . Hawkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyd v. . Hawkins, 17 N.C. 329 (N.C. 1833).

Opinion

ítuiTlN. Chief Justice.

The importance of this suit to the parties, and the nature of some of the questions discussed in it, which were novel among us, make it gratifying to the Court that they have been brought up for a reconsideration by a petition to rehear the decree. It is especially so, as upon further reflection it is found that some general propositions were stated in the opinion given, that are not entirely correct; and that on other points further information, than was then laid before the Court, was necessary to doing exact justice between the parties.

Upon the principal question before discussed and adjudged, the Court sees no reason to alter the decree. That was upon the validity of the deed of the 13th September 1824, as an agreement of purchase, or as an agreement for measuring the compensation of J. J). Hawkins, as a trustee. No doubt, the trust was troublesome and responsible, and required Mr. Hawkins’ personal at* tention. It is clear too, as stated in the decree, that the defendant had with both diligence and skill, discharged the trust. It is equally true, that it was understood by the parties, as admitted in the bill and collected from some of the deeds of trust, that Mr. Hawkins should receive compensation; and that his care, personal labor, time, and loss of attention to his own affairs, and the ad *331 vantage derived by Mr. Boyd from his services, altogether may, and do constitute a meritorious consideration for a proper agreement for remuneration, and for the ultimate allowance of a liberal remuneration. But upon the principle of equity which has long formed the law of this Court for the regulation of dealings between parties standing in the relations these did, at the time of entering into the articles of September, such an agreement cannot be sustained, though not obtained by actual imposition.

_ . , tween trustee and <¡e>tmque a prudent man Reformer might conscien-ceptfromastran-set-

Without going through the cases again, it will be sufficient to state, that although all bargains between trustee and cestui que trust are not absolutely void, yet they are not favored, but are the objects of distrust. Generally, they have been regarded as mere securities, if in the event they turned out to be very gainful to the trustee and prejudicial to the other party, and unless the whole subject was clearly understood by the cestui que trust in its circumstances and their legal consequences. Even then, the contract has not been permitted to stand, when it was not freely entered into by the party under protection, without any undue influence on the, part of the trustee, or any pecuniary necessity» or mental embarrassment on the other side. To gain the countenance of the Court therefore, such agreements must, as it has been said, prove to be fair and reasonable — such as the cestui que trust, as a prudent man, might or would again enter into, and the trustee might, consistently with his duty, advise him to make with another person. It is impossible to define the sources- of secret influence, which one person may,,in their relative situation, have over another, imperceptibly to the world, and almost to themselves, and when it is not sought nor even desired’; an influence which may not only control actions, but color the opinions and determine the judgment of the dependent party. It is wrong to engage him reluctantly in a contract known to be to his prejudice, and it is hardly less so to insist upon a contract with him, thought equal at the time, and to which he made no objection, but which in fact was to his prejudice, and which, *332 0n that ground, and upon his discovery of it, he is reluctant to proceed in. One reason why the Court leans this way is, that regarding such dealings as definitive contracts, they would conclusively bind the cestui que trust at all events, and might do great injustice. But taking them to be voidable, and prima facie to be supported by the aid of collateral proofs, the Court always has the' power of disposing of them in a way that will secure all parties, and do complete justice.

In the case before us, it cannot be doubted, that, certainly in Mr. Boyd’s, and probably, in Mr. Hawkins’ opinion, the latter was the owner of Brown’s judgment, and could, without violating either a rule of law or morality, use it for his own benefit, by selling under it, and buying in the trust property — unquestionably that supposition entered materially and mistakenly into the agreement of September, it is recited in it and is fairly stated in the answer to have been one of the main motives. Here then is at once a clear mistake in the essence of the contract. If the truth had been known, Mr. Hawkins would never have advised the other party to come, nor would he have consented that he should have come, to such an agreement with any body else. Again, Mr. Boyd only did not know the true state and value of the property of which he was disposing, but seems to have had a different opinion upon that subject every succeeding day, and it is extremely probable that it was so uncertain, that Mr. Hawkins’ own opinion frequently fluctuated ; at all events, Boyd’s spirits seem alternately to have been greatly elated and depressed; so that there is no likelihood that in any treaty then carried on, he either reflected coolly, or stipulated upon any confidence in himself. Now, although Mr. Hawkins may not have intended any advantage, and may not then have believed he was gaining any undue advantage, yet it is certain, that Boyd was not in a condition to protect himself, that he did not stand on his rights, that he would have yielded more, if more had beed asked ; and that Mr. Hawkins absolutely refused to accept all that was offered. The case really then, is that of a bargain *333 made all on one side; and therefore as a contract, it cannot be enforced ; because it turns out to be too much to the advantage of the one, and to the prejudice - of the other. It is for these reasons, that contracts between trustee and cestui que trust can hardly be said tobe binding until the relation is dissolved, and a confirmation is given, as in the case of a conveyance from a ward to one who has been his guardian. But, independent of the relation of trustee and cestui que trust, merely as such, that which actually existed between these parties was peculiar — the trust being of the whole estate of Boyd, for sale, to pay very large debts, which gave the trustee a control over his will, that could hardly be resisted. It is by no means declared that it was sought from sinister motives, or that it was exercised with any intent to oppress. But we cannot but see, that it might be so exercised; and that in fact an agreement was obtained, that may have been the result of it.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.C. 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-v-hawkins-nc-1833.