Potter & Son v. Gracie

58 Ala. 303
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 58 Ala. 303 (Potter & Son v. Gracie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potter & Son v. Gracie, 58 Ala. 303 (Ala. 1877).

Opinion

BBIGKELL, C. J.

A contract, the consideration of which is future illicit cohabitation, like all agreements to do acts forbidden by the law of God, or in furtherance of immorality, is utterly void. If it has been executed, no court of law or equity will, at the instance of either party, interpose to set it aside. The courts apply the maxim, “ In pari delicto, potior est conditio defendentis,” abstaining from interference to enforce or to vacate. — Story on Con. 5543; Black & Manning v. Oliver, 1 Ala. 449; Walker v. Gregory, 36 Ala. 180. A contract or conveyance, in consideration of past cohabitation, intended or regarded as reparation, or indemnity for the wrong done, is treated at common law as founded on a good consideration. If executory, and under seal, the seal conclusively importing a consideration, it may be enforced ; but if not under seal, a mere simple contract, the consideration of which may be impeached by plea and evidence, it stands on the same ground with other contracts or agreements, having only the performance of a natural or moral duty as a consideration to support them. — Story on Con. 541; Chitty on Con. 661-62 ; Singleton v. Bremar (Harper’s Law), 201; Binnington v. Wallis, 4 Barn. & Ald. 650; Marchiones of Annondale v. Harris, 2 Peere Wm. 432; Gray v. Matthias, 5 Ves. 286. A conveyance to a mistress, or to her and her children, by way of gift or advancement, not looking to future cohabitation, intended merely as a provision for maintenance, cannot be sustained against existing creditors. It. stands, as would any other conveyance, springing not from motives of justice, but from motives of affection, or generosity, or prudence. The claims of creditors rest on legal obligations, higher than the demands of affection, or generosity, commendable as may be a response to these, when there are not duties Which the law declares paramount.— Wait v. Day, 4 Denio, 439; Sherman v. Barrett, 1 McMullan, 147.

It is not, perhaps, important to inquire whether the conveyance now impeached rests on a consideration of past or of future cohabitation. If the latter is its consideration, having been executed, it is valid and operative against the grantor, his privies in blood and in estate.— Walker v. Gregory, supra. If the former is its consideration,the conveyance is voluntary. It is the settled law of this State that a con-[306]*306V6jan.ce, not founded on a valuable consideration, is absolutely void as to tbe existing creditors of tbe grantor. No inquiry is indulged into tbe intent witb wbicb it is made. Tbe intent is material only when tbe rights of subsequent creditors are involved. Then, if it is tainted witb actual fraud, it is void. — 2 Brick. Dig. 21, §§ 100-119. Tbe complainants are creditors of tbe grantor, and their debts existed at tbe execution of tbe conveyance. As to tbem, the conveyance is void, because its consideration is not valuable. Tbe inflexible rule of tbe law is, that the man must be just before he is generous. Tbe claims of wife and children, of all who are bound by tbe ties of natural affection, and relations tbe law recognizes and favors, must yield to the paramount legal duty of tbe debtor to creditors. If these claims are subordinate, surely all claim wbicb is tbe result of an immoral, illegal, meretricious connection, cannot stand on higher ground.

As is usual, and is to be expected in cases of this character, it is attempted to support tbe conveyance'by evidence of a valuable consideration. Services rendered by tbe mistress, or a loan of money, for tbe payment of wbicb no written evidence is taken, proved by tbe loose declarations of tbe grantor, made to witnesses having no interest to direct their attention to tbem, and no motive for preserving a distinct remembrance of tbem, have often been asserted as tbe consideration of conveyances, made between parties living in illicit intercourse. Criminal as may be their conduct, there is no legal inhibition against their contracting with each other, and if their contracts are not infected by tbe illegality of tbe relation- — if they are supported by a valuable consideration, they will be upheld and enforced. Tbe existence of tbe relation must excite tbe jealousy of the' court called to inquire into tbe validity of the contract. If tbe character of tbe contract is such as would naturally spring from tbe relation, and is not such as would be expected, if it was founded on a valuable consideration, moving between tbe parties, as if -they were strangers dealing witb each other, clear and convincing proof of the consideration must be given to neutralize tbe unfavorable inferences tbe court would feel constrained to draw. For, many years prior to tbe execution of this conveyance, tbe relation between tbe grantor and tbe grantee for life, was that of concubinage. Beginning while she was bis slave, tbe remainderman was born of tbe illicit intercourse; after emancipation, it continued until bis death severed it in 1873. There may be no evidence of a distinct agreement, when tbe conveyance was executed, that tbe relation should continue, yet it cannot be doubted its continu-[307]*307anee was contemplated, and there is no reason for supposing that, if its dissolution had been suggested, the grantor would have executed the conveyance. Separation for the wrong he had inflicted, there is not a fact in evidence tending to show he intended. If he was penitent, and intended to atone for the wrong, it is not apparent from any act or declaration found in the mass of evidence in the record. The character of the conveyance is, that to be expected from the condition of the parties — a gift to the mistress for life, with remainder to the child, the offspring of the cohabitation. If a valuable consideration, a debt due to the mistress, had been the consideration of the conveyance, it is not probable she would have consented that her estate in the premises should be limited to her life; and if she died, the remainder should have been limited to the son to the exclusion of her after-born children, if any she had. Such limitations are not usual in deeds of bargain and sale, into which it is sought, by parol evidence, to convert this conveyance, when the consideration moves from one grantee to the grantor. These are the limitations which would be expected in a settlement upon a mistress and her illegitimate child. Fraud, or illegality, is not presumed, it must be proved; and often it is shown by circumstances, rather than by direct evidence. The inferences which must be drawn from the relation of .the parties, and the. character of the conveyance, as to its real consideration, must be repelled by clearer and more convincing evidence of a valuable consideration than that the appellees have introduced.

Without regard to the weight of the evidence., however, we are constrained to declare that it was inadmissible, and could not contradict or vary the consideration expressed in the conveyance. The deed recites that it is made on divers good considerations, and for kindness, the grantor feels towards Mary Grade, and her child Willie or William. A deed may be supported by a good consideration, or a valuable consideration. If it rests merely on a good consideration, it is subordinate to the rights of existing creditors, valid and operative against the rest of the world; while a valuable consideration frees it from impeachment, if it is not tainted with a fraudulent intent. “A good

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Bluebook (online)
58 Ala. 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potter-son-v-gracie-ala-1877.