Summary
In McArthur v. Johnson, 61 N.C. 317, the Court held that plaintiff could not recover, and that was a case very much like this, except there was no question in that case but what the plaintiff could read.
Summary of this case from Cutler v. R. ROpinion
(June Term, 1867.)
1. Where one proposed to convey a tract of land in trust, and his brother undertook to have the deed drawn, but, without the knowledge of the vendor, inserted therein a conveyance also of another tract in trust for him- self, and, upon presenting the deed for execution, in reply to a question by the vendor, said that it was "all right," where upon the latter executed it without reading it, or hearing it read: Held, that the conveyance of the second tract was valid at law.
2. Distinction between fraud in the factum, and other fraud attending the execution of deeds, stated and applied.
( Logan v. Simmons, 1 Dev. Bat., 13; Reed v. Moore, 3 Ire., 310; Canoy v. Troutman, 7 Ire., 155; Gant v. Hunsucker, 12 Ire., 254; Nichols v. Holmes, 1 Jon., 360; Gwynn v. Hodge, 4 Jon., 168, cited and approved. McKerall v. Cheek, 2 Hawks, 343, overruled.)
TRESPASS, Q. C. F., tried before Fowle, J., at Spring Term, 1867, of the Superior Court of ROBESON.
No counsel, contra.
Both parties claimed under one John L. McArthur. As part of his title the plaintiff introduced a deed executed under the following circumstances:
In March, 1853, John L. McArthur, then about twenty-two years of age, contracted to sell a tract of fifty acres of land to the defendant. On the day after, being upon his way to visit the Southwest, after some discussion as to the best mode of making the conveyance, one Angus L. McArthur, an older brother of John, suggested that one McCallum, who lived upon the road they were traveling, should write a power of attorney authorizing one Daniel McLean to make the necessary deed in John's absence. On reaching McCallum's, John remained in the buggy, and Angus went into the house. After some time he returned in company with McCallum, bringing a deed, which, in reply to a question by John, he said was "all right." Thereupon John (still sitting in the buggy), without reading it or having it read to him, executed the deed, and then, in company with Angus, continued his journey.
The deed included not only the fifty-acre tract, but also one of (318) twenty acres (that in controversy), and authorized McLean to convey the latter to Angus. This was done without the knowledge or consent of John. By various subsequent conveyances this title to the twenty-acre tract vested in the plaintiff.
His Honor charged the jury that if they believed that the execution of the power of attorney was obtained by the fraudulent representation that it authorized a conveyance of the only fifty acres of land, whilst, in fact, it also embraced the twenty-acre tract, it was void; at least so far as the latter tract was concerned; and that, in such case, no title passed to Angus L. McArthur under the subsequent conveyance by McLean to him.
Verdict, not guilty; rule for a new trial; rule discharged, and appeal by the plaintiff.
Leitch, for appellant, cited Logan v. Simmons, 1 Dev. Bat., 13; Reed v. Moore, 3 Ire., 310; Canoy v. Troutman, 7 Ire., 155; Gant v. Hunsucker, 12 Ire., 254; Devereux v. Burgwyn, 11 Ire., 490; Nichols v. Holmes, 1 Jon., 360; Gwynn v. Hodge, 4 Jon., 168; also 2 Bl., 295, ibid., 309 n. 30, and distinguished from the present case that of McKerall v. Cheek, 2 Hawks, 343.
The decision of this case depends upon the question whether the fraud alleged to have been practiced upon John L. McArthur, in the execution of the power of attorney to Daniel McLean, under whom the plaintiff claims, was a fraud in the factum of the deed, or a fraud in the consideration of it, or in some matter collateral to it. It is a well established distinction that, for a fraud of the first kind, the deed may be avoided at law, while for a fraud of either of the (319) two last kinds relief can be had only in a court of equity. Reed v. Moore, 3 Ire., 310; Canoy v. Troutman, 7 Ire., 155; Gant v. Hunsucker, 12 Ire., 254; Nichols v. Holmes, 1 Jon., 360; Gwynn v. Hodge, 4 Jon., 168; Logan v. Simmons, 1 Dev. Bat., 13.
An instance of fraud in the factum is when the grantor intends to executed a certain deed, and another is surreptitiously substituted in the place of it. See Gant v. Hunsucker and Nichols v. Holmes, ubi supra. Another instance is afforded by the case of a deed executed by a blind or illiterate person, when it has been read falsely to him upon his request to have it read; 12 Black. Com., 304; Manser's case, 2 Coke's Rep., 3. These authorities show that the party was fraudulently made to sign, seal and deliver a different instrument from that which he intended, so that it could not be said to be his deed. Several of the cases in our Reports referred to above furnish examples of what is meant by fraud in the consideration of the deed, or in the false representation of some matter or thing collateral to it. In all of them it will be seen that the party knowingly executes the very instrument which the intended, but is induced to do so by means of some fraud in the treaty, or some fraudulent representation or pretense. In this category is included the case of a man who can read the instrument which he signs, seals and delivers, but refuses or neglects to do so. Such a man is bound by the deed at law, though a court of equity may give relief against it. In support of this position the authority of Sheppard's Touchstone is directly in point: "If the party that is to seal the deed can read himself, and doth not, or, being an illiterate or a blind man, doth not require to hear the deed read, or the contents thereof declared; in these cases, albeit the deed be contrary to his mind, yet it is good and unavoidable at law; but equity may correct mistakes, frauds, etc." See 1 Shep. Touch., 56 (30 Law Lib., 121).
While coming to the conclusion that the deed in the case now (320) before us is not one which can be avoided at law, we are aware that a different decision was made in the case of McKerall v. Cheek, 2 Hawk., 343. There a sheriff's deed conveyed three hundred acres of land, but it having been proved that he intended to convey only one hundred and twenty, and would not have executed the deed, had not the courses, of which he was ignorant, been inserted in such a way as to deceive him as to the quantity, it was held that the deed was not conclusive, and that the question ought to have been left to the jury to say whether it was fraudulently obtained; for, of the question of fraud, a court of law had cognizance as well as a court of equity. The case was decided without argument, and no authorities are referred to in support of the opinion of the court. What is more material in lessening the authority of the case, not a word is said about the distinction between fraud in the factum of the deed and fraud in the consideration, or in some matter collateral to the deed. That distinction, and the reasons upon which it is founded, in assigning one kind of fraud to the jurisdiction of a court of law, and another to that of a court of equity, seems to have been first noticed and explained in this State in the case of Logan v. Simmons, 1 Dev. Bat., 13. In that case these remarks are found: "The counsel for the plaintiff, whoever, insisted upon the general observation, that upon questions of fraud, the jurisdiction of courts of law and equity is concurrent. In its generality that position is inaccurate. As to many and most cases it is true; but there are numerous frauds which can be alleged, investigated and relieved against in equity only. Where a conveyance is not avoided by statute, and where the objection is grounded upon imposition in the treaty, and not upon undue and unlawful means used for obtaining the execution — the factum, of the particular instrument, relief in equity is most appropriate, and generally can be had there only. A court of equity can do complete justice in such cases by holding the instrument (321) to be a security for what was advanced upon the treaty or done under the contract, while a court of law would be in danger of doing wrong to one of the parties, at all events, by being obliged to pronounce the whole conclusively void or valid, for all purposes." McKerall v. Cheek, ubi supra, affords an instance of what would be the hardship and injustice of allowing the conveyances to be avoided at law; the sheriff's deed would not have conveyed even what the parties intended to convey; and thus innocent persons claiming under him would have been defeated of their just rights; while in a court of equity the instrument would have been avoided only as to the part of the land fraudulently inserted in it. At all events, the court of equity would not have avoided it in toto, but would have so moulded it as to do exact justice between the respective parties. For these reasons, we are of opinion that the decision in McKerall v. Cheek cannot be sustained, and that his Honor in the court below erred in following that case, instead of the principle of the more recent decisions in this Court. The judgment must be reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.
PER CURIAM. Venire de novo.
Cited: Johnson v. McArthur, 64 N.C. 676; Medlin v. Buford, 115 N.C. 270; Cutler v. R. R., 128 N.C. 481, 483, 494; Griffin v. Lumber Co., 140 N.C. 519; Hayes v. R. R., 143 N.C. 129; Briggs v. Ins. Co., 155 N.C. 75; Lanier v. Lumber Co., 177 N.C. 205; Currie v. Malloy, 185 N.C. 213; Furst v. Merritt, 190 N.C. 400; Parker v. Thomas, 192 N.C. 803.
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