Davis v. Turner

4 Va. 422
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1848
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Va. 422 (Davis v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Turner, 4 Va. 422 (Va. 1848).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

The slaves in. controversy in this case were sold by Wyche to the appellant Davis for their full value, actually paid in cash at the date of the contract; and on the same day, after the agreement was completely made, but before the payment of the price, or the execution of the bills of sale, Davis, at the solicitation of Wyche, and for the mutual accommodation of the parties, hired the slaves to him for a few months, at certain specified rates yielding an adequate compensation for their services. The transaction was perfectly fair and bona fide, without any purpose of defeating the rights of creditors, none of whom were in point of fact in any wise thereby deceived or defrauded. And we are called upon to decide whether this sale is to he condemned as fraudulent and void, and the property subjected to the demand of the appellee Turner, who as creditor of Wyche, levied an attachment thereupon while in possession of the latter, before the expiration of the period for which he had hired the same from Dams. This requires a consideration of what is sometimes called the doctrine of fraud per se.

[426]*426It seems free from doubt, and to be conceded in all discussions of the subject, that in sales of personal goods actual delivery is not necessary to the transmission of the title; and that by the contract of sale and present payment of the price, or an agreement to pay it thereafter, the purchaser acquires the right of property and may recover it by action. Thus, if A sells to B a horse in presentí, and receives payment therefor, or B’s note or promise to pay at a future day, the title passes from A and becomes vested in B, and is not affected by the failure of A to deliver, or of B to demand, the immediate possession. Now, as the dominion over a man’s property belongs to him and not to his creditors, they can subject to their demands only the right which remains in him, and not that from which he has lawfully parted. The advocates, therefore, of the doctrine in question properly rest it, not upon the incompleteness, but the falseness of the purchaser’s title: they do not deny that it would be perfect, if it were fair; but they say that the law condemns it as fraudulent. Hence it is material to enquire in what the fraud consists.

A creditor has no right to insist that his debtor’s resources shall remain in any given shape. The latter may exchange his goods for any other property; he may sell them and put the money in his pocket, or apply it in his discretion to his debts, his purchases or his maintenance. The creditor having no specific lien must resort to the personal remedies given by law for coercion of payment. -But the debtor cannot divest himself of his apparent, and at the same time retain his substantial ownership, so as to elude the lawful pursuit of his creditors. His doing so in any form or shape is a trick, contrivance or fraud, which the law condemns, and frustrates.

The fraud is therefore to be found in the falsehood of the transaction; in the pretence of a sale when there is none; in the reservation of an interest for the grantor [427]*427under the cover of a transmission of his right to the grantee. The genuineness of the consideration is of course essential to the validity of the sale. Tf that be fabricated, the conclusion of fraud is irresistible, whether the grantor retains or the grantee has acquired the possession of the property. In the former case, the continued substantial ownership of the grantor is manifest: in the latter, the falsehood can be accounted for only by a design to delay, hinder or defeat his creditors. In neither case, can the collusive purchaser acquire any title by the contract.

On the other hand, if there be nothing feigned in the consideration ; if the property has been really sold for a fair and adequate price, actually paid or secured, it is difficult to conceive upon what ground the transaction can be properly treated as fraudulent, though the possession has not been delivered to the purchaser, in the absence of all other evidence of a fraudulent purpose. At least, it would seem reasonable that the grantee should be at liberty to prove that he has acted with perfect good faith, without any design to deceive or injure the grantor’s creditors, and especially that in fact the creditor complaining has been in no wise deceived or defrauded.

Thus, it seems to me, the essential enquiry, in most cases, is whether the consideration be fair and adequate or false and feigned; a question upon which there may be no positive evidence that can be safely relied on, and which must then of necessity be determined by the circumstances attending the transaction, such as the condition and resources of the parties, their connection and dealings with each other, and their course of conduct in relation to the subject. And upon such an enquiry, it is difficult to predicate of any single circumstance that it ought to be conclusive.

It is true that in the most natural and usual course of things, a fair purchaser desires and obtains the posses[428]*428sion of the property and hence its being retained by the grantor gives rise to a suspicion of fraud, such as in view of the frequent arts and contrivances against the rights of creditors, warrants a presumption against the fa¡rness of the transaction, requiring full and satisfactory explanation ; a presumption which cannot be too strongly stated, to the effect of throwing the whole burthen of proving the genuineness and sufficiency of the consideration upon the grantee, and in the naked case of an alleged absolute sale, and possession notwithstanding retained, requiring the conclusion of fraud. But I cannot perceive any sound principle upon which the mere nondelivery of possession can be treated as conclusive against the fairness and good faith of the contract.

When it is said that the grantor’s retaining possession in the case of an absolute sale, renders the contract per se fraudulent, or fraudulent in law, I presume nothing more is usually meant than that it raises a presumption of fraud, so strong as to overrule all evidence whatever to the contrary. Accordingly, most advocates of the doctrine rest it upon the ground, that the inconsistency of the possession with the terms and effect of the deed, is evidence of fraud, which evidence they hold to be conclusive. Here then we perceive the principle already adverted to, that the fraud is to be found in the falsehood of the transaction, and when that falsehood is detected in the alleged consideration, I admit it to be conclusive. I admit, moreover, that the inconsistency of the possession with the terms and effect of the deed, is a circumstance to prove the consideration to be false and feigned; and, in the absence of proof to the contrary, should be considered sufficient for that purpose. But it cannot be denied that it is a circumstance which does not lead necessarily to that result, and sometimes happens not to be irreconcilable with a fair and honest contract, free from all imagination of fraud. If, therefore, the object be to ascertain the merits of the case, it [429]*429seems to me that to hold the inference conclusive, and in effect an estoppel to all further investigation, is against the plainest principles of presumptive evidence.

We are not however left to general reasoning on the subject.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Va. 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-turner-va-1848.