Harrison v. Trustees of Phillips Academy

12 Mass. 456
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1815
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 12 Mass. 456 (Harrison v. Trustees of Phillips Academy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison v. Trustees of Phillips Academy, 12 Mass. 456 (Mass. 1815).

Opinion

Parker, C. J.

The title of the demandants being under a deed from him who was the acknowledged owner of "the land demanded in the writ, before the delivery of that deed ; and the title set up by the tenants, under the levy of their execution, having been acquired long after the execution and delivery of that deed ; it is plain that the demandants must recover, unless the conveyance to their father can be impeached and shown to be void.

This conveyance is attempted to be impeached on the ground of fraud, a defect of which the tenants have a right to avail themselves, they having been creditors of Holden, the grantor, long before the conveyance was made.

The circumstances relied upon, to show fraud in the conveyance, are, the execution and registry of the deed by Holden, without the knowledge of Harrison, the grantee ; the purposes and views, which induced Holden to make the conveyance ; the disparity between the supposed value of the estate and the consideration paid for it; and the trust between the parties, that, although the conveyance was in form absolute and unconditional, it should be considered between them as a mortgage or security only, for the debts due to the house of Harrison 8f Wilby, and for the engagements they had entered into in behalf of Holden.

*It is very certain that, until the deed was accepted [*461] by Harrison, the title to the estate had not passed out of Holden, and that his creditors might have arrested the transaction by causing the estate to be attached. For no man can make another his grantee without his consent ; and a deed made to a man with all requisite formalities, and even entered in the public registry, would be null, if not afterwards accepted by the grantee. But if the grantee afterwards assent to the conveyance, it will be good to pass the title to him ; unless some other circumstances shall be shown to render it invalid.

The deed in question bears date the 21st of February, 1810, and was received at the registry on the 26th of the same month. In a month afterwards it was made known to Harrison, who then received it from the registry by direction of the grantor. This completed the transfer between the parties ; so that the grantor and his heirs could no longer claim title to the land, but by virtue of the instrument executed by Harrison and delivered to Holden on the day the transfer was thus completed. The date of the deed is immaterial, its effect commencing from the delivery only ; especially in the present case, there being no acceptance of the conveyance on the part of Harrison, before he received the deed from the registry.

But it was said, that, however effectual between the parties, the [404]*404deed is void against creditors ; because it was made with a view to defeat and delay them ; and that, as well by the common law as by the statute of 13 Eliz. c. 5, a conveyance under such circumstances is void. And, first, it is said, that from the report it appears that such was the intention of Holden; because he was largely in debt, and his express object was to prevent the levy of divers executions upon his lands ; and that these views and purposes, together with that of securing Harrison &r Wilby, were his inducements to make the conveyance ; and that Harrison was privy to them.

The lands conveyed being supposed at the time greatly to exceed in value the actual or probable demands of Harrison, [*462] *if it appeared that he took an absolute conveyance, with a secret trust to hold the overplus for the use of Holden, with intention to prevent his creditors from resorting to the land for security, the conveyance would undoubtedly have been void. But, although such may have been the intention of Holden, the report does not present conclusive evidence that Harrison participated in the design, and fraud is not to be presumed by a court of law. On being informed'of the circumstances and fears of Holden, Harrison bad motive enough to accept the conveyance, without supposing him to be influenced by a desire to prejudice other creditors ; and his willingness to execute an instrument supposed by the parties to amount to a defeasance, and thus to convert his unconditional conveyance into a mortgage, would seem to negative any suspicion that he meant to be the fraudulent trustee of Holden.

But it is said that, notwithstanding the deed is absolute in its terms, there was a contract between the parties at the time of its delivery, the intended effect of which was to make it a mere pledge; and that it was so contrived as to give it that effect for the benefit of Holden, but not of his creditors.

This arguipent seems to be founded on the supposition that, if the conveyance had been by mortgage directly, or by bond of defeasance, which is virtually a mortgage, it could not be impeached. Now, if the parties really intended a mortgage, but failed of giving the transaction that character from ignorance of conveyancing ; although the deed might from this circumstance have been considered by a jury as fraudulent, and so avoided by a creditor, because it contained evidence of a contract different from what was really intended by the parties ; yet fraud would not necessarily be inferred from such a fact.

But we think the instrument executed by Harrison was in truth what it was intended to be, namely, a legal defeasance of the deed on the performance of the conditions mentioned m it. The [*463] only objection to viewing it in this ■ light is, that * it was not executed at the same time with the deed. It is true, [405]*405that it bears date of a different day, and that it was not executed until a month after the deed was signed and sealed by Holden. But we do not hold it to be necessary that the dates of the two instruments should be alike, in order to make the bond a defeasance. It is to be executed at the same time, that it may be a part of the same transaction, and so operate to defeat the conveyance as effectually as if it had been made a condition of the deed. This bond was made and delivered at the same time that the deed was delivered;

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12 Mass. 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-trustees-of-phillips-academy-mass-1815.