Pregnall v. Miller & Kelly

21 S.C. 385, 1884 S.C. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 26, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 21 S.C. 385 (Pregnall v. Miller & Kelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pregnall v. Miller & Kelly, 21 S.C. 385, 1884 S.C. LEXIS 110 (S.C. 1884).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chiee Justice Simpson.

On August 11, 1883, the appellants purchased from the Marine and River Phosphate Company a steam engine, with about 9,627 pounds of iron, then on a certain dredge boat lying in Ashley River, at the wharf of the said company, the consideration of the purchase being a preexisting debt upon which the said purchase was credited. The appellants at once removed the iron from the dredge boat, but left the engine thereon, for their convenience and at their risk. After this, i. e., about August 27, the respondents, claiming to have purchased the plant of this Marine and River Phosphate Company, located at their works, and including the said engine, took possession of the same. This purchase was made after August 11, the time of appellants’ purchase, and wrns also made in payment of a preexisting debt due by said company to respondents. Under these circumstances the action below was brought by appellants against respondents for the recovery of the engine, the sole issue in the case being ownership.

The Circuit judge laid down the following legal propositions, in substance, for the government of the jury. That to complete a sale of personal property, there must be a payment of the purchase money on the one side, and a delivery of the article on the other. That in such sale where the vendor continues in possession after the sale as visible owner, the sale is to be considered fraudu[389]*389lent and void against creditors. That in such sale, where the consideration is a pre-existent debt, and property is left in the possession of the vendor, the sale is null and void ; and in this case if they find that the appellants agreed to buy, and did buy the engine, leaving it in the possession of the company, from whom thereafter the respondents bought, taking possession without notice of plaintiffs’ claim, then the jury are instructed that such prior sale to appellants is null and void, and the latter sale to respondents is good and valid, and the plaintiffs cannot recover.

Under this charge the jury found for the defendants. A new trial was moved, but was refused, the Circuit judge holding that a sale of personal property in payment of a pre-existing debt, the vendor retaining possession required the application of fraud as a legal conclusion, and therefore the verdict, being in accordance with the law, could not be disturbed; and further, as there was but one exception to this rule, to wit, where the vendor remained in possession under a contract of hiring (Pringle v. Rhame, 10 Rich., 75), of which there being no evidence in this case, the verdict was not obnoxious to the objection that it should have been left to the jury as a matter of fact to determine the character of the possession, and especially whether any benefit or advantage accrued to the debtor, as the price of the preference given to the creditor.

The appeal involves the correctness of these different rulings and holdings. The main questions to be considered are, 1st. Whether, as held by the Circuit judge, the retention of possession by a vendor of personal property after a sale on consideration of a pre-existing debt is per se fraudulent as a general rule ? 2. If so, whether, the only exception thereto is, where the possession is retained upon a new contract of hiring as in Pringle v. Rhame f

The leading English cases upon this subject are Twyne’s Case, 3 Co., 80, and the case of Edwards v. Harben, 2 T. R., 587. These eases seemed to favor the principle that the mere fact of the vendor retaining possession after sale will of itself, in every such case, render such sale invalid. But this doctrine to its full extent has never been followed in all of the American courts. In Massachusetts it is held that such retention is only prima facie [390]*390evidence of fraud, and may be explained by testimony; in other words, that the character of such possession is a question of fact. So in New Hampshire, Connecticut, New York, North Carolina, Georgia, Mississippi, Texas, Wisconsin, Arkansas, Ohio, and Tennessee. See 1 Chit. Cont. (11th edit.), 571, 572, note, and cases there cited. In some of the other states a contrary doctrine is held. In our state, previous to Smith v. Henry, 1 Hill, 16, the cases seemed to hold that retention of possession was a badge of fraud, not conclusive, but prima facie; but if the testimony proved that the sale was founded upon a valuable consideration, the sale could not be impeached except by positive fraud, want of bonafides. Terry v. Belcher, 1 Bail., 568; Garrett v. Rhame, 9 Rich., 407; Guignard v. Harley, 10 Rich. Eq., 253.

In Smith v. Henry, however, a distinction was drawn between a sale where a present consideration was advanced, and a sale upon a pre-existing debt; the former being left under the principle suggested above, and the latter held fraudulent as a conclusive presumption of law, the retention of possession being regarded in law as the inducement to the sale, and the cause of the preference given to the particular creditor. In this case Chancellor Harper attempted to reconcile the conflict which seemed to exist in the previous cases, by a close examination of the principle upon which it had been held in some of them, and especially the English Cases, supra, that retention of possession after sale was per se fraudulent. He said that this was not, as some seemed to suppose, because the debtor being left in possession, he thereby obtained a credit upon the faith of property which he was not entitled to, misleading subsequent creditors. Nor was it because his antecedent creditors were lulled into a false security. But it was because the debtor had obtained some benefit to himself as the price of the preference given, evidenced by his retaining possession, and using it as his own.

Such being the principle of these decisions, it was urged that it did not apply necessarily to a sale where the consideration was valuable, and paid down at the time, because there could be no necessary inference in suGh case that the sale was for the benefit of the debtor, although he retained possession thereafter. Where, however, the sale was in consideration of a pre-existing debt ex[391]*391tinguished thereby, and yet the debtor retained possession, the inference that the debtor had stipulated for some benefit or advantage to himself was so irresistible, that in such cases such possession was held per se evidence of fraud. Hence the distinction which he drew in that case, between sales upon a present-consideration advanced at the time, and sales in payment of a pre-existing debt, holding the latter invalid upon the mere fact of retention of possession by the debtor, and the former open to explanation.

Thus stood the law in this state until Jones & Briggs v. Blake and wife, 2 Hill Ch., 636, followed by Pringle v. Rhame, 10 Rich., 74, in which the court modified the stringent rule laid down in Smith v. Henry, as to a sale upon a pre-existing debt, with possession retained under a contract of hire.

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Related

In re Colonial Distributing Co.
291 F. Supp. 154 (D. South Carolina, 1968)
SOUTHERN FIRE & CASUALTY COMPANY v. Teal
287 F. Supp. 617 (D. South Carolina, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.C. 385, 1884 S.C. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pregnall-v-miller-kelly-sc-1884.