Den Ex. Dem. Dobson v. Erwin

18 N.C. 569
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 N.C. 569 (Den Ex. Dem. Dobson v. Erwin) 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
Den Ex. Dem. Dobson v. Erwin, 18 N.C. 569 (N.C. 1836).

Opinion

Ruffin, Chief Justice.

— It is yielded in the case stated in the record, that the whole of the money paid to the sheriff, was the money of Dobson, the debtor in the execution, and that the supposed purchase therewith by the daughter Nancy Young, and the deed taken by her, was upon a dishonest contrivance between those persons, to defeat, thereby, the father’s other creditors. Yet, these facts and intents to the contrary, notwithstanding, his Honor declared his opinion to be, that the sale and deed did not only apparently, but really, divest the estate in law, out of Joseph Dobson, and vest it in his daughter, as against the lessors of the plaintiff, and the creditors whom they represent. Under that opinion, the plaintiff was non-suited, and appealed.

This Court cannot adopt the opinion of his Honor; but deems it erroneous. It seems to have been founded on the circumstances of the judgment and execution being for a just debt, and the good faith', on which the creditor and the sheriff acted. The sheriff is' treated as the owner of the land sold, or, at least, as the authorised vendor, making a Sale, deemed by him to be a true sale at the time; and it is thence inferred, that the sale must be valid, and his deed effectual.

The Court does not view the subject in that light. We think the sale and conveyance to Nancy Young fraudulent and void within the act of 1715. In terms that statute includes suits, judgments and executions as well as feoffments, gifts, grants, and other alienations and conveyances. The spirit and true construction of it extends to every possible art and device, by which a debtor aims to pass the title of his property from himself to another, to the intent to defeat or hinder his creditor. The intervention of the process of the law at the instance of a creditor, who is innocent of the guilty scheme, and ignorant that he is made subservient to its execution, cannot protect the intents on which the other parties acted, from investigation; nor confirm those parts of the transac *573 tion by which those parties would reserve or acquire valuablefinterests. The creditor stands on his good faith. But the others cannot involve his innocence to purge their bad faith, or to conceal it. The creditor was entitled to his own debt. He received the money and may retain it. The payment was right and is valid. But “ every act as well judicial as others, which, of themselves are just and lawful, being mixed with fraud and deceit, are, in judgment of law, wrongful and unlawful.” Fermor’s case, 3 Rep. 77; and a fraudulent estate,” [gained by one thus mixing fraud with what would be otherwise right] “ is no estate in the judgment of law. In the case before us, what did the law and justice demand ? That the debtor should pay the debt; and, if he could not, or would not, that the sheriff should make it of his estate by sale. In fact the debt was paid. By whom? ' By the debtor, through the hands of his daughter, with the debtor’s own money. That is the reality of the case; and thus far being fair and proper, it stands. When the debtor and his daughter endeavour to give to that reality the appearance of another thing, namely, that the debt was not paid by the debtor, and with his money, but was paid by the daughter and with her money, advanced as the price of the land exposed to sale, they introduce falsehood and an injurious deception into the title sét up by the daughter, which vitiates it. That part of the apparent transaction is delusive. As the money was the father’s and not the daughter’s, there was in truth no price and no sale, as between the father and daughter. The sale, which the creditor and sheriff thought they were making, was a mere fiction; and the mistake of those persons cannot impart to it actual existence. It assumed, indeed, the form of a legal sale and conveyance by the sheriff. But if the sheriff had known the truth, he would not have been obliged, and could not justly and lawfully have made the deed. He also was imposed on; and, surely, the authors of that deception cannot adduce it as a screen from animadversion by other persons, on whom the artifice, if successful, operates still more injuriously. That a deed obtained from a sheriff by deceit, is not good, and may be *574 impeached at law, was decided in the case of Den on demise of M‘Kerall v. Cheek, 2 Hawks, 343. But this case need not be put on that point. It rests upon the solid ground that, notwithstanding the form which it took, there was, in fact and in truth, rio sale; and, consequently, the sheriff had no authority to convey. It is a flagrant attempt to disguise, under .the form of a sale by the law, an arrangement of the debtor’s property, made by himself, for his own benefit, or without any consideration, for the benefit of his child, to the disappointment of his creditors. It is a perversion of the process of the law, to a.purpose not intended by the law, but forbidden alike by it and by common honesty; the making a sale under it, to raise money, which the debtor already had, which he had intended to apply, and which he did apply to the satisfaction of that very debt. The law would be false to itself,' if the substance of such a transaction could be secured from scrutiny by the shell of mere form, if it treated as a sale, made by its officer, under its authority, that .which is, under the garb of such a sale, so palpably a voluntary disposition by the debtor himself, upon premeditated and preconcerted' fraud between him and the pretended purchaser.

The correctness of the foregoing general observations seems to us to be incontrovertible. If so, they must, we think, remove the difficulty which was felt in the Superior Court. Whatever may be the effect, as between themselves, or those claiming under them by contract,'of the form imparted by the debtor and his accomplice to the transaction, the law characterises it as “ feigned, covetous and fraudulent,” in respect of creditors, and enacts that it shall be “ utterly void, frustrate, and of no effect — the •pre-tence, colour, and feigned consideration to the contrary notwithstanding.” This principle being enacted by statute, and the subject of the controversy being whether an instrument, which purports to pass the legal estate from the debtor, which was before in him, is valid or void, as being without or within the rule thus created, it seems to us to be essentially and necessarily within the jurisdiction of a court of law, to examine into the' consideration and purposes of the conveyance, and if they should be found to *575 be those forbidden by the statute, to apply and enforce its enactments. This we had considered as settled law. The position laid down by his Honor, implies, that such a conveyance is necessarily valid at law, notwithstanding the intent stated, because a trust arose between the parties, which could be enforced in equity, and can be enforced there only.

If there be a trust, the change of the jurisdiction must be acknowledged. But that takes for granted the very question in dispute; which is, whether the daughter gained any estate, out of which a trust could arise. That depends on the validity of the deed to her: and that, again, upon the intent and purpose on which she took it — ■ into which it is competent to a court of law to inquire.

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Related

Den on Demise of M'Kerall v. Cheek
9 N.C. 343 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1823)
Vick v. . Flowers
5 N.C. 321 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1809)

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.C. 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/den-ex-dem-dobson-v-erwin-nc-1836.