Shannon v. White
Shannon v. White
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Elizabeth Wherry White is the widow and sole administratrix of Francis White, and she and the defendant jane White, the only child of the said Francis White, are his heirs at law and distributees.
The plaintiffs are the creditors of Carter Lee, and seek by these proceedings to vacate certáin conveyances of property, both real and personal, by Lee to White the intestate, which they allege to have been in fraud of Lee’s creditors.
It would be unprofitable for me to encumber this opinion with a statement in detail of all the pleadings and proceedings which have taken place in the progress of this earnestly contested cause, or of the voluminous evidence which has been adduced by the different parties. It will be sufficient for me to notice such of the pleadings, and such of the fac.ts as will render intelligible what I now have to say.
The bill in substance charges, that all the estate, real and personal, of Dr. Carter Lee, and all his choses in action had
The answer of Elizabeth W. White, the administratrix of Francis White, denies all the material allegations of the bill; denies positively the fraud and the trust; alleges, that all the transfers of property by Lee to White were made to him absolutely, and without condition, or trust, and that the choses in action were paid for in cash. She also sets up the statute of limitations as a plea in bar to the plaintiff’s claim.
Chancellor Wakdlaw, hy an order filed 30th October, 1851^ directed issues to be made up and submitted to a jury in the Court of Law. The order is as follows: “ It is ordered and decreedj that issues be made up in the Court of Common Pleas for Ches
At Spring Term 1852, the issues as directed by the foregoing order, having been made up,.were submitted to a jury and tried. The presiding Judge has reported the verdict , together with the evidence. .The following is the verdict of thejury :
“ We find that the deed of conveyance by Joel Patterson and others for the nine acres of land, and the deed by Lucy and Carter Lee for the interest of Carter Lee in the estate of Elliot Lee his father, and the several bills of sale and assignment of the n.egroes named, in the bill, were made to Francis White to secure advances of money made by him to Carter Lee; and upon the trust, that the property should be re-vested in Carter Lee; when these advances- were paid. We further find, that the alleged advances -by White to Lee, and payments by Lee to White, cannot be properly ascertained by us, but should be accounted for.”
The case came on for trial at July Term, 1852: the Chancellor who presided, confirmed the verdict. He also decided that the transfers of property by Lee to White, were mala fide and fraudulent.- He gave leave to the plaintiffs to amend their
The plaintiffs filed an amended bill, in pursuance of the order of the Court giving them leave to do so; and to this amended bill the defendants filed a demurrer.
The case came on again for trial at July Term, 1853. The Commissioner ■ then submitted his report upon the accounts taken in pursuance of the directions of the decree of July Term, 1852. The case was heard upon the demurrer of the defendants, and upon the report and exceptions thereto. The demurrer was overruled, and the report was confirmed. And this is an appeal from the decree overruling the demurrer and the exceptions to the report, and from the previous decisions made in the case.
As to the demurrer, it will be as well here to say, that this Court concurs with the Chancellor who overruled the said demurrer, and for the' reasons stated by him. And so much of the appeal as relates thereto is hereby dismissed.
The English cases on this subject are confused and contradictory, and the point has never been adjudged in our Courts.
In the prosecution of this enquiry, and in the solution of the question, it will not be improper to resort to the philosophy of evidence. From the nature of man, and from the circumstances by which he is surrounded, it is rarely possible to establish the negative of any proposition involving an issue of fact in the common transactions of life. Whether the plaintiff has had a knowledge of the fraud for more than four years before the filing of his bill, though he asserts it, is a negative proposition-And while man has the power of veiling his thoughts, it would be difficult in many, and impossible in most cases, to prove it by evidence. For though it might be shewn that he did not have the information from this source or from that — from one or from
The ground upon which the Court of Equity applies the statute of limitations is the laches of the plaintiff. He is required to prosecute his claim with a reasonable diligence. But how can laches be imputed to him who is ignorant of the fraud? When the defendant pleads the statute of limitations, the plaintiff in an artistic system of pleading might reply, that the statute does not apply, because he had notice only within the statutory period. But as we have no replications in this Court, the plaintiff may allege the want of notice in his bill, in anticipation of the plea. This must arrest the operation of the statute until the defendant, who is in the affirmative of the question, by proof brings his case within its provisions.
I wilhconclude what I have to say upon this branch of the subject, by referring to the separate opinion of Chancellor Johnston in Thrower vs. Cureton, 4 Strob. Eq. 155, where the authorities are collated.
On the trial then of this question of notice, it was incumbent upon the defendants to prove that the plaintiffs had notice of the fraud more than four years prior to the filing of the bill. And here it is to be remarked, that it would not be sufficient to prove that the plaintiff had a suspicion of the fraud. But it is necessary to bring home to the defendant a knowledge of the facts constituting the fraud. Suppose some one were to tell him that a fraud had been committed, it would not be sufficient, unless he were informed of the facts constituting the fraud, or put in the possession of a clew, by which, with a proper diligence he might come to a knowledge of the facts. He would not to be required to enter into a costly contest, which would end in disappointment and defeat, or to encounter a shadowy and intangible phantom, which was sure to elude his attack.
Having thus defined the principles which must govern us in the decision of this question of notice, I proceed to apply them to the case under judgment. That the plaintiffs or some of them had a strong suspicion of the fraud at the very period of its perpetration, is abundantly clear from the evidence. But we are not satisfied from the evidence, that the plaintiffs had such a knowledge of the facts, constituting the fraud, as would have authorized them to proceed with any reasonable prospect of success. Indeed, we think that the negative of the proposition comes nearer to being established than the affirmative. It was only after the fraudulent and corrupt pact between Lee and White had been broken by the representatives of the latter, and Lee, under the influence of resentment and malice, had betrayed his confederate and exposed his own infamy, that the plaintiffs were put in possession of the clew to this labarynth of fraud. The Chancellor who tried the cause, decided, that the proof did not authorize the belief that the plaintiffs did have notice of the fraud more than four years before the institution of their suit. And upon a careful examination of the evidence, we concur in that opinion. The plea of the statute of limitations was therefore properly overruled.
This brings me to the consideration of the issue as to the fraud. To prove the fraud, Lee himself was examined as a witness, the defendants insisting upon his incompetency. The ground of this objection was, that his testimony tended to create a fund to satisfy the claims of his creditors. On the other side it was contended, that his interest was in a state of equipoise. In the opinion of this Court, it will not be necessary to decide the question of Lee’s competency. It appears, that neither the Commisioner nor the Chancellor laid much stress upon his evidence. And this Court is of the opinion, that throwing Lee’s testimony aside, there still remains evidence amply sufficient to
It is ordered and decreed, that the Circuit decree be affirmed and the appeal dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
So much of the Circuit decree as relates to the demurrer is as follows:
Dunkin, Ch. It may be proper to premise that by the deoroo of Chancellor Johnston leave was granted to the plaintiffs to amend their bill by stating that the fraud was not discovered until within four years of instituting those proceedings. The amendment was accordingly made, to which the defendants filed a special demurrer. The principal ground seems to be, that the amendment was not verified by the oath of the plaintiffs-It may be remarked that the original bill was not filed on oath, nor does it seem to hare been necessary. The amendment relies on a fact to take the case out of the Statute; and, as the decree declares that this averment oasts the onus on the defendants, it may be that it should havo been supported by the oath of some of the plaintiffs. If the defendants had objected to the filing on this ground, or had moved to take it off the file, it would have
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.