Dance v. Seaman
Dance v. Seaman
Opinion of the Court
If the questions presented by the record in this case were of the first impression in this court,
Preference of favored creditors is forbidden by the bankrupt law in England. But where that law does not apply, the right to make such preferences is admitted. In Estwick v. Caillaud, 5 T. R. 420, Lord Kenyon says, It is neither illegal or immoral to prefer one set of creditors to another. The same doctrine was avowed in Nunn v. Wilsmore, 8 T. R. 521. The same rule has been sanctioned in courts of equity. Small v. Oudley, 2 P. Wms. 427. The right results from the ownership of personal property, and the un
The cases of McCullough v. Somerville, 8 Leigh 415; of Skipwith v. Cunningham, Id. 271; and Phippen v. Durham, 8 Graft. 457, have recognized the doctrine in Virginia. The same cases decide that it is not necessary to the validity of such a deed, that the creditors should have been consulted beforehand. In Skipwith v. Cunningham, 8 Leigh 271, the subject is examined by Tucker, president, who observes, “ that if the grantor seals and acknowledges, and delivers, (though not to the grantor personally or to his agent,) a deed setting forth a bargain and sale for a valuable consideration, that consideration instantly raises a use, which the statute instantly executes, and vests the estate in the bargainee, with or without his assent, leaving him, indeed, the capacity to avoid it at his pleasure, by renouncing it.” And “that there is no instance in which the courts of Virginia have decided that such deeds were incomplete and ineffectual, for such a decision would shake every title in the commonwealth.” And in the recent case of Phippen v. Durham, 8 Graft. 457, the deed was executed without the knowledge of the creditors, and was not signed by the trustee.
That the reservation of an interest in the property, by postponing the time of sale, or directing a sale on credit, or providing for the payment of the surplus after satisfying the creditors secured, do not of themselves furnish evidence of fraudulent intent, has been affirmed by the repeated decisions of this court. Skip
The fact that creditors may be delayed or hindered, is not of itself sufficient to vacate such a deed, if there is absence of fraudulent intent. Every conveyance to trustees interposes obstacles in the way of the legal remedies of the creditors, and may, to that extent, be said to hinder and delay them.
Postponing a sale to an unreasonable time may be a circumstance, in connection with other circumstances, tending to prove a fraudulent intent. If made with such an intent, the time to which the sale was postponed would not affect it. Neither the stipulation to postpone the sale or to return the surplus, can operate to the exemption of any portion of the debtor’s property from the payment of his debts. The surplus is rightfully his property; everything not embraced by the conveyance belongs to him for the benefit of his creditors; is liable for his debts. The mode of subjecting it may be different, but there can be no question of the right of the creditor to do so. A deed of trust for the security of a future or contingent liability, as for the indemnity of a surety or endorser, could not be impeached for that cause alone, if made bona fide. Such deeds are of every day’s occurrence; and their validity has never been questioned. Such a deed may interpose obstacles to the legal remedies of creditors for an indefinite period of time. But the interest of the debtor would still be subject to his debts, and could be reached, if not by legal process, by a proceeding in chancery; which, in a proper case, would no doubt sequestrate and apply the rents of the land, the hires of his slaves, and the interest arising from the sale of the perishable estate, to the discharge of his debts.
The cases of Spencer v. Ford, 1 Rob. R. 648, and
In Spence v. Bagwell, 6 Gratt. 444, the deed contained such limitations and conditions as secured to the debtor a full control over the property, and would have enabled him to defeat the conveyance. The deed reserved the right of possession from November 1841 until March 1843; that he should be considered the agent of the trustees, with full power to sell and collect the proceeds; and with a provision that if he paid off the debts or any part of them, by moneys not raised by the sale of the trust property, he should be considered a creditor of the trust'fund, and might retain the amount out of the proceeds arising from a sale of the property conveyed. The deed on its face showed a contrivance to retain as owner first, and as agent, the control of the property, with authority to convert the proceeds of his labor into debts charging it, so as to keep it beyond the reach of his general
The violation by B. L. Belt of his engagement of the 17th of May 1848, to give a deed of trust on other property to secure the appellees Seaman and Muir, can have no bearing on the deeds under consideration. They embrace other property. It does not appear that the other creditors had any notice of the agreement ; and the failure of the debtor to give one creditor a deed of trust on specific property, does not even tend to prove a fraudulent intent in the execution of another deed, on other property, to secure all his creditors; the creditor in question being one of the class of preferred creditors.
I think the decree was erroneous, and that the same should be reversed, and the bill dismissed with costs.
The other judges concurred in the opinion of Allen, J.
Decree reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Dance & als. v. Seaman & als.
- Status
- Published