Doe on Dem. O'Daniel v. Crawford

15 N.C. 197
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 N.C. 197 (Doe on Dem. O'Daniel v. Crawford) 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
Doe on Dem. O'Daniel v. Crawford, 15 N.C. 197 (N.C. 1833).

Opinions

Gaston, Judge.

This was an action of ejectment, and upon the trial the plaintiff endeavored to shew a title in his lessor by a deed from I-lenry O’Daniel to his children, and the defendant sot up a title under a sale and conveyance from the sheriff upon executions issued against Henry 'O’Daniel subsequent to the delivery of this deed. The controversy turned mainly upon the question whether O’Daniel’s deed was fraudulent and void as against the creditors in these executions. The jury found a verdict for the defendant, and judgment having been rendered accordingly, the plaintiff appealed to this court.

We have not the right to decide, nor the means of knowing whether the verdict of the jury was correct or incorrect. The facts testified are brought before us so far only as to enable us to see the application of the charge of the Judge, and to ascertain whether’ in the instructions given, or in the instructions refused, any error has been committed which might have led the jury toan improper conclusion. The appellant excepts to a part of the charge as erroneous in law, and also complains that the Judge refused to give certain instructions which were prayed for by him, and which in law' ought to have been given.

The part of the charge excepted to is in these wordsr “ that the question had been raised in the argument how “far a person indebted, was permitted to dispose of his “property by a voluntary conveyance — that it was a “ general principle that a man should be just before he “ was generous. If he was indebted and voluntarily “conveyed such a portion of his estate as left an insuf- “ ficiency for the payment of his debts, that such convey- “ was inoperative as to the debts which he then owed. “ If he was indebted and disposed of a part of his property by voluntary conveyances, leaving enough to *201 “satisfy the claims of his creditors, hut by some casn- alty or accident the property reserved should bo destroyed, when there had not been any delay in the creditors endeavoring to obtain their debts, and no improper indulgence given by them, that a voluntary “conveyance under such circumstances would be inval- ‘‘ id to defeat such debts.” In a subsequent part of the charge after declining to give the instructions asked for by the plaintiff, the Judge laid down the above rule in a form more favorable to the voluntary donee. I do not however deem it necessary to examine the effect of fliis subsequent modification, because upon deliberate reflection, I am satisfied that the plaintiff lias no cause of complaint against the part of the charge excepted to, and that no rule more favorable to voluntary conveyances than the rule there stated can be tolerated, without violence to morality, public policy anti long established law.

That the obligations of justice arc superior to the daims of affection, and that no man can rightfully bestow a favor at the expense of his creditor, is not questioned in the ingenious and able argument which has been urged on the part of the appellant. But it is asked may not these obligations and claims be reconciled — may not justice and generosity be both consulted — and is not this harmonious discharge of both classes of duty provided for, when the donor takes care, while giving away a part of his property, to reserve what will probably be sufficient to answer the demands of his creditors ? To the morality of such an arrangement, it seems to me there are obvious and unanswerable objections. It does not provide for the discharge of duties of different grades in their relative order. It does not even place the demands of right on a footing with the claims for bounty, but inverts the order for moral preference. It secures the latter — confessedly of inferior and imperfect obligation— beyond the correction of mistake and the reach of casualty, while it exposes the former — those of superior and. perfect obligation — to all the dangers arising from error of judgment and the contingencies of time an$ xnisphance. *202 jf} contrary to probability, enough has not in fact been reserved for the creditor, and either he must lose the debt Qr .¡.¡1C ¿onco pc disappointed of the gift, can it be a question of morals on whom the loss should fall ? In the estimate of conscience no man owns more than what remains after the satisfaction of the just dues to others, and every donation which he makes is of the property of his creditor if by such g’ift they arc defeated. The duty of the debtor is to pay his creditor if ho have the ability to do so. The donee ought not to hold, and honestly cannot hold tiie property given, if it be needed for the payment of a creditor of the donor prior to the gift. Public policy is in this respect, as it always ought to be, consistent with the injunctions of morality and will not admit of the adoption of a rule less strict or precise. That credit which is indispensable for the commerce of life, can Scarcely be commanded in any country, where a debtor has the power to jeopard an existing debt by the gratuitous alienation of his effects. It would be strange if the common law, which has been termed the perfection of reason, had not recognized these dictates of justice and maxims of policy. In the progress of society, when with the refinements of life the artifices of deceit had greatly multiplied, it might well have been deemed expedient by the Legislative authority to interfere with positive enactments, the more explicitly to denounce, and the more effectually to embarrass and defeat contrivances at unfair alienation, which threatened injury to creditors and purchasers. The well known statutes of the 13th Elizabeth, almost expressly re-enacted by our act of 1715, and of the 27th of Elizabeth, were enacted for this end. But Lord Coke calls on the student to notice with respect to the first of these statutes, that it uses the words “declared,ordained and enacted,” and remarks “by force “ of which word declared it appeareth what the law was “before the making of the statute.” Co. Lit. 76 a. 290 b. Lord Mansfield observes in the case of Codogan v. Kennett, Cowper 434, “that the principles and rules of the “ common law as now universally known and under- “ stood, are so strong against fraud in every shape that *203 ;s the common laiv was calculated to attain every end “proposed by these statutes.” Whether the observation of this great judge be’ correct or notin its full extent, particularly in reference to the statute of 27th Elizabeth, there can be little doubt, and so it lias been declared by this court in the case of Morgan v. McClelland, (3 Dev. 83.) to be perfectly correct with respect to alienations attempted against existing rights. Certainly ever since the statute of the 7 3th Elizabeth either upon common law principles or by construction of that statute, a voluntary disposition of property has always been held void against a prior creditor thereby attempted to be defeated.

Distinction as to equitable relief between cases of actual

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.C. 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-on-dem-odaniel-v-crawford-nc-1833.