Christy v. Sill

95 Pa. 380, 1880 Pa. LEXIS 333
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 25, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 95 Pa. 380 (Christy v. Sill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christy v. Sill, 95 Pa. 380, 1880 Pa. LEXIS 333 (Pa. 1880).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Paxson

delivered the opinion of the Court,

It was not denied that the facts found by the jury in their special verdict constitute-a clear case of fraud; that by reason of said fraud Jake Hill acquired no title that he can set up as against the heirs of William Sill, and that those claiming under Hill not being bona fide purchasers without notice, stand in no better position. The defendants, however, set up the Act of 22d of April 1856, as a bar to the plaintiff’s recovery. The sixth section of said act pro[384]*384vides that no right of entry shall accrue or action be maintained for a specific performance of any contract for the sale of any real estate, or for any damages for non-compliance with any such contract, or to enforce any equity of redemption after re-entry made for any condition broken, or to enforce any implied or resulting trust as to realty, but within five years after such contract was made, or such equity or trust accrued. * * * Provided, that as to any one affected with a trust, by reason of his fraud, the said limitation shall begin to run only from the discovery thereof; or when by reasonable diligence the party defrauded might have discovered the same.” The learned judge of the court below held that the case did not come within the letter of the Act of 1856, although he considered it to be within its spirit, and entered judgment for the plaintiffs below upon the verdict. This ruling was assigned for error here.

The sixth section of the Act of 1856 is not, strictly speaking, an Act of Limitation, but rather of repose. So much was said by the present chief justice in Douglass v. Lucas, 13 P. E. Smith, at page 12. It is “ an act for the greater certainty of title and more secure enjoyment of real estate,” the preamble of which declares its object to be that “the people should acquire, hold and improve their homesteads and estates in the confidence that they will not be lost by secret and unknown claims, or by fraud and perjury.” The court below was clearly right in saying that the case comes within its spirit. It is also within the mischief intended to be remedied. We have here an ejectment brought in 3875 for a valuable property and a recovery upon the ground of a fraud committed in 1863 by the purchaser at a sheriff’s sale. Said fraud consisted chiefly in obtaining the property at less than its value by falsely pretending that he was bidding it in for the family of the defendant in the execution, and by this and other devices deterring other persons from bidding. There must be some point of time when a purchaser of real estate at a judicial sale shall not have his title cut up by the roots by mere parol evidence of what took place at such sale.; or by a secret trust, disentombed after the lapse of years and set up by the uncertain recollection of witnesses as to remote transactions. The Act of 1856 was evidently intended to' to prevent titles being disturbed in this manner. It is a highly beneficial statute and ought to be liberally construed. It remains to consider whether this case comes within its protection.

That the act was intended to apply to cases of fraud appears both from the preamble and the body of the act. “Fraud” and “perjury” are mentioned in the preamble as among the causes that endanger titles, while the exception in the proviso as to per-song affected with a trust by reason of their fraud is conclusive that trusts of this character are within the act. We have then in the sixth section the case of implied and resulting trusts; the former, [385]*385implied trusts, including cases of trusts arising from fraud, which are generally known as trusts ex maleficio.

It was not denied that if Jake Hill was a trustee ex maleficio, the case comes within the act. The contention was that such trusts are confined to cases where there has been a confidential relation between the parties; or that they had a mutual interest in the subject of controversy and one of the parties by a fraud obtained an advantage over the other; that there was no confidential relation between Hill and Sill; that Hill owed no duty to Sill, but that his act was a bare, bald fraud committed upon Sill; that as a result, the title which Hill acquired by the sheriff’s sale was absolutely void under the Statute of 13th Elizabeth, and that Hill took no title and was clothed with no trust for Sill by reason of his fraud.

If there was a trust, it is clear it was what is known as a constructive trust, implied by the law from Hill’s fraud, and Hill was a trustee ex maleficio.

Much stress was given to the fact that Hill’s title was absolutely void under the Statute of 13th Elizabeth; that he stood as regards Sill as if no such conveyance had been made; that there was no title in him, and therefore no trust.

It is true, the Statute of 13th Elizabeth does say that as against the party intended to be defrauded, the title shall be “ utterly void, frustrate and of none effect.” Some little confusion. has arisen out of the use of the word “void” in this and other statutes by giving it too broad a meaning. If such title is absolutely void, nothing passes to the fraudulent grantee. Yet he takes sufficient title to pass a good title to an innocent purchaser, and this is so by the terms of the act. And I apprehend the party defrauded could ratify and confirm a conveyance void under the Statute of Elizabeth, which he could not do if it were void in the broad sense of the term. This subject is very fully discussed by Chief Justice Lowrie in Pearsoll v. Chapin, 8 Wright 9, and the authorities are there collected. In a later case (Seylar v. Carson, 19 P. F. Smith 81), the late Justice Williams, after citing Pearsoll v. Chapin with approval, proceeds to point out with great clearness the distinction between contracts which are void and those which are merely voidable. He says at page 87: “ The principle on which the distinction rests seems to be this: that is absolutely void which the law or the nature of things forbids to be enforced at all; as contracts to do an illegal act or omit a legal public duty; contracts in a form forbidden by law or made by persons having no legal power or capacity to contract; as bonds of married women. That is relatively void or voidable which the law condemns as a wrong to individuals and refuses to enforce against them; as contracts tainted with fraud or any other wrong against persons. A contract that is absolutely void cannot be ratified or confirmed, for that would be [386]*386giving sanction and validity to an agreement which the law declares to be illegal and refuses to enforce. But a contract relatively void, though it cannot be enforced against the defrauded party, is not so void as to vitiate a title under it as against a bona fide purchaser for value and without noticeor to prevent the party intended to be injured by it from renouncing the privilege which the law allows him of rejecting it altogether, or from ratifying it and thus making it his own.”

It may be said, as a general proposition, that whenever a person has obtained the property of another by fraud, he is a trustee ex maleficio for the person so defrauded. The reason of it is this: having perpetrated a fraud and by means thereof obtained the property of another, equity will not permit him to enjoy the fruits of his fraud, but will hold him to be but a trustee for the rightful owner. He is not trustee for- the title, for that he never acquired, but of the thing which he has in manual possession. These and similar cases are not technical' trusts, but constructive trusts, or trusts

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Bluebook (online)
95 Pa. 380, 1880 Pa. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christy-v-sill-pa-1880.