Thompson v. Esty

45 A. 566, 69 N.H. 55
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 45 A. 566 (Thompson v. Esty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Esty, 45 A. 566, 69 N.H. 55 (N.H. 1896).

Opinion

Carpenter, C. J.

In Coburn v. Pickering, 3 N. H. 415, it was held that any trust in favor of the vendor in a sale of chattels is a fraud with respect to creditors; that possession of the chattels retained by the vendor is always grima facie, and, if unexplained, conclusive evidence of a secret trust; and that when the fact appears that there tvas a trust, fraud is an inference of law, w'hich the court is bound to pronounce in favor of judgment creditors. The doctrine of that case has been applied in numerous cases in this state, and it may be regarded as too firmly established in our jurisprudence to be reversed by judicial action. “ It is unnecessary to cite authorities to the point that 4i sale of chattels is invalid as to creditors of the vendor when the property is allowed to remain in his use and possession." Doucet v. Richardson, 67 N. H. 186, 187. Though it is found or admitted that the vendee paid to the vendor the full value of the property, that no actual fraud was intended or committed, and that no creditor was misled, deceived, or injured in any respect by the transaction, the law pronounces it fraudulent and void. It is declared a fraud in law “without auy particular reference to its effect upon existing or subsequent creditors.55 Kendall v. Fitts, 22 N. H. 1, 7. It is a fraud though “ neither the dictionary nor morality rvould give it that name 55 (1 Par. Pont. 281); and a creditor by legal process may seize the property for which the innocent vendee has paid an adequate consideration and apply it in satisfaction of his debt. N either the good iaith of the parties, nor the entire absence of injury or inconvenience to others on account of the sale, is material. Indeed, if it could be shown that the insolvent debtor’s attachable estate was increased in value by reason of his prudence, shrewdness, or good fortune in making the trade with the vendee, the evidence would be inadmissible; the vendee -would still be deprived of his property, and both the debtor and his creditor would be benefited thereby,— the debtor by the liquidation of his indebtedness, and the creditor by the collection of his claim.

To one not profoundly versed in the science of law, the rule that in all cases the vendor’s retention for his use of the possession of the chattels sold raises a conclusive presumption of fraud, to bo declared by the court as a matter of law, would seem to afford a convenient and effective method by which creditors may accomplish a practical fraud upon innocent third parties. A *64 strenuous, effort to guard the interests of attaching creditors, announced as a rule of law, has resulted in depriving innocent purchasers of their property without a return of the purchase price. For no actual fault on their part they are often doubly punished, being compelled to sacrifice the consideration they paid for the property as well as the property itself. The reason assigned for this conclusive presumption of fraud, arising as a matter of law from the debtor’s unexplained possession of the-chattels, is that such a sale is void, not because any wrong in fact has been perpetrated,— not because the creditors have been injured in the slightest degree or have been actually hindered' or delayed in the collection of their debts by the debtor’s conditioned sale of the property,— but because the form of the sale is such as might be convenient for perpetrating a fraud upon the debtor’s creditors. Such- sales “ would afford a cover for innumerable frauds against creditors, if they were by law compelled to unravel each transaction and show actual fraud. It would rarely be in their power to do this in the most fraudulent cases. All would be contrived originally by the parties to the fraud to meet the attack; and the fraud would be carefully covered by fortresses impregnable by any evidence which it would be in the power of creditors to bring against them.” Coburn v. Pickering, 3 N. H. 415, 428. “ The reason why the law denounces as wanting in good faith and fraudulent, a bill of sale purporting an absolute conveyance of property but attended with a secret trust, is that it holds out false colors; that it is evidence to prove the contract to be different from what it is in reality, and is calculated to deceive and mislead creditors and may be used for that purpose. And the law presumes that he Avho buys goods of a person in debt, and takes evidence of the contract which is in its nature false, intends to use it for the purpose of deception, and to defeat that purpose declares the contract to be void for that cause.” Parker v. Pattee, 4 N. H. 176, 178. “ It is because such trusts are calculated to deceive and embarrass creditors, because they are not things to which honest debtors can have any occasion to resort in sales of then-property, and because they are the means which dishonest debtors commonly and ordinarily use to cheat their creditors, that the laAV does not permit a debtor to say that he used them for-an honest purpose in any case.” Winkley v. Hill, 9 N. H. 31, 33. In effect, the argument is that insolvent debtors may sometimes resort to this method of disposing of their property in order to place it beyond the reach of their creditors; hence, the law-pronoun ces all such sales void in favor of attaching creditors.

If from the nature of the transaction it necessarily followed that the debtor’s purpose was fraudulent, and that -the vendeeengaged to assist him in carrying it out, the legal conclusion- or con- *65 elusive presumption that the conveyance was fraudulent and void would be supported by sound logic. It would not then be the finding of the fact of intention from evidence reasonably susceptible of more than one explanation. But if it is conceded that the debtor may retain the possession and use of property which he has sold without intending to delay or hinder his creditors, a presumption of law, or a binding charge by the court to the jury, that he did so intend and that the conveyance is therefore void, would seem to be an invasion of the province of the jury. The presumption, though called one of law, is essentially one of fact. Formerly it was held that from the recent unexplained possession of stolen property the law presumed that the possessor was the thief, and the burden of proof was thereby shifted upon the respondent. But in State v. Hodge, 50 N. H. 510, this doctrine was repudiated on the ground that the inference or presumption was one of fact for the jury,— not of law for the court. The possession of stolen property may be evidence that the respondent stole it, as the possession by the vendor of the goods sold may be evidence that he had a purpose to conceal them from his creditors; but as the possession of property recently stolen is not inconsistent with innocence on the part of the possessor, and as the vendor’s possession and use of the subject of the sale may not be tainted with the least bad faith on his part, the inference to be drawn therefrom is one of fact; and nothing less than legislative action could make it a rule of law. Because it is a question of fact, its determination as a question of law has often resulted in the most evident injustice.

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Bluebook (online)
45 A. 566, 69 N.H. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-esty-nh-1896.