Parker v. Carter

4 Munf. 273, 18 Va. 273, 1814 Va. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 28, 1814
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 4 Munf. 273 (Parker v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Carter, 4 Munf. 273, 18 Va. 273, 1814 Va. LEXIS 42 (Va. 1814).

Opinion

the following opinion of the court was delivered by

Judge Roane.

This is a bill brought by the appellant against the appellees J. C. Carter and Afifihia his wife, and their children, as also, among others, against the representatives of Edward. Carter, the trustee named in a deed of settlement, of April 5th, 1784, from Wm. Faunileroy, the father of the said Afifihia, That deed conveyed certain negroes to the said trustee, for the use of the said Afifihia for life, free from the controul of her husband and his creditors, and, after her death, to the use of all her children who should be then living. The bill was brought, after the appellant had obtained a judgment at law [284]*284against the said J. C. Carter, upon a bond, of April 12th 1784, given by him to Hudson Muse, and assigned to the appellant, and after the said Carter had taken the oath of an insolvent debtor, under an execution sued out upon the said judgment. Its object is to set aside the deed aforesaid, in favour of the said appellant, and subject the negroes, thereby conveyed, to the payment of the debt aforesaid, on the ground that he was a creditor of the said J. C. Carter, and that, on his marriage with the said Afifihia, in 1782, the said slaves had been delivered to him, under a parol gift thereof, by the said William Fauntleroy. The bill' also prays a decree against three of the sons of the said Carter and wife; on the ground of an alleged agreement on their parts to pay the debt in question. •

The decisions of the Court of Appeals, upon the true construction of the act of 1758, for preventing fraudulent gifts of slaves, having declared void all such gifts, made prior to the act of 1787, as were not evidenced by a deed, although possession of the slaves given may have been delivered to the donee; the present claim can only be set up, on the ground of the appellant having been a creditor of the donee J. C. Carter, and that his possession of the slaves aforesaid, under the gift, either singly taken, or in connexion of acts .of ownership on his part, and of consent or connivance on the part of the donor, ought, in a controversy between the latter, or volunteers claiming under him,, and the creditors of the former, to give them the preference. Where such possession has actually taken place under the parol gift, it is a matter of great importance to decide, of what character that possession must be, in relation to its tendency to deceive.the donee’s creditors, and what acts of ownership, or of consent and connivance as aforesaid, (if a possession singly is not sufficient,) and whether all the said circumstances, conjunctly taken, are adequate to produce the effect above mentioned. But if no possession is shewn to have taken place under such gift, these important enquiries are unnecessary to be gone into. There would then be no foundation on which the claim of the creditor can be erected. In [285]*285such case, it is also unimportant, for the same reason, to en-quire, whether the party was a creditor of the donee, or not, prior to the delivery of the deed attempted to be impeached, or whether that circumstance be important.

None of these enquiries will now be gone into by this court. It is unnecessary, because there is no adequate proof, in the cause, that the appellee, J. C. Carter ever had possession of the negroes in question, under the parol gift before mentioned.

However the case, on this point, might have stood, if the deposition of Richard Parker should be sustained, it is clear that, if that deposition be withdrawn from the cause, the answers of the appellees J. C. Carter and his wife (which on this point of possession are strictly responsive to the bill,) must preponderate. There is, afterwards, nothing but circumstances to be opposed to those answers.

As for the witness, Mr. Parker, he admits that he was a practising attorney at the time ; that it was in that character that he drew the deed in question, and expected to receive a fee for drawing it. This is not only admitted by him, but it results from the nature of the application, that it was in this character that he was applied to, and retained. He was applied to by Mr. Fauntleroy, to draw such a deed as would settle the negroes on the appellee Afifihia, and exempt them from liability to her husband’s creditors. The preparing such a deed necessarily required some degee of legal knowledge ; and it might not be, that a person wholly unskilled in the law would be competent to draw it. While we say this, it is by no means intended to be admitted, that, where an attorney is retained and consulted, his right to disclose his client’s secrets depends, at all, on the difficulty or clearness of the case submitted. A compliance with Mr. Fauntleroy’s request in this instance necessarily required the facts to be by him stated, on which the attorney’s judgment was to turn : and the fact then disclosed, touching the delivery under the parol gift, was all-important, in forming a right conclusion on the subject. Being thus important, it is wholly immaterial whether it was disclosed by way of answer to an [286]*286enquiry of the attorney, or was spontaneously mentioned by his client. But, if the fact were even unimportant, it makes no difference as to the principle now in question. It is enough that it was communicated by the client, in a professional consultation with his counsel. As to the exception set up from the general rule, in this case, on the ground of the publicity of the conversation in which the disclosure was made; while it does not' follow that, because there might have been many persons in the court-house at the time, they were so unengaged as to have attended to this conversation, this publicity only shews an indiscretion on the part' of Mr. Fauntleroy. We must not, in relation to a fact of a highly confidential nature, and strictly applying to the question submitted, embark in a field of uncertainty and conjecture, and, without any certain scale to go by, undertake to decide, from the place and manner of the conversation, that this fact was not disclosed in confidence. It is safer, and more conducive to that free intercourse which should exist between a client , and his attorney, to consider all communications confidential, which fall within the description just mentioned: unless, indeed, the client should seem to vaunt his disclosures to the public, and, as it were, challenge the by-standers to heat? them. Whatever opinion the witness, Mr.. Parker, may, therefore,have entertained, as to his not being bound to secrecy, either because there was no cause depending in court at the time, and in which he was employed; because his counsel or advice was not, literally, ásked for in the case ; or on account of the place and manner in which the conversation was held; this court differs in opinion from him upon all these points, and, in respect to the disclosed fact now in question, holds him to have been an incompetent witness.

This court understands it to be the settled law, that counsel and attornies ought not to be permitted to give evidence of facts imparted to them, by their clients, when acting in their professional character; that they are considered as identified with their clients, and, of necessity, entrusted with their secrets, which, therefore, without a dangerous breach of ©onfidence, eannot be revealed; that this obligation of [287]*287secrecy continues always, and is the privilege of the client, and not of the attorney.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Munf. 273, 18 Va. 273, 1814 Va. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-carter-va-1814.