Ray v. Proffet
Ray v. Proffet
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Complainant, A. L. Ray, and the respondents, Proffet and Edwards, were the sureties of one Solomon M. Ray, upon his official bond as sheriff of Yancey county, North Carolina, for some years preceding and up to 1860. Said sheriff embezzled a large amount of monies which he had .collected as
Said sureties, Proffet, A. L. Pay and Edwards, in 1869, came to Tennessee, by their agent, and filed a bill against the heirs of Solomon M. Ray, who, in the meantime, had died, alleging that said land was-purchased by said Solomon M. Ray with monies that he had collected and embezzled as sheriff, and for which they, as his sureties, had been held liable, some portions of which, they alleged, they had paid, and were liable for the residue as his sureties, and seeking to have said tract of land attached, and held subject to their reimbursement for what they had actually paid, and their indemnification for the debts for which they were liable, or the satisfaction of the same. In August, 1873, a ■ compromise decree was rendered in said cause, by which the complainants recovered three-fourths of said land. This suit had been instituted and prosecuted by oue Hensely — as the agent of the complainants — who was the son-in-law of Proffet, and by the same decree it was recited that it appeared “ that complainant, David Proffet, had paid the whole of the debts against S. M. Ray, the right to said three-fourths of said tract of land is hereby vested in himand partition of said tract of land was. made between said Proffet and the heirs
He also filed a cross-bill in which he substantially assumes the same ground, and ■ alleges that, as his judgment was against the complainant and Edwards, as well as Proffet, if by any means the complainant should be held to have any interest in the land, that the same be held subject to the satisfaction of said judgment. Complainant, A. L. Ray, by his answer to this ■cross-bill, denies that Jackson recovered any judgment against him, but if he did, he says, it was more than ten years before the filing of his cross-bill, and pleads and relies upon the statute of limitations of ten years as a bar to any recovery upon said judgment.
The injunction was dissolved pending the litigation in the chancery court, and the land sold under Jackson’s decree of sale in this court, and purchased by him at a sum less than the amount of his judgment, interests and costs. The sale has been confirmed, ■and the title to the land vested in him.
The chancellor decreed that complainant, Ray, was entitled to the relief sought by his bill; that the recovery was for the benefit of the sureties jointly, and for their indemnity, and the taking the title in the name of Proffet was a fraud upon the rights of •complainant, and ordered an account to ascertain what -amount of debts or liabilities of said sheriff had been paid by each of said sureties, and decreed them entitled to the land in the proportion in Avliich they had paid debts for which they were so liable, and that Proffet should be held liable for rents during
From this decree both Jackson and Proffet have appealed.
The Referees have reported that’ the chancellor’s decree should be affirmed; the exceptions to which open the whole case.
The judgment recovered by Jackson against said' sheriff, S. M. Ray, and his sureties, David Proffet, John Edwards, A. L. Ray, and one Gordon, was, upon January 22, 1 S(r>l, in the court of pleas and quarter sessions of Yancey county, North Carolina, for the sum of |589.95. It is objected that this judgment is not properly authenticated, inasmuch as it does not affirmatively appear anywhere that the defendants were served with notice. The judgment is regular upon its face, and is duly and properly certified by the proper officials of North Carolina as a judgment of that court, and the presumption is in favor of its validity and its regularity. The clerk of that court, in addition to his certificate required by law, also certifies that the files of papers, such as writs, etc.,
In the case of Breedlove et al. v. Stump et al., 3 Yer., 257, it was held that an indemnity or collateral security, given by a debtor to his surety,' inures to-the benefit of the creditor, who may subject it in equity without even a judgment against the debtor. In that case the court adopts the language of a decision in 7 Cranch, 97, in which they say: “It is settled in this court that the person for whose benefit a trust is created, who is tó be the ultimate receiver-of the money, may sustain a suit in equity to have it paid directly to himself.” This language was again quoted and approved, and the principle decided, in Saylors v. Saylors et al., 3 Heis., 530. The original bill having been filed to secure the land as the pro-erty of Solomon M. Ray, for the indemnity of the-sureties against the liabilities they were under as. such for the debt of Jackson and others, as well as.
It is insisted, however, that although Ray may not be entitled, as against Jackson, to any of the equities set up by his bill, yet as he was no party to Jackson’s bill against Proffet, under which the land Avas sold, wc ought now to set aside the sale, and order the land to be resold for the satisfaction of Jackson’s decree. We are unable to see how this could be done; but as we have seen, Ray, if he had been a party to said bill, had no equity which he could have enforced as against Jackson, and Jackson having seized the legal title in the hands of Proffet, who held it, coupled with a trust in his favor as a creditor of S. M. Ray, and haviug, by virtue of his-decree against Proffet, and sale, and his purchase thereunder, become possessed of the legal title, aud his equities superior, or at least- equal, to any that can exist in favor of Ray, will be permitted to hold it-It is said in argument that the land was sold for air inadequate price, and for that reason the sale ought to be set aside. There is no proof as to the value of the land, except that S. M. Ray gave $4,500 for the entire tract in 1862, if this can be taken as any evidence of its value in 1878, when Jackson purchased it. He gave for three-fourths of the tract between $1,100 and $1,200, which was, as we have seen, less than the amount of his judgment and interest. But this would afford no grounds for setting aside the sale, as the land was sold at public judicial sale, by the clerk of this court, under a decision
The exceptions to the report of the. Referees as to this branch of the case will be sustained, and the decree to Jackson will be reversed, and the original bill as to him dismissed. In the view we have taken of the case there was no necessitjr for the cross-bill of Jackson, though it was, as a matter of pre•caution, proper to file it. As to the equities between Ray and Proffet, we think the taking the title to Proffet in the original suit was in fraud of the rights of Ray, as the proof, we think, shows that Ray had paid some small amounts upon the liabilities of said sheriff, and that Proffet had not paid all of said liabilities by any means, and perhaps no very great amount of them, but the greater portion of such as were paid was with means obtained from other sources, •and as between them the decree of the chancellor was correct, and will be affirmed.
The complainant, Ray, will pay one-half the costs of this cause in this court, and the respondent, Proffet, the other half. The costs of the chancery court will be paid equally by complainant, Ray, and the respondents, Proffet and Jackson, one-third each.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- A. L. Ray v. David Proffet
- Status
- Published