Hildreth v. Sands

2 Johns. Ch. 35, 1816 N.Y. LEXIS 219, 1816 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 13
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 15, 1816
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 2 Johns. Ch. 35 (Hildreth v. Sands) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hildreth v. Sands, 2 Johns. Ch. 35, 1816 N.Y. LEXIS 219, 1816 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 13 (N.Y. 1816).

Opinion

The cause having stood over for decision, the following opinion was this day delivered by

The Chancellor.

The bill is to set aside, as fraudulent,

a deed of lands, at BrooJclyn, from Comfort Sands to his brother, Robert Sands, of the date of the 21st of February, 1807. The plaintiff claims those lands as a purchaser, on executions under a judgment, and under a decree against Comfort Sands, of a date subsequent to that of the deed.

[ * 42 ]

*The defendant, Comfort Sands, though charged with fraud in making the deed, has declined answering the charge, and has suffered the bill to be taken pro confesso. But the defendant Robert Sands has come in and denied the fraud, and claims to be an innocent and bona fide purchaser for a valuable consideration.

If the deed is admitted to be fraudulent on the part of Comfort Sands, the grantor, there would be difficulty in allowing the deed to stand, even if the grantee was, as he alleges, innocent of the fraud. It was observed, in a late case [42]*42in Vesey, (Huguenin v. Basely, 14 Vesey, 289, 290.) that interests obtained through the fraud of another person cannot be maintained; and the case of Bridgman v. Green (5 Vesey, 627. Wilmot’s Opinions, 58.) is an express authority that interests so gained can be set aside. Lord Hardwicke observed, in that case, that if a person could get- out of the reach of the doctrines of the Court by giving interests to third persons, instead of reserving them to himself, it would be almost impossible ever to reach a case of fraud. When the same case came before Lord Ch. J. Wilmot, as commissioner, he held the same language. This was also the doctrine of Lord Chancellor Thurlow, who held it to be against conscience, that one person should hold a benefit which he derived through the fraud of another.

A deed, fraudulent on the part of the grantor, may be avoided,though the grantee be a bona fide purchaser, and ignorant of the But the fraud of the grantor must be established by proof. The mere fact of his suffering the bill to be taken pro confesso, is not sufficient. A deed brought forward as founded on a JdeVation, cannot be setup as fafyft orco™!“"i anee.

[42]*42In á recent case in the house of lords, (1 Dow’s Rep. 30.) Lord Redesdale very much doubted whether a purchaser for valuable consideration, even under a decree fraudulently obtained, though ignorant of the fraud, could protect himself.

[* 43 ]

The principle advanced by these high authorities is by no means new or uncommon. It has been laid down in the books, at different and distant periods, (Bennet v. Wade, Dick. Rep. 84. Davidson v. Russell, Dick. Rep. 761.) that fraud vitiates a deed in toto, though persons no way privy to fraud are beneficially interested in such deed. The words of Dodderidge, J., in Shepherd’s Touchstone, (p. 66. *67.) are to the same effect. “Albeit,” he says, “those to whom a deed of fraud is made knew nothing of the fraud, yet is the deed fraudulent in that case also, ks well as where they are privy to it.”

These cases, however, all proceed on the ground that the fraud of the grantor is clearly established. In the present case it would be too rigorous to deprive the grantee of his deed, however innocent he might be, upon the mere fact that the grantor suffered the bill to be taken pro confesso. This might happen from collusion with the plaintiff, or from ill will to the grantee; and though no such motive is to be suspected in this case, yet before the above principle is to be applied, I should say there ought to be more evidence of the fraud than the mere implied admission of a co-defendant who neglects or refuses to answer.

The question, then, to be considered, is, whether, from the pleadings and proofs, there appears to be satisfactory evidence of fraud, either in fact or in law, and sufficient to set aside the deed as against the plaintiff.

There are several circumstances from which actual fraud is to be inferred.

[43]*43[ *44]

[42]*421. The consideration alleged was inadequate. The defendant has put the deed upon the fact of a fair nurchase [43]*43for an adequate price, and to that test the injury must be confined. A deed brought forward as founded on a valúable consideration, cannot be set up as a gift or voluntary conveyance. The party is bound by the consideration alleged. There is no doubt of this rule. (Lord Hardwicke, in 2 Vesey, 628. Lord Redesdale, in Schoale Lefroy, 501.) All the cases relative to voluntary conveyances are, therefore, not applicable. The consideration expressed was 4,500 dollars, and yet a few days before the date of the deed, C. Sands had leased only a part of the premises, (one half,) for seven years, at the yearly rent of 750 dollars, which would be nearly 17 per cent, on the assumed capital, or worth' of the whole land. Barbarine, the *tenant, says, that the property claimed by the defendant under the deed, was worth, in September, 1807, between 6 and 7,000 dollars. The consideration alleged could not, therefore, have been near the fair market value of the land.

[ * 45 ]

2. There is no proof that the price was paid, or that any voucher or security was taken as evidence of the debt. The defendant, in his answer, says, that C. Sands, at the time, owed him 500 dollars, and that sum was to go in part payment, and that the residue, or 4,000 dollars, was to be paid as C. Sands should require it, either in money or in the assumption of debts of C. Sands. The debt created by the sale was, however, left in this precarious state, without any evidence in support of the verbal arrangement. We are told, also, by the answer, that small sums were paid to C. Sands in 1807, 1808, 1809, and 1810, and that in September, 1810, the defendant assumed to pay debts owing from C. Sands to the amount of 2,948 dollars; thus is the consideration said to have been paid without any interest being charged for all this protracted indulgence. No receipts were taken by the defendants for any of these payments. Both the debt and the payments were left to rest in the memory and in the mutual integrity of the parties. This assumption of the debts of C. Sands was equally frail and insecure. It was never made to the creditors themselves, but to C. Sands, by some writing at the foot of the list, and except the sum of 446 dollars and 20 cents, no part of those debts have, as yet, been paid by him ; and though he delivered to C. Sands, so late as 1812, 1149 dollars and 50 cents, for the purpose of paying a part of those debts, he does not know that the moneys have been so applied. The whole of this account of the payment of a part of the consideration (for above the sum of 1,300 dollars remains to this day without any pretence of its being paid) is lame and defective, and ought to have been supported by evidence, and not left to rest upon the allegations in the *answer. The defendant [45]*45was cahed on to meet the charge of an impeached conveyanee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Johns. Ch. 35, 1816 N.Y. LEXIS 219, 1816 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hildreth-v-sands-nychanct-1816.