Gordon v. Cannon

18 Va. 655
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1868
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Va. 655 (Gordon v. Cannon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. Cannon, 18 Va. 655 (Va. 1868).

Opinions

MONCURJ5, P.

Whatever may be the law and course of judicial decision in other States on the subject, there can now be no doubt but that in this State, a debtor in failing circumstances may make a valid assignment of his whole estate (subject, however, to existing liens thereon), for the benefit of his creditors, in such order of priority as he may choose to prescribe in the assignment; and though his estate be insufficient for the payment of all his debts, he may lawfully subject it, in the first place, to the payment in full of such of his debts as he may choose to prefer, and then to the payment pro rata of the claims of such of his other creditors as may, in a limited period, (which should be reasonable,) accept the terms of the assignment, and release him from all further or other liability on account of said claims. And such an assignment may be valid, even though it do not direct any surplus which may remain after satisfying the claims of the accepting and releasing creditors to be applied to the payment of his other debts, or ' any of them; or even though *it direct any such surplus to be paid to the debtor himself.

That such is the settled doctrine in this State, is abundantly shown by the cases of Skipwith’s ex’or v. Cunningham, &c., 8 Leigh 271; Kevan & als. v. Branch, 1 Gratt. 274; and Phippen v. Durham & als., 8 Id. 457. Whether the doctrine be sound in its origin or not, it ought to govern our courts until otherwise provided by the legislature. As was said by Allen, P., in an opinion concurred in by all the other judges, in Dance & als. v. Seaman & als., 11 Gratt. 780: “It would disturb many titles if the principles heretofore established and sanctioned by the practice of the country were now to be questioned. , If inconvenience results from the construction heretofore given to the statute against fraudulent conveyances, the remedy should be administered by the law-making power. An act of the legislature would operate prospectively, and men could regulate their transactions so as to conform to its provisions. But a decision of the court giving a new and different rule of construction, would have a retroactive, and, therefore, an unjust operation.”

Of course, if there be any intention on the part of the debtor, in executing the assignment, to delay, hinder or defraud creditors, &c., it is void as to such creditors, by the express declaration of the statute ; saving only the title of a purchaser for valuable consideration, and without notice of the fraud. Ho appearance of fairness on the face of the assignment can ,give effect to it in such a case. Rraud may be proved by the deed itself, or by evidence aliunde. When proved by the deed itself, it is called constructive, or legal fraud, and cannot be disproved by evidence aliunde. Mere badges of fraud, which sometimes appear on the face of the deed, and sometimes from evidence aliunde, unlike constructive or legal fraud, may always be repelled by other evidence.

*In this case it certainly does not appear that there was any actual intention to delay, hinder or defraud creditors. If actual fraud be charged ip the bill, it is positively denied in the answer, and there is no evidence in the record tending to prove it, but the contrary. Indeed, the bill seems to state a case only of constructive or legal fraud.

Then the question we have to consider is, Whether the deed of trust in this case is void according to the doctrine settled by our decisions before referred to?

In order to maintain the validity of such a deed, or, at least, that part of it which provides for the payment of debts on the terms of the execution of a release by the creditors, it is necessary that all, or substantially all, the debtor’s estate should be conveyed by the deed. Skipwith’s ex’or v. Cunningham, &c.; Phippen v. Durham & als.; ubi supra. The debtor is permitted by such arrangement to protect his future earnings from the pursuit of such of his creditors as may enter into it, but not a portion of his present property. “He may protect his person, indeed, by a fair composition, and a surrender of all his property, but he cannot protect a part of that property by giving up another part. Such an attempt is fraudulent and void.” 8 Leigh 292; Quarles & als. v. Kerr & als., 14 Gratt. 48. But it is not necessary for the deed to show on its face that all the estate of the debtor is conveyed. That fact may be proved by evidence aliunde. In neither of the cases of Kevan & als. v. Branch & als., and Phippen v. Durham & als., did it appear on the face of the deed that all of the property of the debtor was conveyed. , In Phippen v. Durham & als. all of the debtor’s property was not in fact conveyed, yet so nearly all as to bring the case within the operation of the rule. The amount omitted was too small to show that it was omitted for the purpose of securing any benefit to the debtor. The omission *must have been from inadvertence. What invalidates a deed in such cases is, an intention to delay, hinder or defraud creditors, &c. ; and unless there be such an omission of property in the deed as shows such an intention, it is not material. Any omission of property for the purpose of securing a substantial benefit to the debtor (except such property as may be exempt by law from distress or levy), conclusively shows such an intention.. In the [660]*660■case we have in hand, it plainly appears on the face of the deed that all of the partnership property of the grantors was conveyed, but not that all of their individual property was conveyed. In order to bring the case within, the operation of the rule before referred to, it was necessary for the deed to convey all of the individual property of the grantors, as well as all of their social property. Ror though the debts provided for were only partnership debts, yet they bound the partners personally, and the release stipulated for by the terms of the deed was a release not only of the firm of Rogers, Riddick & Co., and Rogers, Adams & Co., but of the members thereof individually. It sufficiently appears on the face of the deed, that the two tracts of land in Texas thereby conveyed, were the individ-' ual property of W.r H. Rogers; but it does not appear on the face of the deed that he had no other property, nor that his companions had no individual property. The evidence in the record shows that W. H. Rogers had no other individual property than the land in Texas, and that his co-partners in the said firms had no individual property at all of any value. The deed, therefore, strictly complies with the rule which requires that all the property of the grantors should be conveyed in such a case.

•But it is objected, that the deed not only requires that the grantors should be released, but also that Samuel R. Adams, who is.,not a ■ grantor, should be released. If’the property of the firm of Rogers, Adams & Co. was properly ^conveyed for the purposes of the deed' — a question which will be hereafter considered — it seems to follow that he ought to be released from the debts of that firm, as well as the other partners.

Again it is objected, that the deed is incomplete in this, that it refers to and makes schedule A a part thereof, whereas it was not attached or appended thereto before the execution of the deed. There was no necessity for such a schedule to give effect to the deed — the property thereby conveyed being sufficiently described therein for that purpose. Skipwith’s ex’or v. Cunningham, &c.; Kevan & als. v. Branch; Phippen v. Durham & als., supra; Lewis & als. v. Caperton’s ex’or & als., 8 Graft. 148; Brashear v. West, 7 Peters R.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Va. 655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-cannon-va-1868.