Huston's Adm'r v. Cantril

11 Va. 136
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1840
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Va. 136 (Huston's Adm'r v. Cantril) 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
Huston's Adm'r v. Cantril, 11 Va. 136 (Va. 1840).

Opinions

*BROCKFNBROUGH, J.

The bond executed by Clendenin as principal, and Huston as surety, to Mayo, bears date as far back as 1782. After various efforts made bjr the creditor, he at length, in 1800, obtained a judgment against Huston the surety, who paid the amount of the debt on the 29th of May 1800. The supplemental bill by which Cantrii and wife, and the other daughters of Clendenin and their husbands, were made parties, was filed on the 21st of July 1827. That bill seeks to set aside certain deeds as voluntary and fraudulent, by which Clendenin had conveyed some slaves to his three infant daughters, for the consideration of love and affection, which deeds were admitted to record as early as May 1790. If the plaintiff has any right to set aside those deeds, and to subject the property conveyed by them to the payment of Huston’s debt due from the estate of Clendenin, that right accrued at least as early as May 1800, more than 27 years before the filing of the supplemental bill; and the defendants rely on the lapse of time as a bar to the recovery.

It was contended by the appellant’s counsel, that the plaintiff’s action did not accrue till he had established his debt against the rightful administrator; and as an excuse for not making this demand at an earlier period, it was stated, that shortly after it was ascertained from the commissioner’s report what was due, and then that there was not a sufficiency of other' assets to discharge the debt, this bill was filed against the fraudulent donees. It is well established at law, that the limitation begins to run from the moment that the cause of action accrues, and not from the time that it is ascertained that damage has been actually sustained by the breach of contract. Battley &c. v. Faulkner &c., 3 Barn. & Ald. 288; 5 Eng. C. b. R. 288, and Wilcox &c. v. Plummer’s ex’ors, 4 Peters 172, are strong cases to that effect, and I see no reason why the same rule should not prevail in equity. After the enjoyment of the property for 37 *years, and 27 years after the right of action, if any, accrued to the plaintiff, I think the title of the children ought not to be disturbed. The supplemental bill ought not to have been allowed, and was properly dismissed.

I concur with my brethren in the opinion, that as the bond on which the claim is founded does not bind the heirs of the obligors, no decree can be rendered against the children of Clendenin, to subject to the payment of this debt any land inherited by them, other than that on which Huston acquired a lien by the deed in the record mentioned: and that, by the very terms of that deed, Huston was bound to allow for that land at the rate of one dollar per acre.

I am for affirming the decree.

CARR, J.

The original bill in this case was filed to enforce a lien on a tract of land, given by Clendenin to Huston, in the form of a power of attorney to sell, but operating as a mortgage on the land. The bill was filed against the real and personal representatives of Clendenin, and on hearing, the court decreed a sale of the land. It was sold; and the report of the marshal shewing that it left a considerable part of the debt unpaid, the court (without confirming the report, as I understand the record) gave leave to file a supplemental bill, for the purpose of impeaching three deeds made by Clendenin to his daughters, conveying to them slaves and other chattels, and of having those slaves sold to pay the residue of the debt. Without acting finally on the original bill, the court proceeded to hear the supplemental bill, and dismissed it: from which dismissal this appeal is taken by the plaintiff.

I think this dismissal right, for several reasons. In the first place, I do not think that under the aspect of the case at the time, the court ought to have given leave to file the supplemental bill. Here was a specific subject ^pledged for the debt, and resorted to by the bill, and until that was fairly exhausted and shewn to be insufficient, there was no need and no propriety in seeking to condemn other property. Now, to my mind, this specific fund has by no means been shewn to be insufficient; on the contrary, the fact seems to be, that, properly disposed of, it would have discharged the debt and left a considerable surplus. The lien on the land, dated in December 1794, contains a stipulation between the parties that it should not be sold for less than one dollar per acre. This is prima facie evidence that, at that early period, the parties thought it worth that price. In the commissioner’s report, made in 1821, we find him representing '‘that from 600 to 1000 acres of this land is of the first quality for that country, and if sold in small tracts and on a reasonable credit, would probably produce five dollars per acre: but the balance thereof is worth but little.” This report was before the court when the last order of sale was entered. In 1822, Archibald Hutchinson makes oath that he is well acquainted with the land, and thinks it worth on an average one dollar per acre. And yet, in July 1822, this whole tract is set up and sold in a lump, and bought in by Huston the plaintiff at 30 cents per acre, making, to be credited to the decree, 870 dollars only; whereas, if it had been sold according to the suggestions of the commissioner, 800 acres of it would probably have brought 4000 dollars. I feel satisfied [588]*588that if this monstrous sacrifice had been-brought to the notice of the chancellor, he ■would have ordered a resale; this being strongly prayed for in the answers to the supplemental bill, and in itself most reasonable and proper. But the report seems never to have come under his notice: the subsequent proceedings are wholly taken up with the case made by the supplemental bill, answers and evidence, ending with the dismission of that bill, from which the appeal is taken.

*1 think this dismission correct, in the second place, on the ground taken by the chancellor; that the deeds from Clendenin to his daughters, though in their origin voluntary, and, while they continued so, assailable by creditors, yet became, by the marriage of those daughters, deeds for a valuable consideration, and from the dates of their marriages the daughters and their husbands' became purchasers for a valuable consideration, liable to no creditor of their father who had not, before such marriage, obtained, by judgment or otherwise, a specific lien on the property. That a deed voidable may be rendered valid and effectual by matter ex post facto, ■ is an undeniable proposition, and as old as the statute of Marlbridge. (See 2 Inst. 111.) In Prodgers v. Langham, 1 Sid. 133, a conveyance was made in trust for an only daughter for 21 years, to the intent that the profits before her marriage should be applied to her maintenance, and if she married with her father’s consent, then in trust for her during the rest of the term. The court held that the deed to the daughter was voluntary, and would have been void against the defendant, a subsequent purchaser for valuable consideration, if the marriage had not intervened; but when that took effect, the deed ceased to be voluntary, and became supported by a valuable consideration which was unimpeachable, inasmuch as the marriage was an advancement to the daughter, and the husband was induced (though that fact does not appear in the case) by the prospect of this provision. The cases of Kirk v. Clark, Prec. in Ch. 275, and East India Co. v. Clavell, Id. 377, are to the same effect, except that in these the marriage was had with notice by the husband of the deed, and in the first such notice was presumed. In Brown v. Carter, 5 Ves.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Va. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hustons-admr-v-cantril-va-1840.