Lynch v. Sanders
Lynch v. Sanders
Opinion of the Court
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
This is an action of ejectment. Sanders and others, the lessors of the plaintiff, claimed title to the land sued for—about four hundred acres—as the devisees of Mary Adair Hardin, who had, for the price of one hundred dollars, purchased the tract, in 1834, under an execution against estate descended to Charles Lynch and Mildred Smith, from their father Charles Lynch, deceased, and the defendants claimed it under a conveyance in 1825, to Charles Lynch, the son, from William Taylor, to whom the land had been conveyed, in 1810, by commissioners, who had sold it to him, in execution of a decree in favor of Breckenridge and others, against Charles Lynch, the father, on a mortgage given on it in 1802, by the latter to the former.
Verdict and judgment having been rendered in favor of the defendants in the action—two general questions, are now presented for our revision: first, was the judgment under which Miss Hardin purchased, valid? and 2nd, was the land subject to sale, as assets descended to Charles Lynch and Mildred Smith, as the only heirs of their deceased ancestor?
According to the seventh section of an act of 1801 (Stat. Law. 1430,) two returns of “not found,” like two nihils, according to laws of England, operate as legal service of a writ of scire facias, unless the person as to whom such returns had been made, was an inhabitant of some other county in the State than that of the returning officer. And although one of the returns in this case showed that Charles Lynch was not an inhabitant of the sheriff’s county, yet it did not show that he was a resident of Kentucky; and if he did not reside in this State, two returns of “not found” authorized the judgment of revivor. And on the trial of this case the plaintiff offered to prove that, Charles Lynch was, at the dates of the returns, a resident of the State of Mississippi. That proof we deem competent because it did not contradict the sheriff’s return, and only rendered certain a fact concerning which the return had been uncertain; and therefore, whilst perfectly consistent with the return, it showed that there could be no ground for even presuming that the judgment was prohibited by the 18th section of the act of 1796, (Stat. Law, 1429,) which provides that “no judg-“ment shall be rendered on the return of two nihils, un“less the defendant reside in the district or county, or “unless he be absent from the commonwealth.”
But without such parol proof, we could not decide that the judgment in this case was void, merely because the sheriff’s return did not certify a fact which he could not have officially known, and therefore had no authority to
Second, The Plaintiff’s counsel has argued that the legal title had been revested in Charles Lynch, deceased, prior to his death, which occurred in 1824; or that, if it had not been so revested, it was held fraudulently by Taylor, for the purpose of evading the just demands of creditors; and therefore, although the conveyance to Charles Lynch, the son, after his father’s death, recites a consideration of fifteen hundred dollars, as paid by him to Taylor, and the payment of which is established by the plaintiff’s own testimony; yet, the land should be liable in his hands, as so much estate descended, in judgment of law, from his father.
The counsel for the defendants in error, deny that there was, either any such revestiture of title in the decedent, or any such fraudulent collusion between him and Taylor, or that the land can be deemed legal assets descended to Charles Lynch, the son.
Prior to Taylor’s purchase, under the decree on the mortgage, the mortgagor, mortgagees, and himself, agreed, in writing, that if no person should offer a reasonable price at the sale, Taylor should, as a trustee, become the purchaser, pay the mortgagees, and hold the title in trust for some other designated creditors, and for his own indemnity. The parties also stipulated that, whenever all
Nor should a re-conveyance be presumed from lapse of time and continued occupancy by the decedent, during his life time: Such possession for only fourteen years, cannot per se authorize a legal presumption of re-conveyance or relinquishment.
Even if, as assumed by the plaintiff’s counsel, a jury might infer that Taylor held the title for the fraudulent purpose imputed, nevertheless, that fact alone would be insufficient to convert the title of Charles Lynch, as purchaser from Taylor, into an estate by descent, so as to subject it as assets, to sale under the execution against him as heir; for as decided in the case of Ralls vs. Graham, 4 Monroe, 120, although the creditors of Charles Lynch, deceased, might, in his life time, have subjected the land; because a conveyance of it for the purpose of defrauding them, would, as to them, have been void—yet, as the conveyance was nevertheless legally valid between the parties to it, Lynch’s heirs could have acquired no title by descent, against the will of Taylor.
But, according to the principle established in the cases of Campbell vs Harrison, and Warren vs Hall, 6 Dana, if Charles Lynch, Junior, acquired the title or use from Taylor without consideration, or mala fide, with a knowledge of the alleged fraud, or of the nonexistence of any just right in Taylor to fifteen hundred dollars for so much due him, in consequence of advances made by him in execution of the trust created by the agreement of 1808, or as a purchaser under an execution which was levied on the land after he had purchased under the mortgage—then the law would consider the conveyance of 1825 as also
If, however, as may be the fact, Charles Lynch could not have obtained Taylor’s conveyance without paying him fifteen hundred dollars, and if, therefore, he did, in good faith, pay that sum out of his own estate, he was so far a bona fide purchaser; and therefore, though he may have acquired a portion of the value of the land in consequence only of his being one of his deceased father’s heirs, and in trust for his his sister also, still, as the conveyance, to him, as purchaser, was entire and indiscriminating, no distinct or ascertainable portion of the land can be deemed legal assets subject to sale under the execution. In such a case, a court of equity alone can afford to the judgment creditor an appropriate remedy, by subjecting so much of the value of the land as shall remain after deducting the amount actually paid by Charles Lynch Jr. to Taylor, unless the said Charles will pay to the creditor the amount due to him.
Instructions were given to the jury, and others refused, on the trial. But we are of the opinion that the circuit Judge did not err substantially, to the prejudice of the plaintiff in error, in either giving or refusing instructions, so far as the title of the defendants is concerned; and we should not hesitate to approve the verdict and affirm the judgment upon it, had not the Circuit Court instructed the jury that, as to Charles Lynch Jr. the judgment of revivor on the scire facias was void. In this opinion, there was error, as we think. We have felt some difficulty in deciding whether that error should be judicially considered as prejudicial to the plaintiff. But on full consideration, we are of the opinion that, it should not be so considered.
If the judgment had been, as the Circuit Court decided, void as to Charles Lynch, it was not therefore void, but only erroneous, as to Mildred Smith, and the judgment being valid as to her, and so admitted by the court on the trial, the jury could not as they did, have found a verdict for the defendants, as to the whole of the land, unless they had decided that Taylor’s conveyance to Charles Lynch passed the title to him, as a purchaser, in
Wherefore, as, in our opinion, the evidence, as here exhibited, authorized the verdict, we must affirm the judgment of the Circuit Court.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.