Knapp v. White

40 Wis. 143
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 40 Wis. 143 (Knapp v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knapp v. White, 40 Wis. 143 (Wis. 1876).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed at the January term, 1875.

Ryan, C. J.

The appellants were creditors at large of the respondent William White, Sen., long before the sale of the latter to William White, Jr., and so remained until they became judgment creditors for the same debt. During most of that time, the respondent White, Sen., was their sole debtor. For some time in 1872, after the sale, White, Jr., was a joint debtor with him to the appellants, by being bis surety on a note for the debt. But, during that'time, as well as before and after, the appellants were creditors of the the respondent White, Sen., for the whole debt. The suretyship of another for him in no way affected bis liability. And, íjs the appellants were thus continuously creditors of the respondent White, Sen., before and at the time of bis sale to White, Jr., for the debt on which they finally recovered their judgment, they are in a position to attack the sale as fraudulent against creditors, whether subsequent creditors could do so or not.

And the fact that, after the sale, the vendee, White, Jr., [148]*148joined tlie vendor, tlie respondent White, 8m, in an obligation to tbe appellants, afterwards relinquished, for the debt, cannot wort any estoppel upon them from impeaching the sale for fraud. "We are quite unable to perceive any tendency in the taking or in the relinquishment by the appellants, of the liability of the vendee as surety for the vendor for their debt, to operate as affirmance or assent to the sale. We see nothing in the case to give such a color to the fact, and we can see nothing in the fact itself to give it such effect. A creditor may take or relinquish the suretyship for his debtor, of one who is a fraudulent vendee or trustee of the debtor, without, under ordinary circumstances, ratifying the fraudulent sale, or releasing the fraudulent trustee, or relinquishing the right to pursue the property fraudulently transferred to hinder creditors. Doubtless he may do so, in special circumstances or under special conditions, so as to work a ratification or an estoppel. But the mere fact that he accepts and relinquishes the suretyship of the vendee or trustee has, of itself, no such effect: has no apparent bearing, in any way, upon the sale alleged to be fraudulent. "While the vendor and vendee were jointly liable to the appellants, the question of the validity of the sale might have lost practical consequence; but the right to question the sale was not merged in the suretyship of the vendee. A less right merges in a greater, only when both have a common object or relation. Here, if the liability were joint and several, the appellants might have had judgment against the vendor only, and attacked the sale to the vendee for fraud: so, if the vendee were beyond the reach of process: so, if the vendee had died: so, if the vendee had again sold to one chargeable with notice of the fraud. And when the vendor again became the sole debtor of the appellants, the fact that the vendee had been and had ceased to be liable for the debt of the vendor, appears to .us to have no bearing on the validity of the sale. The surrender of the vendee’s sure-tyship for the vendor in no way affects his title under the sale, [149]*149wben impeached, for fraud. Ilis relations to the appellants as surety, and as yendee under a sale charged with fraud, are in no sense akin; and the cessation of one has no effect on the other. His suretyship appears to have been accepted and relinquished without any reference to the sale, and has no connection with it.

The cases of estoppel founded on acquiescence in the sale impeached for fraud, or on the acceptance of benefits under it, or on the fact that the creditor was the actual vendor himself, cited by the respondents, do not appear to us to have any application to the facts appearing in this-record.

The court below held the appellants to be estopped to impeach the sale, excluded evidence tending to impeach it and took the question of fraud in it from the jury. In our view, this was error fatal to the judgment, if the appellants on the trial showed title in themselves to the property in dispute. Eut bn this point, not raised in the argument of counsel, we entertain grave doubt, and we desire to have it argued before deciding the appeal.

It appears that the sheriff first levied on the goods in question on' an execution in favor of the respondent Adelaide against White, Jr., and then on an execution in favor of the appellants against the respondent White, Sen.; that, having the goods in his possession, he sold them separately, on each of the executions, at -the same time and place; to the respondent Adelaide on the former execution, and to the appellants on the latter; and that he delivered the goods to the respondent Adelaide, as purchaser, probably before the sale to the appellants.

We do not think it proper to discuss our doubts, in advance of the argument, beyond the mere statement that we do not understand how the sheriff could hold possession of the goods, at the same time, as the property of one person on one execution, and as the property of another person on another execution; and make separate valid sales of them, at the same time, [150]*150to different purchasers, for different prices, on different titles; of necessity making delivery only to one; so as to vest a title in the purchaser to whom he made no delivery. And we desire to have it argued by counsel, -whether the sheriff’s sale to the appellants, in the circumstances, vested in them a title to the goods, which they can assert in this action; assuming the sale from the respondent White, Sen., to White, Jr., to have been fraudulent and void as against the appellants.

The cause will therefore be continued for the term, to be argued hereafter on the point now reserved, only.

And, before it will be heard, the appellants must print and serve a new case. The case presented at this term was printed in disregard of the rule, and was an abuse of the time and convenience of the court. As much of the bill of exceptions, itself defective with all its extravagant length, as was necessary to the intelligent discussion and decision of the questions involved in the appeal, might well have been presented in some half dozen pages of printed case, instead of the wilderness of 393 folios of type, through which we had to wander, and from which we could escape only to the manuscript record, as a choice of evils. That case cannot be again used in this court, and the cost of printing it should not, in any event, be taxed in the costs of the appeal.

By the Court. — Let an order be entered in conformity with this opinion.

A new printed case having been served and filed, the cause was again submitted on briefs at the January term, 1876.

Moses Hooper, for appellants:

It appears that the sheriff actually levied upon and sold to Adelaide White nothing but the interest of White, Jr., in the property. True v. Congdon, 44 N. H., 48; Rorer on Jud. Sales, § 1055. By virtue of the sale to plaintiffs upon the execution against White, Sen., they obtained all the title and interest of the latter in the property, unless this result was [151]*151prevented by the delivery of tbe property by the sheriff to Adelaide White, upon the sale to' her.

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Bluebook (online)
40 Wis. 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knapp-v-white-wis-1876.