Orrender v. . Chaffin

13 S.E. 911, 109 N.C. 422
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 S.E. 911 (Orrender v. . Chaffin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orrender v. . Chaffin, 13 S.E. 911, 109 N.C. 422 (N.C. 1891).

Opinions

The plaintiff brought an action for possession of, and offered the deed of an administrator c. t. a. to, the land in controversy, made by virtue of a power contained in the will of David Call, executed in 1838, which power is construed in the case of Orrender v. Call, 101 N.C. 399, together with the will of David Call.

The defendants claim through conveyances from the heirs at law of David Call, and set up, as a ground of affirmative relief, that there was a fraudulent combination or collusive arrangement between the plaintiff and the administrator to prevent a fair competition of bidders at the administrator's sale of the land, and that by reason of such collusive combination the plaintiff was enabled to buy at a grossly inadequate price. The defendants ask that the sale be declared fraudulent, and the deed executed in pursuance of it be declared void and canceled.

There were many circumstances shown tending to prove such fraudulent combination, but as the court directed a finding on the issues for the defendant, it is not necessary to give in full any testimony but that of the plaintiff. His wife was a daughter of Berry Call and a devisee under his will. He testified as follows: "I was present on the day of sale. Chaffin, the administrator, put up the land for sale; Conatzer stepped up and forbade the sale, and said he had a deed; Taylor did the same; they stopped the sale; Bailey said they were going to sell the land under the will of David Call, Sr., and if any others had any exceptions, to come up; the lands were then put up; several there; I bid ten dollars on the land; no bid against me; bought the David Call land for five dollars; no other bids; it was knocked off to me; Chaffin did not know I was going to bid; I had no understanding with him.

"I signed Chaffin's administration bond; got him to administer; did not talk with counsel about land before sale; I had (424) counsel before sale; got him to examine will; he was also counsel for the administrator Chaffin, and announced the terms of the sale. He said we are going to sell under the will, and asked if others had objections to state it. I paid a low price; there are 61 or 62 acres in the Dave Call place; there are 28 acres in the Conatzer place; there are 225 or 230 acres in the John Taylor place; the land worth $300 or $400; I sold it for $500. I got Chaffin to administer and signed his bond; don't know what commissions Chaffin got; I made no arrangements with him to get his pay." *Page 308

The issues submitted, with the responses returned by direction of the court, were as follows:

1. Is the plaintiff the owner of the land in controversy? No.

2. What damage, if any, has the plaintiff sustained?

3. Was the sale of the administrator invalid as alleged in the answer? Yes.

The plaintiff and the defendant Chaffin both asked instructions. Among the requests by plaintiff, was one that the burden was upon the defendant Conatzer to prove the fraud alleged, and also a guilty participation in the fraud on the part of the plaintiff Orrender. The court declined to give the instruction, and directed the jury to respond to the first issue, No, and to the third issue, Yes. To the refusal of the court to give the instructions asked, and to the ruling in directing the issues to be so found by the jury, the plaintiff excepted, as also did the defendant Chaffin, and appealed. The judge who tried the cause below erred in taking (425) the issues away from the jury and directing what their findings should be.

There is a class of cases in which the court may declare that in any aspect of the evidence the party charged was guilty of fraud, and there is often an admitted state of facts which the court may tell the jury raises a presumption of fraud, and, in the absence of testimony tending to rebut the prima facie proof, the finding of the jury may be directed by the court. Berry v. Hall, 105 N.C. 163; Woodruff v. Bowles, 104 N.C. 197;Brown v. Mitchell, 102 N.C. 368; Hardy v. Simpson, 35 N.C. 132; Costenv. McDowell, 107 N.C. 546; McLeod v. Bullard, 84 N.C. 515; Lee v.Pearce, 68 N.C. 76. The case at bar does not fall within either of the classifications mentioned, but involves an issue the affirmative of which it is necessary to sustain by testimony satisfactory to the jury. Bobbittv. Rodwell, 105 N.C. 236; Harding v. Long, 103 N.C. 1; Lee v. Pearce,supra.

In Berry v. Hall, supra, the Court say that "the fact that an inadequate price was paid is but a circumstance tending to show fraud, and at most is to be considered a badge of fraud that throws suspicion on the transaction and calls for close scrutiny. . . . Proof of gross inadequacy of price standing alone as a circumstance, in the absence of actual fraud or undue influence, is insufficient to warrant a decree declaring the conveyance void." See also Bump on Fraud. Con., 76, 77 *Page 309 and 87; Bigelow on Fraud, 136; Kerr on Fraud M., 189; Potter v. Everett,42 N.C. 158; Moore v. Reed, 37 N.C. 580.

In Osborne v. Wilkes, 108 N.C. 671, this Court said: "Inadequacy of price is not of itself in any case sufficient ground for setting aside a conveyance as fraudulent, but is a suspicious circumstance to be considered in connection with other testimony tending to show fraud in procuring its execution. . . . If additional testimony were offered tending to show a fraudulent combination to prevent a fair competition of bidders on the part of her husband and others, (426) in which she participated, or of which she had notice before buying, then the jury would be justified in considering the inadequacy of the price paid for the Capps mine in connection with other badges of fraud, and with the fact that she was the wife of a debtor." In that case the sheriff sold under execution the Capps mine, a tract of land that had once been sold for $13,000, and the wife of the judgment debtor bought it for five dollars. The judge below was asked to charge that there was a presumption of fraud in the purchase of the property, but, in lieu of the instruction asked, charged the jury that if the sale wasbona fide, and not made in pursuance of an arrangement between the husband, acting for the wife, and the sheriff, to defraud creditors by getting property for a small price, it was valid, though $13,000 worth of property was bought for five dollars.

If the testimony was not such as to show fraud in law, to be declared by the Court, and did not raise a presumption that the land was sold by the administrator and bought by the plaintiff in pursuance of a collusive plan concocted by them, at a totally inadequate price, then the small sum paid by the purchaser was but a badge of fraud to be considered by the jury in connection with other suspicious circumstances in passing upon an issue as to the alleged fraudulent combination between the administrator and the plaintiff to prevent a fair competition of bidders, and to enable the latter to buy the land at the sale at a grossly inadequate price, if such issue was fairly raised by the pleadings.

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.E. 911, 109 N.C. 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orrender-v-chaffin-nc-1891.