Hopkins v. Hastings
Hopkins v. Hastings
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs sued by attachment for $107.86, alleging' in their affidavit that: ‘ ‘ The defendant has fraudulently conveyed and assigned his property and effects so as to hinder and delay his creditors, and that the défendant has fraudulently concealed, removed, and disposed of his property and effects so as to hinder and delay his creditors, and that defendant is about fraudulently to convey and assign his property and effects so as to hinder and delay his creditors.”
The issues on plea in abatement were determined by a jury in favor of the defendant.
The testimony tended further to show that the defendant never rendered any account of his sales to the mortgagee, and paid nothing from the proceeds on the mortgage debt. Nor did the mortgagee ever make any demand of the defendant, for either accounting or payment. A few days before the institution of this suit, the defendant admitted to an agent of the plaintiffs, that the plaintiffs’ claim was just; that he owed, also, other accounts, and said: “I am-paying off these accounts, as fast as I can, out of the proceeds of the sales from the drag store.” The defendant at the same time, in presence of the agent, “took money out of the drag store drawer.” About a month after the commencement of this suit, the defendant sold out his entire stock, and paid off the 'mortgage debt.
The plaintiffs asked for two instructions, both to the effect that, if the defendant remained in possession of
The plaintiffs’ position assumes that a mortgage may be free from any taint of fraudulent intent, and altogether valid when executed and delivered, and -may yet become fraudulent and void ab initio, because of subsequent acts or omissions of one of the parties. Such a position is repugnant to reason. If a deed is valid when delivered it remains so forever. Parties may afterwards forfeit rights or privileges which it was intended to secure, but this by no means impeaches the validity of the deed itself. The mistake lies in confounding the fact with the evidence of the fact. It sometimes happens that parties, by their acts or omissions subsequent to the delivery of the deed, may furnish evidence proper to go to a jury, from which they may determine whether the deed was, or was not, tainted in its execution with a fraudulent intent which might render it void ab initio. But this is a matter of evidence only, and not a conclusion of law. The jury, and not the court, must reach the proper conclusion. Missouri decisions leave nothing open to speculation on the points involved in these refused instructions. The mortgage in this case was certainly not void on its face. Metzner v. Graham, 57 Mo. 404. “But the mere fact that the grantor in such
With the concurrence of all the judges, the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.