Clement v. . Cozart

17 S.E. 486, 112 N.C. 412
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 17 S.E. 486 (Clement v. . Cozart) 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
Clement v. . Cozart, 17 S.E. 486, 112 N.C. 412 (N.C. 1893).

Opinion

MacRae, J.:

Was the one issue submitted by the Court such that the appellant was not denied an opportunity to have the law applicable to any material portions of the testimony fairly presented and passed upon by the jury, it being settled that beyond this rule there is no limit to the discretion of the presiding Judge in settling issues? Denmark v. Railroad, 107 N. C., 185.

The main point in this case was whether the deed was fraudulent as to subsequent creditors as well as to creditors existing at the time of its execution, if it were indeed fraudulent as to the latter class. The plaintiff’s intestate was a subsequent creditor.

The issues -which arose upon the allegations of the complaint, as to the death of plaintiff’s intestate and the appointment of plaintiff as administrator, and the denial of knowledge by defendants, as appear by articles one and two of the complaint and article one of the answer, were not mentioned, and we presume were not insisted upon by defendants.

His Honor submitted but one issue: “Was the deed executed by James C. Cozart to I). C. Lunsford and Thomas G. Cozart, dated November 21, 1871, made with intent to hinder, delay or defraud Amos Gooch f”

We by no means hold that his Honor was required to submit the issues presented by plaintiff’s counsel, although, *415 if lie lmd deemed best to have submitted issues upon several facts alleged and denied in order to bring the principal question the- more clearly before the jury, or in order to enable the Court upon the ascertainment of facts by the jury to declare the law, he might' have done so. The decisions are becoming quite numerous on this subject. The question, What are the material issues? arises in each case. We refer to Braswell v. Johnson, 108 N. C., 150, and to Clark’s Code, sec. 393.

The execution of the deed was admitted. The complaint alleged that at the time of its execution the grantor, J. Cl Cozart, was insolvent, greatly indebted beyond his ability to pay, and that the deed was executed with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the then and all subsequent creditors of said J. C. Cozart, and that the grantees and their alleged cestuis que trust had notice thereof.

It alleged the- indebtedness of said J. C. Cozart with other persons upon a bond to plaintiff’s intestate, the judgment thereon and a partial payment, and that a large part thereof is still due and unpaid.

It charged that said deed was made upon some secret trust for the use and benefit of the grantees; that no part of the recited consideration had ever been paid nor was ever intended to be paid; and averred that the said deed was intended to be a voluntary conveyance.

It further alleged the death of said J. C. Cozart, the administration by one of the defendants, the want of personal assets, the necessity of a sale of the lands of intestate to pay his debts, the conveyance by T). C. Lunsford and Thomas G. Cozart, the grantees in the deed above named, of the lands described therein for the recited consideration of one dollar, to W. AY Cozart and his heirs in trust for the use and benefit of the said James C. Cozart and his wife for life, and after the death of the survivor to be sold and *416 the proceeds divided among the children and heirs at law of the said -James C. Cozart; and that the defendants are the only heirs at law of said J. C.-Cozart.

The answer admits the judgment in favor of plaintiff as alleged and the payment thereon as alleged, the death of J. C. Cozart and the administration by defendant W. W. Cozart, and the want of personal assets. It denies all fraud, and denies that said J. C. Cozart died seized of the land in question, or that it will be necessary for the defendant administrator to sell lands to pay debts.

The plaintiff undertook and offered evidence tending to prove that at the time of the execution, of the deed first mentioned J. C. Cozart was indebted to several persons and was insolvent. It will be seen by reference to the statement of the case that all of the debts alleged to have been due and owing by the said J. C. Cozart at the time of the execution of the deed were contracted in the years 1857 and 1858, except a judgment rendered against him in 1869, and that upon a bond for $2,000, made by J. C. Cozart and W. W. Cozart on June 1, 1857, a payment had been made in February, 1870. So that according to the evidence there was a large amount of indebtedness of J. C. Cozart at the time of the execution of said deed, but that at the date of the beginning of this action the presumption of payment had arisen if payment were pleaded upon all of the said bonds, and that an action upon the said judgment would be barred if the statute of limitations were pleaded thereto, provided there were no disabilities which prevented the running of the statute.

The plaintiff offered evidence tending to prove that said deed was made to a son and a son-in-law of the grantor; that it was secretly made, and the registration thereof long delayed; that the grantor remained in possession exercising acts of ownership over said land all his life; that some tliir *417 teen years after the execution of said deed the grantees conveyed the said lands to another son of the said J. 0. Cozart as trustee for him and his wife, and under such limitation as to render said lands unavailable at the instance of creditors. Plaintiff’s counsel contended that the fact proved raised the presumption of a secret trust for the benefit of the grantor and in fraud of his creditors, and that the evidence tended to prove that the |2,000 recited consideration had never been paid, or raised a presumption to that effect which the defendants had failed to rebut. They contended that under the evidence a presumption had arisen which had not been rebutted; that the said deed was fraudulent and void, not only as to those existing at the time of its execution, but as to all subsequent creditors. They further contended that if the deed was made with intent to defraud the then existing creditors it was void, and .that as there were still subsisting debts 'which existed at the time of the execution of the deed, it was void also as to subsequent creditors.

We are of the opinion that, in order to a clear understanding of the matters in controversy, it was necessary to have submitted an issue as to the intent of -J. C. Cozart, at the time of the execution of the deed, to hinder, delay or defraud his then existing creditors; for although it might not be clear to the jurv that there was an intent in the mind of the donor at the time of the execution of the deed, in 1871, to hinder Amos Gooch, who became a creditor in 1877, yet if they should find that it was executed with the intent to defraud the then existing creditors, and if it should further appear that any of the then existing debts were still in existence and capable of being satisfied out of the lands in question, if said deed should be declared void, in that case the deed being void as to one was void as to all, and the plaintiff is entitled to his relief.

*418 Up to the Act of 1840 (section 1547 of The Code)

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17 S.E. 486, 112 N.C. 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clement-v-cozart-nc-1893.