Shober v. . Hauser

20 N.C. 222
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1838
StatusPublished

This text of 20 N.C. 222 (Shober v. . Hauser) 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
Shober v. . Hauser, 20 N.C. 222 (N.C. 1838).

Opinion

On the trial at Guilford on the spring circuit of 1837, before his Honor, Judge Dick, the plaintiff to establish title in his lessors gave in evidence a deed duly executed by the defendant, Daniel Hauser and Elizabeth Lash of the one part, and the said Emanuel of the other, bearing date 2 April, 1831, whereby it was witnessed that in consideration of five dollars paid by the said Emanuel to the said Daniel and Elizabeth, and also in consideration of the matters thereinafter recited, the said Daniel and Elizabeth bargained and sold the land in controversy *Page 177 to the said Emanuel, to have and to hold to him, his heirs and assigns forever, upon the special trust and confidence thereinafter declared. The indenture proceeded to declare this special trust and confidence to be that, whereas, on the day of the date the said Daniel and Elizabeth had executed their bond to Charles F. Bagge for the sum of $1,200, payable two years after date, with interest from the date, payable annually; if the bond should not be paid when it became due, or the annual interest thereof should not be paid as stipulated, the said Emanuel, at the request of the said Charles, should sell the land at public sale, and after paying off, by the proceeds of such sale, the debt aforesaid, and retaining a reasonable compensation for his services, account for and pay (224) over the residue of the proceeds to the said Daniel and Elizabeth; and if the said Daniel and Elizabeth should pay off the said debt in any other way, then the said Shober should convey the said land to the said Daniel and Elizabeth and their heirs, or to that one of them and his or her heirs who should thus pay it off; and furthermore it was covenanted by the said deed that until a sale should be made as aforesaid, the said Daniel and Elizabeth should retain the possession of the land. The plaintiff further proved that in pursuance of the stipulations of this deed of trust the land was duly sold by Shober and bought by Salathiel Stone, the other lessor; and exhibited in evidence a deed from the said Shober to the said Stone effectual in form to convey the land. The defendant acknowledged himself in possession, but contended that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, because, as he averred, the deed of 2 April, 1831, was utterly void, it having been made as an assurance or part and parcel of an assurance for the payment of money loaned by the said Bagge unto the bargainors in said deed, or one of them, at an usurious rate of interest.

Upon the evidence it appeared that at the request of the defendant the trustee Shober had applied to Bagge to borrow the sum of $1,000; and being informed by Bagge that he was not then in funds Shober shortly thereafter communicated this information to the defendant, who then requested him to say to Mr. Bagge that if he would make the loan of $1,000, the defendant would become responsible for two bonds of his father, Christian Hauser, held by Bagge; thereupon Shober applied again for the loan and delivered this message, when Bagge informed him that he was then in funds, and would lend the money. A short time thereafter the defendant and Bagge came to Shober; the two bonds of the defendant's father, on which there was due two hundred dollars for principal and interest, were given up by Bagge, and the thousand dollars lent, a bond for the sum of $1,200, payable two years after date, with interest from the date, was executed by the defendant and Elizabeth Lash, and the deed hereinbefore referred to was also drawn up by *Page 178 (225) Shober at the request of the parties, and executed as a further security. It was in evidence also that at this time the defendant was in good credit, was engaged in negro speculations, and that his father, the said Christian, was in his service — that Bagge was an old friend of the said Christian — that the said Christian was supposed to be embarrassed, if not insolvent, and his property was covered by fraudulent alienations to his friends, so that his creditors could not readily reach it — that a few months after this transaction he confessed judgment to the defendant, without any evidence of debt, for $120 — that at the instance of the said Christian, executions were levied upon property of the said Christian, and that at the sale under these executions every article of property was bid off at a single bid by the defendant, except one article, which was bid off by the said Christian's son-in-law — that the said Christian seemed always to have the means of paying debts which he chose to pay, and that in August and November, 1831, the said Christian became surety for the defendant in his purchases of negroes, and that the defendant then represented him as perfectly solvent and worth at least three thousand dollars.

Upon this evidence his Honor charged the jury that if from the evidence they believed that Christian Hauser, at the time of the loan to defendant, was insolvent, or even in doubtful circumstances, and it was any part of the motive with Bagge in making the loan to secure the debt from said Christian, the transaction was usurious, the bond and deed void, and they should find a verdict for the defendant. The jury found a verdict for the defendant; the plaintiff moved for a new trial because of misdirection to the jury. The new trial was refused and judgment rendered for the defendant, from which the plaintiff appealed.

This case was argued at length at the last term by and after an advisari until the present term, the opinion of the Court was delivered by The plaintiff had no claim to recover except upon the demise of (226) Salathiel Stone. There was no evidence of title in Bagge, and if Shober ever had any legal estate it passed by his conveyance to Stone. The correctness of the instruction is therefore to be considered in reference to his demise.

In the argument of the case several questions of law were discussed, which heretofore have not been decided in the courts of this State. As *Page 179 well on this account as because of their importance to the community they have been considered by us very deliberately.

On the part of the plaintiff it was contended that, admitting the debt referred to in the deed to have been tainted with usury, and therefore the bond and the trust to sell for payment of the debt void, yet the deed passed the legal estate to Shober. In support of this position it was argued that the statute avoids "bonds, contracts and assurances for payment of any money to be lent upon usury; that a court of equity, which looks upon the conveyance of the legal estate as formal only and considers the trusts declared as the substance of the conveyance, and which has jurisdiction of trusts and is competent to decide on their character, might pronounce the deed, to the extent of these trusts, a mere security, and as such set it aside upon payment of what was equitably due; but that at law the conveyance is absolute — contains no provision whereby the estate thereby granted is to return to the bargainors on payment of the money lent, and therefore it is not in the contemplation of a court of law an assurance for the payment of money" avoided by the statute. It seems to us that this argument could not be answered if, in determining what is an "assurance" prohibited by the statute, we are to be governed by the form of the instrument, and are not at liberty to look into the purposes designed to be accomplished by it. In form the deed is a bargain and sale from Hauser and Lash to Shober, and they are the only parties to it.

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.C. 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shober-v-hauser-nc-1838.