National Bank of Fredericksburg v. Conway

17 F. Cas. 1202, 1 Hughes 37, 14 Nat. Bank. Reg. 175, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1779
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia
DecidedJune 6, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 1202 (National Bank of Fredericksburg v. Conway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Bank of Fredericksburg v. Conway, 17 F. Cas. 1202, 1 Hughes 37, 14 Nat. Bank. Reg. 175, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1779 (circtedva 1876).

Opinion

HUGHES, District Judge.

There is no question here of actual fraud or of moral wrong-doing. The transaction of the 20th of July, 1S75, was between men of the highest character, socially and in their pecuniary dealings. There is but one question in the case, which is, whether the writing, signed and acknowledged on the 20th of July, 1S75, kept in the iron safe of Conway, Gordon & Garnett until the paper of Slaughter & Son had gone to protest on the loth of October, 1875, and on the afternoon of that day recorded, is valid under section 5128 of the Revised Statutes of the United States. This statute is not a statute of frauds, but of disabilities. It establishes a policy. It makes it against the policy of the law for men, knowing the insolvency of their debtors, to exact or take deeds of preference from them. State laws permit this, and indeed encourage it. But congress declares a different policy, and places failing debtors -in the same condition as to deeds, grants, and conveyances of preference, in which state laws place minors and femes covert as to contracts, and in which state laws place all adults who are in debt, but sui juris, as to deeds of gift. The word “fraud” occurs but once in this section 512S, and then not as implying moral or actual fraud, but only as implying a breach of the policy of the law just mentioned; the phrase in which the word occurs being “in fraud of the provisions of this act.” I have nothing to do, therefore, with fraud as a--crime, moral or legal. I have only to inquire whether the writing between M. Slaughter and Walter P. Conway, trustee, signed and acknowledged on the 20th of July, 1875, was in violation of the policy of section 512S, Rev. St., and therefore void. . .

The question whether . this ■ writing was properly acknowledged or not, which was so ably and elaborately argued at bar, is only a seco’ndaiy one in the case. The primary question is, when did this writing become a deed as between the grantor ¡and grantee? The acknowledgment of the writing by the grantor had reference only to its being recorded, and thereby made valid as against- his creditors. If the question were only as to acknowledgment, I should decide, without hesitation, that it was properly acknowledged; for the teaching of the cases cited at bar seems to me plainly to be, that an interested person may take the acknowledgment of a deed when the act is merely ministerial; though if the act be judicial, such as taking the acknowledgment, after privy examination,' of a mai'-ried woman, an interested person cannot take it. Harkins v. Forsyth, 11 Leigh, 294; Carper v. McDowell, 5 Grat. 212; Horsley v. Garth. 2 Grat. 471; Taliaferro v. Pryor, 12 Grat. 277; Johnston v. Slater, 11 Grat. 321; Turner v. Stip, 1 Wash. [Va.] 319; Hampton v. Stevens [1871] 10 Am. Law Reg. 107; Boswell v. Flockheart, 8 Leigh, 364; Dimes v. Grand Junction Canal Co., 16 Eng. Law & Eq. 63. Though the acknowledgment of this writing of the 20th of July, 1875, were good, that fact might not invalidate the deed; for it has been recently decided, by the supreme court of the United States, in Sawyer v. Turpin, 91 U. S. 114, that the recording of a deed may be within the period of prohibition imposed by the bankrupt law, and yet the deed itself be good against an assignee in bankruptcy. if executed before the period. Were it necessary, I should hold that that decision does not govern this case. A clear distinction may be drawn between this case (relating to real estate) and that decided in Sawyer v. Turpin (relating to personalty), founded on the distinction between the respective laws of Massachusetts and Virginia relating to fraudulent conveyances. The law of Massachusetts, on which the decision in Sawyer v. Turpin was rendered, declares that mortgages of personal property shall not be valid against any other person than the parties thereto, unless, etc., etc., the- mortgage be recorded, etc. Whereas, the law of Virginia decláres that every deed of trust, conveying real estate or goods and chattels, shall be void as to creditors, until and except from the time it is duly recorded. The deed of Montgomery Slaughter, signed and acknowledged the 20th of July, 1S75 was void as to creditors, and was not a deed at all, until the 15th of October, 1875; and I doubt if the supreme court of the United States would hold that it took effect any earlier as to the assignee in bankruptcy representing the general creditors of the bankrupt. But, assuming that the decision in Sawyer v. Turpin governs this case, as to deeds which have become deeds between the parties to them, previously to the period of two months before bankruptcy, but recorded within that time, the further question is, when did this writing of. the 20th of July, 1S75, become a deed, good as between M. Slaughter and W. P. Conway, the parties to it? It cannot be claimed that this writing was, in the hands of W. P. Conway, until the 15th of October, 1875, an escrow; for, in strict law, an escrow is a deed delivered to a stranger, which is to become valid on the happening of some definite future contingency. From this writing having been delivered to the grantee by the grantor, and not to a stranger, it cannot be called, with technical accuracy, an escrow.

But was it in truth and in law a deed, so delivered and so accepted, until the day it was recorded in the office of the corporation of Fredericksburg? This I assume, of course, to depend upon the understanding or contract as to it, which was had between M. Slaughter and "W. P. Conway, either tacitly or expressly, on the .day it was signed. The transaction of the 20th of July, 1875, is stated by Conway, Gordon & Garnett, in their answer, to have been “precisely similar” to numerous [1205]*1205others that had preceded it for five or six years. These writings had never been treated as passing title, but as papers which might be treated as nullities after awhile and can-celled. No previous one of these writings had been recorded; no previous one had been treated as a deed of conveyance requiring release. All had been treated as writings that might become deeds in the option of- the trustee, or of the holders of the notes of M. Slaughter & Son. All of them had been held privately by W. P. Conway, and by him torn up and cancelled whenever he so elected to do.

Now, the very question in this case is, whether the writing of the 20th of July, 1S75, signed and acknowledged by M. Slaughter, and delivered by him to W. P. Conway, with the understanding that it was to be cancelled on the payment of the notes which it secured, was intrusted to him in a way that made it a nullity from the beginning, except in ease of default; was intrusted to him in a way to pass no title and requiring no release except on default. I say the very question is, whether such writing was a deed, to be taken and treated, as a deed as of the 20th of July, 1875. Was it a deed at all until the 15th of October, 1875, when W. P. Conway elected to treat it as such? I see no reason and know of no precedent which requires a paper, in form a deed, but delivered upon condition that if is not to be treated as a deed passing title, except on the future election of the holder of it, to be held in law as an absolute deed from its date, contrary to the intention of both grantor and grantee in making it.

In the case before me, the intention of both grantor and grantee was, that the deed was not only not to go upon record, to bind creditors, but was not to be a deed passing title, in such a way as to require a release of title, until the grantee should elect so to treat it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 1202, 1 Hughes 37, 14 Nat. Bank. Reg. 175, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-bank-of-fredericksburg-v-conway-circtedva-1876.