Den on dem. Fullenwider v. Roberts

20 N.C. 278
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 20 N.C. 278 (Den on dem. Fullenwider v. Roberts) 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 on dem. Fullenwider v. Roberts, 20 N.C. 278 (N.C. 1839).

Opinion

Ruffin, Chief Justice,

after stating the case as above, proceeded as follows: The counsel for the defendants contends, that the Court erred in laying down, in the first part of the instructions, that the deed to 'Dixon, if designed to defraud the creditors of Falls, was void as against purchasers from Falls as well as against his creditors; and it is insisted that it was a prejudice to the defendants to leave the case to the jury upon that erroneous and irrelevant proposition.

•But we think the judgment cannot be reversed on that ground. It is generally true, that deeds void by reason of bad faith, as to creditors, aro also void as to purchasers.— [281]*281They are not, indeed void as to the purchasers, because they are so as to the creditors, but by reason of the bad faith,which alike vitiates them as against both purchasers and creditors. There may, perhaps, be instances in which purchasers would not stand on the same footing with creditors. If so, this certainly is not a case of the kind; for if the deed be as to the creditors, it is so upon the grounds that the sale to Dixon was merely colourable and in trust for Falls or his J * family, and that the consideration was never to be paid, if we are to judge from the relation of the parties and the distant periods to which the payments were deferred. Now, the same considerations would render the deed . . , , so void as against a subsequent purchaser under the Statute 27th Elizabeth. See. 1 Rev. Stat. Ch. 50, Sec. 2. This is, we think, what his Honor is, in fairness, to be understood 7 J J ixieaa. At all events, the supposed error, if committed in this case, worked no prejudice to the defendants, and therefore furnishes no reason for setting aside the verdict. It could do the defendant no harm, because, clearly, the was here as much void under the 27th Elizabeth against the one class, as it was under the 13th"Elizabeth against the oth’er class of those persons. But furthermore, the defendants did not even contend that the deed was good against purchasers ; but in the instruction prayed by them, expressly admitted it to be void both as to creditors and purchasers, A 7 and relied only on this: — that the lessor of the plaintiff was not such a person as could claim the benefit of the statute for the protection of “purchasers for money or other good consideration” — The defendants cannot therefore comp'ain that the Court accepted their own admission on this point.

^ deeds roid by vea-son of bad creditors,40 asetopuich-' They are not indeed void as «''eso as lo creqit-ors, but by thebadfith "dl.illh aji,ke against asers'a'nd'1" xheremay perhaps be which par-not stalldon*he samelooting with creditors'

But upon the point on which the defence was placed, as just stated, the opinion of the Court is, that the law is for the defendants. Fifty dollars is not such a consideration for conveying an estate worth $25,000, as will defeat a prior voluntary conveyance. It is too palpably and glaringly deficient to amount to a purchase within the Statute 27th Eliza-' beth; and so, we think, the jury ought to.have been told.— They were, on the contrary, instructed that, notwithstanding the price was inadequate and greatly inadequate, they might [282]*282that the transaction was or was not fraudulent, according ^13 ^ntent °f parties; whether it was or was not merely defeat the previous deed. Without reading the instruc-hypercriticallv, we understand them to be substantial- , ,. . , , that any sum or money constitutes a purchaser under the and that, the inadequacy of the consideration, how-great, will not, of itself, take the case out of the statute the jury shall infer therefrom, as a fact, that the sec-conveyance was a contrivance merely to defeat the first.

In those opinions this Court does not concur. We think there are cases, and that the present is one of them, in which the inadequacy of the consideration alone, is sufficient to condemn the transaction, and strip from it the mask of a purchase; and that the Court ought so to have stated to the jury as a matter of law.

The opinion of his Honor as to the effect of inadequacy of price was, probably, drawn from the doctrine, that an agreement cannot be set aside, as between the parties, merely for that cause. But the reason of that is, that, if one will, without imposition, distress or undue advantage, make a bad bargain with his eyes open, he must stand .to it. His agreement is sufficient, because his interests alone are affected by it.. — . The cases of his creditors, however, or persons claiming under a previous conveyance from him, admit of a very different consideration. They fall within Lord Hahdwxctc’s fourth class of cases in Chesterfield vs Jansen: that of a fraud and imposition on third persons, not parties .to the agreement. To the complaint of such third person it cannot be replied, that he cannot call the consideration petty, and inadequate, because he had assented to it. As against creditors and prior donees, the price must be sufficient in itself to sustain the deed, without the aid of their acceptance; for no such acceptance exists. Then it is to bé enquired, what price will put the statute in operation, or what inadequacy will prevent its operation ? We think that a fair and reasonable price, according to the common mode of dealing between buyers and sellers, was meant by the Legislature; and that at all events, no case is within the statute in which the purchaser cannot with a good conscience claim to hold [283]*283the estate upon the ground and for the sake of the price paid, and not merely upon the score of the vendor’s agreement; and that the present is not such a case.

¡n the stat-g,?zot technical sense, for one -who act. -it ceivcdmits mea'nhig as denoting for buvT’&iriy? ®°"rse price. •

The term, “purchaser,” is not used in the statute in its technical sense, for one who comes to an estate by his own act. It is to be received in its popular meaning, as denoting who buys for money, and, as we think, buys fairly and course for a fair price. Yery soon after the act of Parliament passed, the case of Upton v Basset. Cro. Eliz. 445, was decided and by Judges, of whom some had assisted in framing , t the Act. It is there laid down that every purchaser ought not to have the benefit of the statute, nor even everyone that pays money, but only those who come to land upon good consideration lawfully, and not without consideration; nor by any indirect means. The case does not leave us at a loss, what we are to understand by the expressions “without consideration” and “indirect means;” for it proceeds diately to exemplify the principle laid down, by giving acase wherein one madea voluntary conveyance, and afterwards another procured him, for £500, or “other petty consideration,” to sell unto him the land, worth £500 per annum; and it was held, that, although he paid money, yet he should not avoid the first conveyance. It is clear that it was then understood, as matter of law, that the act only extended to such purchasers as gave a substantial price, or come in upon other good consideration, as marriage. When the consideration was pecuniary, a “ petty” -sum, when compared with the value of the land — and the amount of a year’s rent was thus denominated — would not help a second over the head of a first conveyance. In Doe v. Routledge, Cowp. 705, the same doctrine is found, yet more distinctly expressed.

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20 N.C. 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/den-on-dem-fullenwider-v-roberts-nc-1839.