Ford v. Douglas

46 U.S. 143, 12 L. Ed. 89, 5 How. 143, 1847 U.S. LEXIS 306
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 26, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 46 U.S. 143 (Ford v. Douglas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford v. Douglas, 46 U.S. 143, 12 L. Ed. 89, 5 How. 143, 1847 U.S. LEXIS 306 (1847).

Opinion

Mr. Justice NELSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a décree of the Circuit Court of the United States, held in. and for the Eastern District of the State of Louisiana.

The complainants below, the appellees'here, filed their bill against Christopher Ford, the appellant, and Robertson, the marshal of the district, for the purpose of obtaining injunctions to stay -proceedings upon the several judgments and executions, which Ford had recovered in the Circuit Court of the United States against one Stephen Douglas, as executor of J. S. Douglas, deceased.

The judgments amounted to some f 18,000, and the marshal had levied upon two plantations, and the slaves thereon, of which the testator, J. S. Douglas, had died seized and possessed.

The bill set forth .that Stephen Douglas, against whom the judgments had been recovered, neither in his Own right nor as exadutor of J. S. Douglas,, deceased, had any title to or interest in the plantations and slaves, which had been seized under and by virtue .of the ■said executions ; and that the same formed no part or portion of the succession of the testator in the hands of the said executors to be administéred. But that the whole of the said plantations and slaves, including the crops of cotton, and all other things thereon, were *164 the true and lawful property, of the complainants ; that thpy were in the lawful possession of the same, and had been for a long time before the issuing of the executions and seizure complained of; and had acquired the said property, and the title thereto, at a probate sale of all the property belonging to the estate and succession of the said testator, — which sale was lawfully made, and vested in the complainants a good and valid title. All which would appear by the proces verbal of the said-adjudications, and the mortuary, proceedings annexed to and forming a part of the bill.

An injunction was granted, in pursuance of the. prayer of the bill, staying all proceedings on the judgments rendered in the three several suits, and also on the executions issued thereon against the property.

Christopher Ford, the adjudged creditor, in answer to the. bill, denied the validity of the probate sales of the plantations and slaves to the complainant's ; and charged that they were effected, and the pretended title thereto acquired, by fraud and covin between.the executor, Stephen Douglas, and the executrix, the widow of the tes--tator, and one of the complainants, for the purpose of hindering and defrauding the creditors of the estate ; that in furtherance of this design a large amount of simulated and fraudulent' claims of the executor and executrix were presented against the succession, to wit, $53,000 and upwards in favor of the former, and $76,000 arid upwards in favor of the latter, which were received and allowed by the probate ■ court without any vouchers or legal evidence of the genuirieness of the debts against the estate ; that- these simulated and fraudulent claims were made the foundation of an application to the said probate court for an order to sell the two plantations, and slaves thereon, under whom the widow and one Archibald Douglas became the purchasers at' the probate sale ; that neither had paid any part of the purchase-money to the executor or probate court; and which was the only' title of the complainants to the property in question, upon which the defendant had caused the executions to be levied.

In confirmation of the fraud, thus alleged in the probate sales in the parish of Madison and State of Louisiana, the defendant further charges, that the testator died seized and possessed, also, of a large plantation and slaves and personal property therein situate in the county of Claibomé and State of Mississippi, inventoried at upwards of $70,000, besides notes and accounts to the amount of $ 161,000 and -upwards, that the said plantations and slaves were, on application of Stephen Douglas, the executor, to the probate court in that State, and an order for that purpose obtained, sold, and purchased in by the widow and executrix for about the sum' of $40,000, and that the personal estate, of $161,000 and upwards, of notes and accounts, were not, and have not been, .accounted for by the executor to the court of probate.

*165 In short, according to the answer of the defendant,, the estate and succession of the deceased debtor, inventoried at about' the sum of $ 300,000,. and for aught that áppears available to that amount, has been sold and transferred through the instrumentality arid agency of family connections, under color of proceedings apparently in due form in the probate court, into the hands of the widow and a brother of the deceased, without adequate consideration, if consideration at all, and with the intent to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of the estate, and particularly the defendant.

The complainants excepted to the answer filed bv the defendant, because the matters and doings set forth therein could not, in law, be inquired into in the present suit, or proceedings instituted by the said complainants, and prayed that they bright have the benefit of their injunctionj and that it might be made perpetual.

And thereupon it was agreed that the'case might be set down for argument on the matters of law arising on the bill and answer,; and that if the judgment of the court in matters, of law. should be for the defendant, the complainants might join issue on the fact, and testimony be taken in the usual manner.

The court', after argument of counsel, decreed that the exception of the complainants to the defendant’s answer was well taken, and gave leave to answer over, which was declined ; and, therefore, the court adjudged and decreed that the injunction theretofore awarded in the case should be made perpetual; .and it was further adjudged and decreed that complainants recover the costs of suit, without prejudice to the right of the defendant to any action he might think proper.

The decision of the court below, and the view which, we -have ■ taken of the case here, do not 'involve the question, whether the matters set forth in the answer sufficiently established the fact that a fraud had been committed by the complainants against creditors, in the several sales and transfers of the property in question, through, the iristrumentality of the probate, court, nor, as it respects the effect of the fraud, if established, upon the title derived under these sales. If the . case depended upon the decision of these questions, we entertain little doubt as to the judgment that .. should be given.

The ground of the decision below, and of the argument here, is, that the complainants were not bound to ■ answer the allegations of fraud against their title, in the-aspect, in which the case was presented to the court; that a title derived under a public sale,, in due form of law, by the probate judge, protected them in the full and peaceable possession and enjoyment of the property until the conveyance was vacated and set aside by a direct proceeding Instituted for that purpose ; and that this step, on the párt of the judgment creditors, was essential, upon the established law of the State of *166 Louisiana, before he could subject the property to the satisfaction of his judgment.

We

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Bluebook (online)
46 U.S. 143, 12 L. Ed. 89, 5 How. 143, 1847 U.S. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-douglas-scotus-1847.