M'Gregor & Darling v. Hall

3 Stew. & P. 397
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 Stew. & P. 397 (M'Gregor & Darling v. Hall) 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
M'Gregor & Darling v. Hall, 3 Stew. & P. 397 (Ala. 1833).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

A judgment had been obtained against' a third person, and, an execution, which was sued out thereon, was levied on two slaves. The defendant in error claimed said property, and .made an affidavit, in the words following, viz: “Personally appeared, Samuel W. Hall, who being duly swojm, deposeth, and saith, that he has a just claim to Walker, a mulatto man, aged about fifty years, and to Ca-tey, a black woman, about the same age, levied on,” &c. The execution was thereupon returned; and, at the next term of the court, an issue was formed, according to the statute, to ascertain, whether the property was liable to the execution, or, of right, belonged to the defendant in error. Upon that trial, the jury found in favor of the claimant; but, during the progress of the trial, various exceptions were taken, to opinions, delivered, by the court.

Some of the objections made below, have not been relied upon, in the argument in this court; and, therefore will not be noticed, in this opinion.

The first point made by the counsel for the plaintiffs in error, is, that the affidavit of claim, is insuf-

The first act, which was passed, authorising this proceeding, is to be found in Toulmin’s Digest, p. 31 Cb So much of the act, as relates to the affidavit, is in these words. “Where any sheriff shall levy execution on property claimed by any person, not a party to such execution, such' person may make oath to such property,” &c. The first section of the act,entitled, “an act, the better to provide for the trial of the right of property; and for other purposes,” passed in January, 1828, begins thus,. “ It shall be the duty of the sheriff to prepare a bond, whenever pro-[400]*400pertj levied on, by him, shall be claimed, and affidavit made,” &c.

These are the only provisions, specially relating to the affidavit; and they certainly are abundantly vague and uncertain. By the first statute a written affidavit is not expressly required : the claimant was to “ make oath to the property.” In respect to what was this oath tobe made? To the identity of the property? This could not be, because that would have given him no right to interfere with the proceedings of the sheriff, upon the execution. It must, then, have related to his interest in it, and the proper affidavit would have been, .that the property which was levied on as that of another man, was his, or equivalent words. The statute of 1828, has no effect in altering the nature of this oath,'but evidently "refers to the law previously in existence on that subject, the words are, whenever property levied on by him shall be claimed, and affidavit made” — How made? As required by the first statute. But, do thé words used in the present instance, substantially comply with the requirements of the law? The claimant deposed, that he had “a just claim” to the negroes in controversy. This, although not so definite as it might have been, yet, when the uncertainty of the statute Is considered, is believed to be a sufficient compliance with it. In swearing that he has a “just claim,” we must believe the affiant meant a title not founded in fraud; not set up to defeat the better titles of others; but or^e that he considered good, though it could be viewed only as a claim, be- . cause, in the necessity of making the affidavit, he had abundant proof that his title was controverted, and that he must resort to the courts of justice to establish it.

[401]*401The second point is, that the deed of mortgage is fraudulent as to creditors, because it was not recorded as the statute requires.

The act of January, 1828, entitled “ an act more effectually to prevent frauds and fraudulent conveyances, and for other purposes,” declares, “ that, hereafter, all deeds and conveyances of personal property, in trust, to secure any debt, or debts, shall be recorded in the office of the clerk of the county court, of the county wherein the person making such deed or conveyance, shall reside, within thirty days, or else the.same shall be void against creditors and subsequent purchasers, without notice.”

There can be no doubt but that a conveyance of slaves is a conveyance of personal property ; and just as little, that motgages are included within the meaning and intention of the legislature.’ The object of the act is tc» give notice to the world of the liens which are held on property, by persons out of possession, so as to prevent credit from being given to the holders, on account of the possession of it. Our courts have uniformly decided that a mortgage, or deed of trust, honestly executed, to secure the payment of a bona fide debt, to be paid in futuro, was valid, although the mortgagor, &c. was left in possession of the property, and that it was not necessary for the mortgagee, or trustee, to take possession even* when the day of payment arrived, to secure the interest of the creditor. Although these decisions are believed to be strictly legal, and in accordance with the soundest policy, yet it is certain that it behooved the legislature to throw every guard around the honest members of the community, that was possible, [402]*402to protect them from the arts and combinations of the fraudulent. The act of 1828 was, therefore, passed, requiring all persons holding the liens, to take such steps as were calculated to give notice of them to others, by having them recorded in the several offices prescribed by law for that purpose. 'Every reason, which could have influenced the general assembly to provide, that deeds of trust to secure debts, should be registered, operates in an equal o.r. greater degree, with respect to mortgages. From the nature of (.he instruments, the execution of the former is generally attended with more notoriety than that of the latter. The circumstance that an indifferent person is made a party to a deed of trust, in addition to the debtor and creditor, while to a mortgage the latter only are parties, is, in itself, highly calculated to cause its existence to be more known. Deeds of trust, long before the enactment of the act $f 1«28, had become much the most common mode of securing creditors, and to this is to be ascribed their having' been particularly named.

In this case, however, the mortgage was regularly acknowledged, and left in the proper office, and with the proper officer, to be recorded, some four or five days before the thirty had expired, but was not recorded until the thirty-second day after its execution; which, it is contended by the defendant, was, on his part, a full compliance with the requisitions of the law, and that he is not to suffer from the failure’ of the clerk to perform his duty. It is, insisted, on the other side, that, here is, no compliance with the law; that unless the deed was actually recorded, the act of assembly makes it void as to creditors; that it was the duty of the mortgagee, to see that the clerk [403]*403performed his duty, and if the officer has failed, he he must look to him for redress.

Acts of assembly must always receive a reasonable construction, and to give them this construction, it is necessary to ascertain the motive of the law giver. It will not do to be governed uniformly by the .literal expressions of a statute; by doing so, we should, many timds, wander entirely from the obvious intention of the legislature. We have already seen an (instance of this1, in the case before us.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Stew. & P. 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mgregor-darling-v-hall-ala-1833.