Hartshorn v. Williams

31 Ala. 149
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 31 Ala. 149 (Hartshorn v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartshorn v. Williams, 31 Ala. 149 (Ala. 1857).

Opinion

~W ABNER, J.

— The declarations of Gaston and Morris, to the effect that they had sold their interest in the partnership assets, were mere hearsay ; were, therefore, inadmissible as evidence, and were properly excluded by the court below.

2. The charge given by the court, to which the plaintiff excepted, asserts these two propositions: that parol evidence was not admissible, at law, to show that an absolute deed was intended to operate as a mortgage; and that a deed of personal property, intended to be a mere security for a debt, would be void, “for want of a consideration provable at law.” It is true that, at law, parol evidence is not admissible to transform an absolute deed into a mortgage; but it would be competent, for one assailing the deed for fraud, to show by parol the intention that it should operate as a mortgage. If the effect of this charge of the court was to exclude this view from the jury, it was not injurious to the plaintiff, who certainly had no right to vary the deed by such proof, and who could not have been benefited by so doing.

3. If an absolute deed was intended to be a mere security for the payment of a debt, it is fraudulent and void [153]*153as to existing creditors. The law is so settled, upon the clearest reasoning and authorities, in the case of Bryant v. Young & Hall, 21 Ala. 264. — Gregory v. Perkins, 4 Dev. & Bat. 50; Holcombe v. Ray, 1 Iredell, 340. We do not pause to consider whether, under the circumstances presented in the charge, the deed would be void “for want of a consideration provable at law.” It is void for fraud under those circumstances. The important matter of the charge is, that the deed is void upon the facts supposed ; and it could not injuriously affect any person, for the court to attribute its invalidity under the facts to a want of consideration, instead of fraud.

4. As the effect of showing that the deed was intended to operate as a mortgage was to establish fraud, it would, of course, have been improper in the court to instruct the jury, that that fact, in connection with the bona fides of the debt, was admissible to repel the idea of fraud. Consequently, the court did not err in refusing the first charge asked by the plaintiff.

5. We are not certain that the next ‘charge refused by the court, numbered 4, might not have been refused on account of its ambiguity. We think the idea intended to be conveyed by it is, that the grantee of the deed, notwithstanding the design that it should operate as a mortgage, had a right to immediate possession ; and the objection of a want of such right on his part being thus out of the way, and there being then no other t^ason or impediment to prevent his suing, the plaintiff might maintain trover against any one who converted the property. This charge, if given, would have authorized a verdict against the defendant, notwithstanding his conversion of the pi’operty had been rightful, because perpetrated by him as sheriff, in obedience to lawful process, in favor of the grantor’s creditor, as to whom the deed was void for fraud. As a general proposition, the plaintiff may have had the right to the possession of the property, and a right to maintain trover for a conversion of it; and yet that right may have been destroyed, as to the defendant in this suit, by his reception, as sheriff, of process which the law required him to levy upon the property, because [154]*154the conveyance was fraudulent as to the plaintiff in the. process.

6. It is well-settled law, that one may become a trespasser ab initio, by the abuse of an authority given to him by law. — Six Carpenters’ case, as reported in Smith’s Leading Cases, vol. 1, p. 62, and notes; Wright v. Spencer, 1 Stewart, 576. Several different reasons for this, technical rule of law are assigned by the books ; but the most satisfactory reason is that given in Bacon’s Abridgment, (Trespass, B, 451,) where it is thus stated : “Where the law has given an authority, it seems reasonable that the law should, in order to secure such persons as are the objects thereof from abuse of the authority, when it is abused, make everything done void, and leave the abuser in the same situation as if he had done everything without an authority.” The reason and policy of the rule fail in criminal cases, and hence its applicability to those cases is denied. — 1 Smith’s Leading Cases, 62, note; State v. Moore, 12 N. H. 42.

The authority bestowed by the law upon the defendant did not authorize him to interfere with any of the rights of the plaintiff’in this case, or to affect any title which the latter had as against the plain tiff’in the process. The plaintiff in this case could not be injured by an abuse of the authority. If ho has any cause of action against the defendant, it was complete in the instant of the levy]; and the amount t>f his recovery could be neither increased nor lessened by any subsequent irregularity of action on the part of the defendant. We conclude, therefore, that the plaintiff is'not within the reason of the rule, and he cannot invoke its aid. There would be an absolute absurdity in the application of the rule to such a case as this. The gravamen of the plaintiff’s cause of action is, that the defendant has levied process against another person on his property, and that the law gave him no authority whatever for the act; while, in the charge which he asks, he assumes the ground, that the defendant did have authority, derived from the law, to take the property in the outset, but that, in consequence of the subsequent abuse of that authority, that lawful act became a trespass.

[155]*155We do not intend to say, that there is no conceivable case, in which a sheriff may not, by an abuse of process, become a trespasser ab initio, as to one not a party to the process. A sheriff’ who, by virtue of process against one tenant in common of a chattel, levies upon the chattel, and sells the entirety — the share of the stranger to the process, as well as that of the defendant — has been held a trespasser ab initio, as to the tenant in common not a party to the process. — Melville v. Brown, 15 Mass. 82. In that ease, the law gave the sheriff an authority to take possession of the entire chattel, and to keep it for the purpose of executing the process ; and thus bestowed an authority which affected the tenant in common not a party to the process, and placed him in a situation to. b.e injured by an abuse of that authority. There may be other cases of kindred character;-and all such cases fall without the principle of this decision.

In McAden v. Gibson, 5 Ala. R. 341, it was held, that a sheriff’s omission to return an attachment deprived him of the right to justify under it, when sued by one not a party to the process. The distinction between that case and this is clearly pointed out by Mr. Justice Bayley, in Shorland v. Govett, 5 Barn. & Cress. 485. The return of the mesne process, or an excuse for the omission to return it, is necessary to constitute the justification, and is a necessary averment in the plea of justification; but it is not so as to the abuse of the authority given by the process. The sheriff’makes no averment in his plea of justification, denying an abuse of the authority: that must be brought forward by a replication; and we decide that no party can avail himself of an abuse of authority, when he is not interested in the exercise of it. The rule in McAden v.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ala. 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartshorn-v-williams-ala-1857.