Fowler v. Merrill

52 U.S. 375, 13 L. Ed. 736, 11 How. 375, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1516
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 52 U.S. 375 (Fowler v. Merrill) 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
Fowler v. Merrill, 52 U.S. 375, 13 L. Ed. 736, 11 How. 375, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1516 (1851).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WOODBURY

delivered the opinion of the court..

' This was an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Arkansas.

The decree was in favor of Merrill, on a bill in chancery to foreclose a mortgage of certain negroes, described therein and executed to'him, November 25, 1837, to secure him for indorsing two notes made in April and June, 1837, the first payable in one year and the other in two years, for $ 12,578.42 in1 the aggregate. These notes run to F. L. Dawson or order, and were by him indorsed to the plaintiff, Merrill, and by him to-the Planters’ Bank for Dawson, who obtained the money thereon for himself. This mortgage was recorded December 29,1837.

*393 The notes not being taken up by Dawson, Merrill was compelled to pay their amount and interest, on the 4th of March* 1842.

The bill then proceeded to aver, that the defendants below, viz. James L. Dawson, James Smith,,William Dawson, and others, had since got possession of these negroes, some of one portion of them and some of another. And that, although they were bought with full notice of Merrill’s prior rights to them under the above mortgage, yet the respondents all refuse to deliver them to him, or pay their value and hire towards the discharge of the mortgage. Whereupon he prayed that each of them be required to deliver up the negroes in his possession, and account for their hire or to pay their value.

The court below decided, that $ 18,934 be paid to Merrill by the respondents, excepting Mrs. Bayler, and, .on failure to do it, that the redemption of them be barred, and other proceedings had, so as eventually to restore the slaves or their value to the mortgagee.

Several objections to this decree and other rulings below were made, which will be considered in the order in which they were presented.

Some of the depositions which were offered to prove important facts had been taken before “ a judge of the Probate Court” in Mississippi, when the act of Congress allows it in such cases before “ a judge of a county court.” 1. Stat. at Large, .88, 89.

But we .think, for such a purpose, a judge of probate is usually very competent, and is a county judge within the description of the law.

In Mississippi, where these depositions were taken, a Probate Court is organized for each eounty, and -is a court of record, having a seal. Hutch. Dig. 719, 721. ' Under these circumstances, were the competency of a probate judge' more doubtful, the objection is waived by the depositions having been taken over again in substance before the Mayor of Natchez.

The other objections to the depositions are in part overruled by the cases of Bell v. Morrison et al., 1 Peters, 356, and Patapsco Ins. Co. v. Southgate et al., 5 Peters, 617.

On the rest of them not so settled, we are satisfied-with the views .expressed below, without going into further details.

The next exception for our consideration that the time of the execution of the mortgage is not shown, and hence that it may have been after, the rights of the respondents .commenced.

But it must be presumed to have been exeeutéd at its date *394 till the contrary is shown; and its date was long before. Besides this, it was acknowledged probably the same day, being certified as done the 24th of November, 1837. And though this was done out of. the State, yet, if hot good for some purposes, it tends to establish the true time of executing the mortgage. It must also have been executed before recorded, and. that was December 29th of the same year, and long before the sale in October, 1841, under which the respondents claim.

The objection, that the handwriting of the record is Dawson’s, does not impair this fact, or the legality of the record as a record, it having doubtless' been allowed by the register', and being in the appropriate place in the book of records.

It is next insisted, that, as the negroes were left in the possession of Dawson after the mortgage, and were seized and sold to the respondents in October, 1841, to pay a debt due from Dawson to the Commercial Bank of Vicksburg, and as the respondents were innocent purchasers, and without notice of the mortgage, the latter was consequently void. This is the substance of several of the answers. Now, whether a sale or mortgage, without changing the possession of the property, is in most cases only prima facie evidence of fraud, or is per se fraud, whether in England or in some of the States, or in Arkansas where this mortgage and the sale took place, may not be fully settled in some of them, though it is clear enough in others. (See cases cited in 2 Kent’s Com. 406-412.) So whether a sound distinction may not exist at times between a mortgage and a sale, need not be examined, though it is more customary in all mortgages for the mortgager honestly to retain the possession, than to pass it to the mortgagee. U. States v. Hoe, 3 Cranch, 88; Haven v. Low, 2 N. Hamp, 15. See 1 Smith’s Leading Cases, 48, note;. Brooks v. Marbury, 11 Wheat. 82, 83; Bank of Georgia v. Higginbottom, 9 Pet. 60; Hawkins v. Ingolls, 4 Blackf. 35. And in conditional sales, especially on a condition precedent bona fide, the vendor, it is usually considered,-ought not to part 'with the possession till the condition is fulfilled. See in 9 Johns. 337, 340; 2 Wend. 599. See most of the cases collected in 2 Kent’s Com. 406.

, But it is unnecessary .to decide any of these points here, as, • in order to prevent any injury or fraud by the possession not being changed, a record of the mortgage ip in most of .the States required, and was made here within four or five weeks of the date of the mortgage, whereas the seizure and sale of the negroes'.to the respondents did not take place till nearly four years after.

Yet it is urged in answer-to'this,'that the statute of Arkan *395 sas, making a mortgage, acknowledged and-recorded, good, without any change of possession of the articles, did not take effect till March 11th, 1839, over a year after this record.

Such a registry, however, still tended to give publicity and notice of the mortgage, and to prevent, as well as repel fraud, and it would, under the statute of frauds in Arkansas, make the sale valid if bona fide and for a good consideration, unless against subsequent purchasers without notice. Rev. Statutes, ch. 65, § 7, p. 415.

There .is no sufficient proof here of actual fraud, or mala fides, or want of a full and valuable consideration. And hence the objection is reduced to the mere question of the want of notice in the respondents. In relation to that fact, beside what has already been stated, evidence was offered to show, that the existence of the mortgage was known and tqlked of in the neighborhood, and proclaimed publicly at the sale. -,

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Bluebook (online)
52 U.S. 375, 13 L. Ed. 736, 11 How. 375, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowler-v-merrill-scotus-1851.