Welsh v. Perkins

8 Ohio 52
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1837
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio 52 (Welsh v. Perkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Welsh v. Perkins, 8 Ohio 52 (Ohio 1837).

Opinion

Judge Wood

delivered the opinion of the court, as follows:

From the present value of the property in dispute, this case is of exciting .interest to the parties, and we have endeavored to give it a thorough and deliberate examination. The complainants-are the heirs at law of the decedent, and seek to set aside the sale, on the ground that it is opposed to public policy, and that Crosby purchased, as the agent of Perkins, or with full knowledge of the agreement between him and Webb. Though not disclosed in the bill, another reason is also presented in the argument of counsel, and urged with distinguished zeal, and attempted to be sustained with an array of authority, that the administrator is not chargeable with the taxes upon real estate, and has no power to-sell the land for their payment. We shall examine each of these positions in its order, as briefly as its nature and our duty will permit. Should we trespass beyond ordinary limits, an apology must be found,in the endeavor to satisfy the complainants, with the reasons on which our conclusions are built.

It is insinuated in the argument, that some of these respondents intended fraud in fact. That position, we apprehend, may at once be abandoned, for there is not one item of evidence, in the case, that leans, in even a remote degree, to its support. The lands sold were, at the time, well sold. They sold for as much as *land, in August, 1831, would ordinarily sell for, for cash in hand, more than one-half their appraised value; and what more could any reasonable man expect? The inquiry, then, as to fraud, . in fact being dismissed, it remains to be settled, in the next place, [53]*53whether the agreement between Webb and Perkins is against sound policy and void ? We have seen, by the answers of these defendants, what this contract was, and it is necessary to keep in view all the peculiar circumstances under which it was made, and more especially the fact that it not only appears, from the nature of the transaction itself, and the character in which Webb was acting, but is most indubitably proved, that he had not one particle of interest in the sale, which, it is claimed, resulted from his agreement with Perkins. There is also another feature in the case, which a chancellor, sitting in a matter of conscience, to do right and repress wrong, should, by no means, overlook: that Butler, one of the heirs, and the active one who managed for the whole, requested that this very land should be sold by the administrator. This is inferable, most clearly, from the evidence that he desired land sold out of the county- of Geauga, and agreed to attend the sale of this very property. The administrator, when he came into the office, found the land advertised for the taxes, and to save them, as he supposed, from sacrifice, the arrangement with Perkins was made. Perkins was the only source from whence the money could be obtained. He could advance it, but required, in return, that the administrator should proceed, with diligence, to raise it for him again from the estate. He knew this land would sell; he required that it should be offered, and that the terms should be cash. Was there either moral or legal iniquity in this ? It is said, if .administrators may make any arrangement by which a sale may be influenced, heirs may be defrauded, and it is, therefore, prohibited. We apprehend the rule is not thus extensive; that it is limited to those cases in which the administrator has an interest, or may have an interest, and then the law refuses to trust him to make any contract for his own benefit in relation to the property of the cestuy que trust. Such are the numerous cases .cited, and for this reason, that his interest interferes with his duty. Bmptor emit quam minima potest, venditor vendit quam máximo potest. The counsel for the complainants rely much on the case of Davoue v. Fanning, 2 Johns. Ch. 252. No one entertains .a higher opinion of the learned chancellor who delivered the opinion in that case. He has probably done more *to build up a system of American chancery law than any other man living. His sound discrimination and persevering industry are worthy of [54]*54all praise. The opinion, in that case, is believed to be law by us j, and it is sustained by a very learned and elaborate analysis of all the ancient and modern decisions to the time it was made. The-analogy, however, between the two cases is not so easily perceived. Fanning was the executor of Davoue, and by an agreement, suffered the property to be purchased in for his wife, and executed a. deed in pursuance of the sale, in trust, for her. The chancellor-remarks : “ Whether a trustee buys in for himself or his wife, the temptation to abuse is nearly the same. His interest interferes with his duty.” And farther, he says : “ The ease, therefore, falls clearly within the spirit of the principle, that if a trustee, acting for-others, sells an estate, and himself becomes the purchaser, or interested in the purchase, the cestuy que trust is entitled to come here, as of course, and set aside the purchase, and have the property re-exposed to sale.” Had the agreement with Perkins been for the benefit of Webb or his wife, the sale must have been set aside; but instead of that, this sale was solely intended by the administrator for the benefit of the complainants. The case of Thompson v. Davies, 13 Johns. 112, is also cited. That was a case-between creditors, who had entered into an arrangement to bid off a debtor’s property, one to purchase the personalty and the other the realty, and pay to his confederate a certain sum of money. It was held by the court that such an agreement was void. That although a creditor was not bound to bid, yet he was at liberty to-do so, and if he suffered himself to be bought off, or silenced, in a way which might prevent a fair competition, or if he abstained from bidding, upon concert, under the promise of a benefit, it was-the very evil the law intended to repress. This principle is, we-think, at the present day universally admitted. It is salutary and necessary to repress fraud and circumvention. 6 Term, 642. In the case at bar there was no agreement to sell to any one, but everything was left open to fair and honest competition. If Perkins bought, he expected to pay more than others. Such is the evidence furnished by his answer. The case of Rogers v. Rogers, Hopkins, 515, was. decided strictly on the same principle with Davoue v. Fanning. An executor took the assignment of a judgment agains this testator, and caused all his landato be sold on execution, and himself became the purchaser. This sale was set aside. The chancellor observed : “ If the executor *had not accepted the trust, he would have been at lib[55]*55erty to pursue all his remedies for the satisfaction of the judgment ; but where he accepted a trust, which imposed on him the duty of taking every legal and prudent measure to pay the debts of Thos. Eogers, from the personal and real estate, he was no longer at liberty to exert his rights as a creditor in opposition to his duties as executor.” So far as the rights of the executor, as a creditor, were in conflict with his duties as executor, his rights were yielded to his duties. Again, he says, “ a trustee can gain no advantage to himself to the detriment of those for whom he bolds the trust. The most frequent application of this doctrine is in cases in which the trustee purchases the subject of his trust. In such cases equity will vacate the sale. The objects of the rule are to secure fidelity on the part of the trustee and preserve the interests of those whose rights are confided to his care. Mills v.

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Related

Thompson v. Davies
13 Johns. 112 (New York Supreme Court, 1816)
Herrick v. Grow
5 Wend. 579 (New York Supreme Court, 1830)
Bumpus v. Platner
1 Johns. Ch. 213 (New York Court of Chancery, 1814)
Mills v. Goodsell
5 Conn. 475 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1825)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welsh-v-perkins-ohio-1837.