Means v. Feaster
Means v. Feaster
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The case, being strictly one for equitable relief, was tried by the Judge. He did not think it necessary to call a
Fraud is a mixed question of law and fact, and the mode by which its prevalence is ascertained in Courts of justice depends on well recognized and established principles.
Exception is taken to the admission of the declarations of Andrew Feaster, testified toby the witness, Annette Feaster.
It is enough, as to their mere admissibility in this case, to say that they were introduced without objection. How far such declarations may be competent, would depend entirely on the time they were made. If, at the time of the conveyance, when the grantor had title, or at a period when they can be held to constitute part of the res gestae, they may be received. — Heard vs. Halford, 5 Rich. Eq., 128 ; Kittles vs. Kittles, 4 Rich., 422 ; Renwick vs. Renwick, 9 Rich., 50.
As they were introduced without objection, any consideration of their mere competency is precluded. The weight that was to attach
The appellants contend that, as matters of law, it is not alone sufficient to show an actual fraudulent intent, on the part of the grantor, to hinder, delay and defraud creditors, “ but that the purchasers, the grantees, were parties to the fraud, or had such a knowledge thereof as would make them equally participants therein or parties thereto.” “ Whether a conveyance be fraudulent or not, is declared by the Statute to depend upon its being made ” upon “ good consideration, and bona fide.” It must “ be both.” — Kerr on Fraud, 199. No matter how adequate the consideration, if it be not bona fide, it wants one of the main incidents to validity. It would be going very far to say that although a deed is executed on full consideration, yet if there be a fraudulent design by the grantor, it will nevertheless be void, although the grantee may be innocent of any wrong intent, and in no way cognizant of any wrong motive.
It is not required that the mala fides of the transaction should be established by positive proof. The complicity of both parties may be inferred from the circumstances. Here the whole property of the father was conveyed to his children by separate deeds at the same time, pending suits by .creditors. No complete and entire surrender of the property made — the children, or some of them, living with the grantor. These were among the facts from which the Judge might properly conclude that it was but a concocted scheme for the defeat of creditors.
The exception to the plea in analogy to the Statute of Limitations cannot defeat it. The Statute runs for four years from notice, or discovery, of the fraud, and the onus of shewing want of notice is not on the plaintiff. The defendant, in order to avail himself of the Statute, must show that the plaintiff had notice four years before the filing of the bill. — Shannon vs. White, 6 Rich. Eq., 96 ; Godbold vs. Lambert, 8 Rich. Eq., 155. The recording of the deeds is only notice of their execution and the contents.
In Godbold vs. Lambert the Court said that the proposition that notice of a deed is notice of the fraud “ cannot be sustained — there is no rationality about it.” It is not necessary to consider whether any notice of the fraud by the Commissioner, the officer of the Court, to whom, in his official capacity, the bond was payable, could
Even if it had been proved, it is not easy to perceive how it could have operated to defeat the rights of those for whose benefit the bond was held.
The motion is dismissed.
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