Wash v. McBrayer

31 Ky. 565, 1 Dana 565, 1833 Ky. LEXIS 144
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 11, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 31 Ky. 565 (Wash v. McBrayer) 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
Wash v. McBrayer, 31 Ky. 565, 1 Dana 565, 1833 Ky. LEXIS 144 (Ky. Ct. App. 1833).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of the Court. — ' Judge Nicholas dissenting.

During the pendency of a traverse which McBrayer had taken to an inquisition against him, on a warrant for forcible entry and detainer, Wash, the traversee, sold and conveyed to his sons, the land in controversy, and which was, at the date of the conveyance, in the adversary possession of the traversor.

On the hearing of the traverse, the circuit court decided, that the champerty act of 1824, applied to the case, and that, therefore, Wash could not recover, by suit, the possession of the land.

Whether or not the circuit court erred in that opinion, is the only question which this court will now consider.

The first section of the act of 1824, amending “the champerty law ” (session acts, page 444) declares, that a contract for selling land whilst in the adversary possession of a stranger to the contract, shall be void, and that no right of action shall arise, from such a contract, to either party to it.

The second section invalidates contracts for “ carrying on” suits upon pretended titles to land, in consideration of a part of the land, and declares that any claim or title, which was the subject oí such prohibited contract, should be forfeited, and that neither party should have any cause of action on any such pretended title.

The third section provides, that any person, who was in the adversary possession of the land at the date of any sale or contract prohibited by the first and second sec[566]*566tions, may “plead the sale or purchase of any pretended right or title in violation of the first section, or any contract or agreement made in violation of the second section, in bar of any suit, or claim founded thereonThis latter section does not extend of alter the import or operation of the first section. It only enables the occupant to plead the contract of sale (prohibited by the first section) in bar of any suit founded thereon — that is, on such illegal contract. It does not apply to a suit brought by' the vendor on his own preexisting title, which had not been invalidated or affected by the void contract of sale made in violation of the first section.

Every conveyance, or contract for the sale of land in the adverse possession of a stranger to the contract, is void, (by the .cham-perty act of’24) and no suit can be maintained upon a title acquired under such circumstan ces. But the title of the vendor is not forfeited by such vain attempt to transfer it ; nor is his right of action,upon his preexisting title, thereby destroyed. [See the Dissent of Judge Nicholas, page 569.]

[566]*566The third section, it is true, authorizes a defendant in possession, when sued on a title, or a claim founded on a contract prohibited by either the first or second section, to file a bill of discovery; and hence it is argued, that the third section should be construed as intending to allow a defendant to plead a sale in violation of the first section, in bar of a suit upon the title of the vendor; because, when the suit is brought on the void title of the purchaser, his deed will shew every fact that a discovery on oath could expose. This argument, though plausible, is far from being conclusive. The true date of the contract is the decisive test of its legality, or illegality; and, to evade the statute, the deed could be easily antedated, so as to appear to have been executed prior to the adverse occupancy. When such an artifice is suspected, the defendant may compel the parties to disclose, on oath, the true date; and, in some other respects, a defendant may be benefitted by the oath of the plaintiff, even though the third section applies only tó the prohibited sale or contract.

It is but reasonable to presume, that the first section is as comprehensive as the legislature intended that it should be. It would not be proper, or.consistent, therefore, to give such an interpretation to the third section, enacted only to enforce the first and second, as would extend the effect of those two denunciatory sections, unless such an incongruous interpretation could not he avoided without a palpable perversion of the language of the third section. And it appears to us, that, even [567]*567according to its true grammatical import, the third section is not inconsistent with the first section, and does not invalidate the title of the vendor; it does not, we think, apply to his right at all, but only to the title of his ven-dee. As already suggested, it applies to the “ contract;’’’ but even if it apply to the title, or to a suit founded on the title, which was sold in viojation of the first section, it should be understood to mean the title claimed, or asserted, by the purchaser, only. It would then mean onlv that the defendant may plead the prohibited sale in bar of a suit founded on the purchased title, which is void ; that is, the title attempted to he derived from the illegal contract. Any other construction, would pervert the act of 1824, into an engine of injustice and oppression, as a single case will exemplify : — A, living in Fayette, explores a tract of land, of whicli he is the only owner, in Livingston county, and ascertains that it is unoccupied. He returns home, and, in perfect good faith, mortgages the land to B, to secure a debt which he owes him. Two months afterwards, he pays the debt, and the lien is released ; but, in the mean time, only one day prior to the date of the mortgage, an intruder, without any pretence of title, settled on the land, and boldly claims to hold it adversely to the title of A. Must A give up the land to the trespasser ? He must do so, if the third section of the act of 1824, apply to him. The legislature never could have intended such injustice and absurdity. Such a consequence is not within the motives or policy of the act of 1824.

But it may be asked, why the second section denounces a forfeiture of the claim of both parties to any contract which it inhibits, unless a similar denunciation was intended as to both parties to contracts forbidden by the first section. Two answers may be given to this question. First : The second section applies to both parties expressly and undeniably, The first as clearly applies to the purchaser only; and ita lex scripta should satisfy the querist. Second: But, if it be necessary to find a motive for the discrimination, a sufficient one is quite obvious. Such contracts as those denounced by the second section are signally odious and pestiferous. They [568]*568generate litigation, and encourage injustice and unprincipled speculation. The aim of both parties is the same. They both know that the title which is the subject of their champertous traffic, is questioned and is doubtful, perhaps desperate — desperate means may be necessary to sustain it. The temptation to make such contracts is strong and cannot be easily overcome. And, therefore, it was deemed necessary to subject to forfeiture the claim of both parties, who, for purposes of speculation and pestilent litigation, conspired to violate a salutary law.

But the bona ficle sale

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ky. 565, 1 Dana 565, 1833 Ky. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wash-v-mcbrayer-kyctapp-1833.