Miller ex rel. Blocker v. Tolleson

5 S.C. Eq. 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedApril 15, 1824
StatusPublished

This text of 5 S.C. Eq. 145 (Miller ex rel. Blocker v. Tolleson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller ex rel. Blocker v. Tolleson, 5 S.C. Eq. 145 (S.C. Ct. App. 1824).

Opinion

Chancellor Desaussure.

The bill in this case, was filed by a creditor of Muse Tolleson, to set -aside the sale and [146]*146-purchases of certain slaves, furniture, lands, and dwelling house of said Tolleson, on the allegation that they were made -covinouslyt and with a view to deceive and defraud his just creditors.

The answers generally denied the frauds. But Muse Tolleson, who is the principal defendant, and upon whom the imputation of fraud chiefly lay, has been positively proved, by several respectable witnesses, not to be entitled to any credit; so we are compelled to come to the conclusion that no reliance can be placed on this defendant’s answer, in a court ofjustice.

It was objected however that it was not proper to receive any evidence to prove the want of credibility of the defendant. Tolleson, because the complainant, by putting him to his oath, gave him credit, which he was not at liberty to attack or deny; This objection, by going too far, defeats itself. It would be absurd and mischievous to admit it — and it is not the rule of the court.

Discrediting then the answer of Muse Tolleson, we are obliged to resort to other testimony, and to form our judgment on the weight of the evidence: But it was further objected by some of the counsel,. that this was a bill of discovery, which gave jurisdiction to the court; and no discovery being obtained, and the answer denying the allegations of the bill, the court was not at liberty to receive evidence to contradict the answers, and to decide on that evidence. This is surely not the doctrine of the court. Here is a bill filed, charging gross fraud t* defeat creditors. All bills in equity may be considered in some degree as bills of discovery, for they all allege facts,, and interrogate the defendants as to their truth. If the answers of the defendants, admitting or denying the charges alleged, were conclusive, there never would be any necessity for the adduction of evidence. But we know that in practice, evidence is constantly produced to contradict the answers, or to establish the facts which are not admitted by the defendants. There isr a plain rule on the subject, which is, that the defendant’s answer, if he is not proved to be utterly unworthy of credit, shall have so much weight attached to it that it shall be considered as establishing the truth to what it states, in answer to the [147]*147allegations of the bill, unless contradicted by two witnesses, or by one witness and strong circumstances. The very existence and continual application of this rule is decisive against the assumption, that because bills in equity demand information from the defendants on their oaths, their answers are therefore to be considered as conclusive, and exclusive of all other testimony. I' have made these remarks, because it appears that there has been a misconception on this subject, which ought to be rectified.

in the case we are considering, the answer af the defendant,, .Muse Tolleson, must therefore be put out of the case, because Witnesses of indisputable credit, have attested to his entire want of credibility. The answers of the other defendants will have their due weight. The mass of evidence was so great, that it would be tedious, and it is unnecessary to state it fully in detail.

It is sufficient to state, that at the hearing of the case, the' complainant, after the production of the evidence, gave up his liens and claims as a creditor, on the slaves purchased by M'Bride, named Dan, Walter, and Joe, and indeed to all the property sold as the property of Muse Tolleson, except the following:

The slaves, Ben, Sarah and her child, Cooper, and Chloe and her child, and to the furniture; and to the house in the 'Willage of Spartanburgh, and the lands in the country: — Also, as to a store of goods said to be sold to Holder. These then form the only subjects of litigation, requring the judgment of the court.

Upon a careful examination of the evidence, it appears to me that these slaves must be decided to be the property of Muse Tolleson, and subject to his debts. Those to whom thej' were knocked down at the sales were not always participators, or even conscious of the frauds intended; but as they were induced to become purchasers and to convey the properly back to Mr. Holder, a man of no property, who does not pretend to claim them, or to the children of Muse Tolleson, who , famished the money himself for the payment, fas appears by [148]*148the weight of .testimony) I am bound to consider these transactions as fraudulent and void as to creditors; more especially, as the slaves remained in possession of said Tolleson, or at his dis~ posal.

This opinion has been formed notwithstanding the attempts to prove that the slaves in question were purchased for the children of Muse Tolleson, and paid for by funds and money, not the property of said Tolleson, but derived from other sources. The great weight of testimony is, that the money ap - plied to the payment of these slaves was Muse Tolleson’s, The presumptions attempted to be set up, of a sufficient fund for the children of Muse Tolleson, being applicable to and actually applied to these purchases, are not supported by sufficient evid' nee to establish that. Thomas Dare testifies that he never, paid any money on his bond to the children of Muse Tolleson, and there is no evidence of any other fund.

We come now to the consideration of the furniture: most of these articles were purchased and paid for by Mrs. Tolleson, in her own name, or by her daughter Missouri, or by Miss Chandler for her, or by others. The only question is from what source the payments were derived? If Mrs. .Tolleson had separate funds, bona fide her own, or was supplied by friends with them, to pay for those articles of furniture, then she may be protected in the enjoyment of them; if not, they musí bo considered the property of her hushand and liable to his debts. It was contended on her behalf that she was created a sole, dealer, by deed, on the 1st May, 1823, and that her purchases of furniture at sheriff’s sales were made subsequent thereto, and that she had separate funds from her husband, which she had applied to.pay for the articles she had purchased.

The right of the husband to appoint his wife a sole trader and dealer was questioned by the counsel for the complainant; and it was also insisted that there was no proof of her having earned any separate estate which she could apply t& this purpose.

The statute of 1744, (being the 10th section of the at-tsctaeni-acR) see Grimke’s Pub. Law, p. 190, is the only [149]*149provision made by our laws respecting wives being made sole traders. That statute does not create or give a right to bus-bands to make their wives sole traders, but it recognizes such a right as then existing and in use, and makes provision against the abuse; and the usage thus recognized and guarded has continued ever since. It cannot therefore be denied that Muse Tolleson had a legal right to constitute his wife a sole trader; and his doing so by deed on the 1st May, 1823, is not vitious. If not a regular creation of her, it is a sufficient recognition of her in that character. Her acts are however open to examination, and she shall not be made the instrument by which her husband may commit frauds on otlier persons. He shall not be permitted to pour his private funds into her purse, and pro* tect them from his debts by calling them her separate estate.

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5 S.C. Eq. 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-ex-rel-blocker-v-tolleson-scctapp-1824.