Waller v. Cralle

47 Ky. 11, 8 B. Mon. 11, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 104
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 9, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 47 Ky. 11 (Waller v. Cralle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waller v. Cralle, 47 Ky. 11, 8 B. Mon. 11, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 104 (Ky. Ct. App. 1847).

Opinion

Judge Simpson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action of detinue for several slaves, instituted by the appellee against the appellant.

The plaintiff in the action claims the slaves by purchase from Armistead Long, who had married her daughter. At the time of the purchase, she' was residing with Long, the vendor, where she continued to reside subsequently for a considerable period of time. No actual change of possession was made under this sale, but the slaves remained in the possession, and under the control of Long as they had been previously. At the time of the sale, Long was largely indebted, and the defendant claims the slaves in controversy, as a subsequent purchaser from Long, being also a creditor at the «time of his purchase.

Sales of slaves and other personal property, where the possession does not accompany the sale, but remains with the vendor, are fraudulent and void, as to creditors and subsequent purchasers. This doctrine is too well established to require a discussion, or reference to authorities for its support. The condition of the parties at the time of the sale, the vendee residing with the vendor, does not take the sale out of the operation of this rule of law. An actual change of possession, so far as the thing sold is susceptible of it, is absolutely necessary to the validity of the sale as to creditors and subsequent [12]*12purchasers, whenever the vendor at the time of the sale, is in the possession of the property. - And this transmutation of possession to be effectual, must not be merely nominal or momentary, but must be real, actual and open, and such as may be publicly known.

The fact that the purchaser had notice that a previous sale had been made, will not aifecl his right, if the sate was made to defeat or delay creditors in the collection of iheir debts.

Waller was apprized of the sale to the plaintiff, Mrs. Cralle, at the time he made his purchase, it is therefore contended,- that having notice, he is not such a purchaser as has a right to impeach the previous sale on the ground of fraud. Where, however, a sale is fraudulent, and made to defeat or delay creditors in the collection of their debts, a subsequent purchaser from the fraudulent vendor is not affected by notice of the fraudulent sale and conveyance: (Roberts on Fraud, 16; 1 Marshall, 209.)

Waller, made his purchase from L. J. Cralle, the agent of Armistead Long, and procured from him a bill of sale for the slaves, executed in the names of Long, Mrs. Cralle and L. J. Cralle, the agent of Long. It appears, however, that Cralle had no authority from the plaintiff to make sale of the slaves, or to execute a bill of sale in her name. Nevertheless, the execution of the bill of sale in her name, although without authority, is relied on as an estoppel on the purchaser to deny her title to the property. It cannot have this effect. The whole transaction shows that the purchase was made, and the property held in opposition to, and not under her title. The purchaser did not recognize, but on the contrary, denied its validity; although for the purpose of preventing litigation, he may have deemed it prudent to procure a transfer of her claim, supposing at the time, that L. J. Cralle was empowered to make it. He has not since looked to her for title, his purchase was not executory, but executed, and there is nothing in his attitude in relation to the plaintiff to preclude him from denying her title, and showing it to be wrongful and illegal. Besides, if the bill of sale to the defendant in the name of the plaintiff operates as an estoppel on him to deny her title, it must be on the ground that the writing is obligatory on her; but as she has repudiated it, and denied its validity, the estoppel, if one ever existed, [13]*13so far as it was created by the mere execution of the bill of sale, has been removed, it being well settled that upon the principle of reciprocity, one is not bound by an estoppel, when his adversary has placed at large the matter of estoppel: (4 Dana, 256.)

A sale is not invalid on the ground ' of duress, from the . factthatthe purchaser had attached,or threatened to attach the property purchasedto enforce the collection of a debt.

The slaves in controversy had been removed from this State by the directions of the plaintiff, under suspicious circumstances. They were taken by L. J. Cralle in the night, for the plaintiff, who is his mother, and hurried along with great rapidity, for the purpose of removing them to Virginia, and were in the State of Tennessee at the time they were overtaken by Waller, who there purchased them. Another creditor sued out an attachment in Tennessee, and had it levied on the slaves as the property of Long. Waller threatened an attachment also, unless some arrangement w;as made to secure the payment of his demands against Long. Cralle, who had the slaves in his possession removing them for his mother, was the authorized agent of Long, to sell and dispose of his property at his discretion. Finding that he would be unable to withdraw the property from the reach of Long’s creditors, he finally sold the slaves sued for to Waller, at a price'agreed upon by the parties, and took from the purchaser a written instrument, securing the right to re-purchase the slaves at the same price, within the period of eighteen months. An objection is urged to the title of Waller, on the ground that the sale so made was not voluntary, but was obtained by duress, and consequently, as purchaser, he is not in an attitude to impeach the plaintiff’s title. Being however a creditor, he had a right to resort to coersive measures to secure the payment of his debt, and if the sale was produced solely by the knowledge that the property could not be taken further, it is not thereby rendered invalid, nor is there any pretence furnished for the charge of duress, particularly if the slaves were subject as the property of Long to the payment of his debts, because in that event, Waller had not only a right to threaten an attachment, but had a right to have'sued it out and levied it on the property. It would therefore be strange, if his [14]*14purchase should be affected by an act on his part, which was legal ,and justified by the circumstances.

consMeraUo7 not a sufficient a^ntract which and1 egaTiS^ fair where a writing ÍB executed to a third person who stated aftóVproo^ anitSdeliveiytioS is competent ai contents!>Ve 118

If Waller used any artifice, or made any fraudulent representations in procuring the sale and purchase of the slaves, such fraudulent conduct, would no doubt af^ect purchase, and disqualify him for assailing success-the plaintiff’s title on the ground of fraud. The reduced price at which he obtained the slaves, is not itself sufficient cause to vacate the purchase; inadequacy of consideration alone being, according to the well established doctrine on the subject, insufficient to justify a rescission of a contract otherwise fair and legal. In’this case too, any unfavorable inference on this ground, is repelled by the fact, that the right to re-purchase at the same price at any time within the period of eighteen months, was secured to the vendor.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Whittaker v. Southwest Va. Improvement Co.
12 S.E. 507 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1890)
Groff v. Cooper
6 Del. 36 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1880)
Vanmeter v. Estill
78 Ky. 456 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1880)
Smillie v. Titus
32 N.J. Eq. 51 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1880)
The Senator
21 F. Cas. 1077 (E.D. Michigan, 1875)
In re Hussman
12 F. Cas. 1073 (D. Kentucky, 1869)
Steir v. Robinson & Co.
65 Ky. 307 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1867)
Phinney v. Holt
50 Me. 570 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1862)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 Ky. 11, 8 B. Mon. 11, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waller-v-cralle-kyctapp-1847.