Bradtfeldt v. Cooke

40 P. 1, 27 Or. 194, 1895 Ore. LEXIS 42
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 40 P. 1 (Bradtfeldt v. Cooke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradtfeldt v. Cooke, 40 P. 1, 27 Or. 194, 1895 Ore. LEXIS 42 (Or. 1895).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Moore.

The plaintiff contends that the new matter alleged in the answer does not constitute a defense to the suit, and that the court erred in overruling the demurrer thereto; while the defendant insists that she may plead her participation in the scheme to hinder, delay, or defraud the plaintiff’s creditors, and that, the note and mortgage being evidence of an executory contract, which, as she contends, is illegal, the court should not enforce it. The defendant’s contention proceeds upon the theory that, she being in pari delieto, the maxim, potior est conditio defendentis, applies to prevent a recovery in cases where the contract sought [199]*199to be enforced has not been executed. The rule is well settled that a court will not, in an action between the parties to an illegal contract, lend its aid either to annul it when executed, or enforce it when executory: Willis v. Hoover, 9 Or. 418; Bernard v. Taylor, 23 Or. 416 (18 L. R. A. 859, 37 Am. St. Rep. 593, 31 Pac. 968). But, while the decisions are quite uniform in affirming the foregoing rule, there is an irreconcilable conflict of judicial opinion in defining an illegal contract, and hence the important question to be considered is whether a conveyance made to hinder, delay, or defraud the grantor’s creditors is valid between the parties thereto when there is a consideration to support it. The statute of frauds, so far as it applies to the case at bar, declares that “eyery conveyance * * * of any estate or interest in lands * * * made with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, * * * as against the persons so hindered, delayed, or defrauded shall be void”: Hill’s Code, § 3059. While such conveyances are by the statute declared to be void as to the grantor’s creditors, they are, nevertheless, by the great weight of authority, binding and valid between the parties: Harris v. Harris, 23 Gratt. 737; Hess v. Final, 32 Mich. 515; Clemens v. Clemens, 28 Wis. 637 (9 Am. Rep. 520); Knapp v. Lee, 3 Pick. 452; Dyer v. Homer, 22 Pick. 253; Harbaugh v. Butner, 148 Pa. St. 273 (23 Atl. 983); Still v. Buzzell, 60 Vt. 478 (12 Atl. 209); Bump on Fraudulent Conveyances (2d ed.), 436, 451; Wait on Fraudulent Conveyances, § 395. But in Nellis v. Clark, 20 Wend. 24, it is held that a contract void as to creditors is void between the parties to it, and, when such contract is executory, it will not be enforced by the courts. The force of this authority is much weakened by the dissenting opinion of Nelson, C. J., in which he clearly distinguishes the difference between an illegal contract, in the strict sense of the term, and one fraudulent as respects creditors; the former kind being alto[200]*200gether void, and the latter void only as against the persons hindered, delayed, or defrauded. In the case of Harvey v. Varney, 98 Mass. 118, Foster, J., in commenting upon the question under discussion, said: “Nellis v. Clark, 20 Wend. 24, was decided in the supreme court of New York in eighteen hundred and thirty-eight, by Mr. Justice Cowen and Mr. Justice Bronson, and sustains the position which the present defendants maintain. But a dissenting opinion was delivered by the third judge, Chief Justice Nelson, now of the supreme court of the United States, the reasoning and conclusions of which commend themselves to our judgment in preference to the opinion of the majority of that court.” And Steele, J., in Carpenter v. McClure, 39 Vt. 9 (41 Am. Dec. 370), also said: “We are aware that in Nellis v. Clark, the court, citing the case from Maine, have made the distinction between executed and subsisting contracts under a statute very similar to ours, and have put their decision substantially upon the grounds which have been so well set forth in the exhaustive and learned argument of the defendant’s counsel. With great respect for the able court, the majority of whom concurred in that decision, we are unable to arrive at the same conclusion. So far as we are informed, contracts fraudulent as to creditors have been uniformly treated by our courts as not becoming thereby void between the parties; and such is clearly the spirit of our reported cases: Gifford v. Ford, 5 Vt. 532; Conner v. Carpenter, 28 Vt. 240; Boutwell v. McClure, 30 Vt. 676.” It would be useless to cite further authority upon this subject, for, as was said by Dixon, C. J., in Clemens v. Clemens, 28 Wis. 637, “It will be found, on examination, that these questions have been and are the subject of the most direct and positive conflict of opinion and decision among the courts of the different states of this Union, and sometimes among the courts of the same state. ”

[201]*2011. Amid such a conflict of authority it should be the duty of a court, when a question is raised for the first time, to adopt that line of decisions which, in its judgment, presents the better reason; and with this object in view we have carefully examined the numerous cases cited by counsel for both the plaintiff and defendant in their exhaustive briefs. It is admitted that where it appears from the plaintiff’s own case, or by proper plea of the defendant, that the contract which is the subject of the suit is void because illegal, the court will not lend its aid either to enforce on one hand or give relief on the other: Buchtel v. Evans, 21 Or. 309 (28 Pac. 67); Ah Doon v. Smith, 25 Or. 89 (34 Pac. 1093). But there is a marked distinction between contracts which are void ab initio and those which are void only as to third parties: Harris v. Harris, 23 Gratt. 737. A contract which was void when executed cannot be made valid by ratification of the parties: Wait on Fraudulent Conveyances, § 489; McIntosh v. Lee, 57 Iowa, 356 (10 N. W. 895); Atlee v. Finck, 75 Mo. 100 (42 Am. Rep. 385). Nor is there any method whereby an illegal contract, — one which never had life, — can be rendered efficacious. A fraudulent conveyance is not void, but merely voidable at the suit of the creditor, and is therefore capable of ratification: Bump on Fraudulent Conveyances, 457; Wait on Fraudulent Conveyances, § 482. A contract entered into to defraud creditors is clearly against the policy of the statute of frauds, as well as against the general policy of the law; but it is not illegal in the strict sense of the term, for the wrong may be condoned by the creditor, and the transaction will thus become purged of the fraud: Millington v. Hill, 47 Ark. 301 (1 S. W. 547). The conveyance being valid between the parties to it, and not illegal in the strict sense of the term, it follows that the defendant should not have been [202]*202permitted to plead the defense interposed, and there was error in overruling the demurrer.

2. The plaintiff was the owner of lot five in block twenty-one, and, having executed a deed to the defendant for lot five in block fifty-one, in which she had no interest, the question is presented whether there was any consideration for the note and mortgage. The plaintiff having in her complaint described the property as lot five in block twenty-one in Albina Addition to Portland, Oregon, the defendant, in her second defense, inter alia,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Matter of Marriage of Smith and Smith
705 P.2d 197 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1985)
Mayti v. Singer Mfg. Co.
184 A.2d 670 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1962)
State Highway Commission v. Kendrick
363 P.2d 1078 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1961)
Windle, Adm'x v. Flinn
251 P.2d 136 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1952)
State v. Western Union Telegraph Co.
80 A.2d 342 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1951)
Severance v. Knight-Counihan Co.
177 P.2d 4 (California Supreme Court, 1947)
Fisher v. Lane
149 P.2d 562 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1944)
Giddings v. Giddings
119 P.2d 280 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1941)
Citizens Nat. Bank of Orange, Va. v. Waugh
78 F.2d 325 (Fourth Circuit, 1935)
Hill v. Harritt
12 P.2d 1021 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1932)
Italian-American Bank v. Lepore
246 P. 792 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1926)
Graham v. Allen
241 P. 1007 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1925)
Massachusetts Trust Co. v. Loon Lake Copper Co.
4 F.2d 847 (Ninth Circuit, 1925)
Booth-Kelly Lumber Co. v. Oregon & California R.
193 P. 463 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1920)
Temple v. Harrington
176 P. 430 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1918)
Columbia River Door Co. v. Todd
175 P. 443 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1918)
Oregon Mill & Grain Co. v. Hyde
169 P. 791 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1918)
Swank v. Moisan
166 P. 962 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1917)
Guernsey v. Marks
106 P. 334 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1910)
Harris v. McCrary
105 P. 558 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 P. 1, 27 Or. 194, 1895 Ore. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradtfeldt-v-cooke-or-1895.