Pierce v. Turner

9 U.S. 154, 3 L. Ed. 64, 5 Cranch 154, 1809 U.S. LEXIS 423
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 13, 1809
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 9 U.S. 154 (Pierce v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pierce v. Turner, 9 U.S. 154, 3 L. Ed. 64, 5 Cranch 154, 1809 U.S. LEXIS 423 (1809).

Opinion

March 13.

Washington, J.

delivered the opinion of the court as follows, viz.

This is an action brought by a creditor of Charles Turner, against Rebecca Turner, who is charged as his executrix; and the questions submitted to the consideration of the court are, 1st. Whether the slaves, mentioned in the deed of the 14th of February, 17S8, are to be taken as assets belonging to the estate of Charles Turner; and if so, then, 2d. Whether Mrs. Turner can, under the circumstances of this case, be properly charged as an executrix of her own wrong? If the first question be determined in favour of the defendant in error, it will become unnecessary to consider the second ; as it does not appear that Mrs. Turner intermeddled in any mauner with the estate of her deceased husband, unless these slayes did, in point of law, constitute a paft of that estate.

*165 The first question depends upon the construction which tne court may give to the 4th section of the statute of Virginia, passed on the 13th of December, 1792, entitled “ An act for regulating conveyances,” which declares that all conveyances of land, mar-riage settlements of lands, slaves, or other personal property, deeds of trust and mortgages thereafter made should be void as to all creditors and subsequent purchasers, unless the same were acknowledged or proved, and recorded within the time prescribed by the statute; but that the same as between the par-, ties and their heirs should nevertheless be valid and binding.

The deed from Rebecca Kenner, the defendant in error, previous to her intermarriage with Charles Turner, by which the slaves in question were settled on the said Charles Turner and herself, during their lives, and the life of the longest liver of them, with remainder to the heirs of the said Rebecca, not having been proved and recorded within the time prescribed by law, it is contended by the plaintiff in error that the same became void as to the creditors of Charles Turner, whose rights remained unimpaired by that deed, in the same manner as if it had never been made; in which case, it is not denied that an absolute estate would have vested in the husband, on his marriage.

This argument proceeds upon the ground, that-by the words “ ail creditors and subsequent purchasers,” is meant as well the creditors of the grantee and subsequent purchasers from him, as those who might derive title under the grantor. Although the words are certainly broad enough to comprehend the whole, it is believed by a majority of the court that the construction should be such as to limit the application of them t° the creditors of, and subsequent parchasers. from, the grantor. In no case but one, where a title can be set up for the grantee paramount the deed, can it ever be the interest of a creditor of the grantee to insist upon such a construction as is contended for in this; for as he must derive his title *166 under the deed,, if it be void as to him, it is impossible for him to found a claim upon it in right of the' grantee, whose only title is under the deed. It would be strange that a deed should be binding upon the grantee and his heirs, and yet void as to persons claiming under him, for a valuable consideration; and yet such would be the Consequence, if the words “ all creditors and subsequent purchasers” should be understood to apply to persons claiming under the grantee as well as those claiming under the grantor, Indeed it would seem repugnant and absurd to' apply the same expressions to persons, who, if they claim at all, must claim under the deed, and also to those who claim against the deed; in the' latter case, the invalidity of the deed is consistent with the claim, in the former it is destructive of it.

It máy be said, however, that these observations are inapplicable to this particular case, because the creditors of the husband do not claim under but against the deed ;- and, in this respect, stand upon th< same ground as the creditors of the grantor. But if m every other case which can be.stated, the invalidity of the deed is applicable to the creditors of the grantor, or those claiming under him, and to none other, by what rule of construction can the same words have a more extended meaning, so ‘as to be applied to persons who claim in right óf a party to the Same deed other than the grantor. If the deed in question had granted to Charles Turner an estate in fee as to' the land, and for life in respect to the slaves, would it have been void as to simple contract creditors, who could go only against the persqna! estate, and good as to specialty creditors, who might subject the real assets ? and yet, if the deed be void at all, as to the creditors of the husband, it must be so throughout; in which case it might well be doubted whether the' land jcould be made liable to the payment of the husband’s debts; or, to present the question in a less doubtful shape, would the deed be-considered void as to q purchaser, from the husband, of the slaves, and gqod as tó a purchaser of the land ? Let the true interpretation of the words “ all *167 creditors and subsequent purchasers” be once ascertained, and every difficulty in the case is at an end. If they are construed to mean the creditors of the grantor, or subsequent purchasers from him, then, the deed being good between all the parties to it, no estate vested iti Charles. Turner, but such as the deed itself'passed to him. The title of his creditors being clearly derivative, if he had no title under the deed, (and being himself bound hy it, he could have none which was inconsistent with it,) then his creditors could have none. But if he had a title incompatible with that granted by the deed, then he was not bound by the deed; contrary to.the statute which declares that he was bound. Ifhis creditors have any such title, it cannot be derived from him, when, in point of law, he had none in himself; and, independent of his title, it is impossible to show any in them. If a subsequent purchaser, with notice of a prior unrecorded deed, could not prevail' against the title of the first purchaser, and most unquestionably he could not, how much stronger is the case when such subsequent purchaser is even a party to the first deed, and claims an interest under it? To say in this case, that, upon the> marriage of Charles Turner, or at any time afterwards, the law cast upon him an estate in the property conveyed by this deed, of which he had notice, and to which he was a party, inconsistent with the estate conveyed to him by that deed, (and this must be said, if his creditors can claim such estate in his right,) is, in the opinion of a majority of the court, repugnant to the plain meaning and spirit of the law under consideration.

That .creditors of the husband, or purchasers from him, may be injured by the construction which this court feels itself compelled to give to this law, need not be denied; but it is not for this tribunal to afford them relief. It might, perhaps, be well if the law were so amended as to render deeds made in contemplation of marriage void in express terms, as to the creditors of the husband, or purchasers from him, in case the same should not be recorded within the time prescribed by law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 U.S. 154, 3 L. Ed. 64, 5 Cranch 154, 1809 U.S. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-v-turner-scotus-1809.