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Snoddy v. Haskins

Supreme Court of Virginia
May 14, 1855
53 Va. 363 (Va. 1855)

Opinion

05-14-1855

SNODDY v. HASKINS & als.

Irving and Johnston, for the appellant. The Attorney General, for the appellees.


(Absent ALLEN, P.)

1. The act, Code, ch. 149, § 13, p. 593, limiting the period in which suits may be brought to set aside conveyances or transfers of property, on considerations not deemed valuable in law, does not apply to cases of actual fraud.[a1]

2. A widow having received her distributable share of the personal estate of her husband, is not a purchaser for value, so as to be entitled to set up the defense of purchaser for value without notice.

3. In such case the husband having obtained slaves by a conveyance fraudulent as to the creditors of the grantor, and one of these slaves having been allotted to the widow, the slave in her possession may be taken in execution at the suit of a creditor of the grantor, though the husband and those claiming under him have been in possession of the slave more than five years.

4. The execution is for less than five hundred dollars, but the slave is allotted to the widow at a valuation above that sum. She having obtained an injunction to the sale under the execution which is afterwards dissolved: QUÆ RE: If the Supreme court of appeals has jurisdiction of the case.[d1]

In November 1852, Martha L. Snoddy obtained an injunction to restrain the sale of a slave in which she claimed a life estate, and which had been levied upon under an execution issued in the name of Haskins and Terry against William M. Tyree for two hundred and sixty-three dollars, with interest thereon from the 19th of February 1841, until paid. In her bill she stated that Robert W. Snoddy died in 1845 intestate, leaving her his widow and three children. That John C. Snoddy qualified as administrator upon his estate; and in 1849 he had a division of the estate under an order of the County court of Buckingham, when certain slaves were allotted to her, among which was a man named Shadrick, valued to her at six hundred and fifty dollars. That long since the division, to wit, in 1852, Haskins and Terry levied an execution on said slave as the property of William M. Tyree, and had executed an indemnifying bond to the sheriff for the purpose of having said slave sold under their execution, upon the pretense that Robert W. Snoddy had come into possession of the slave by a fraudulent purchase from Tyree. That she knew nothing of the purchase; but had heard that Tyree was largely indebted to her husband, and in part payment of said debt had sold him the interest of said Tyree in certain dower slaves of which his wife was entitled to a share, and had executed a deed of trust on other slaves to secure the balance of said debt. That afterwards the trustee had sold the slaves, and that her husband had purchased them. That this sale was made in 1842: That the slaves had been in possession of her husband for several years before his death, and of his representative and herself ever since, a period of ten years; and she relied upon the length of possession to protect her in the possession of said slaves.

She insisted further that if she was to be deprived of this slave, she was entitled to be reimbursed by the distributees of Robert W. Snoddy. And making Haskins and Terry, the administrator of Robert W. Snoddy, and his distributees, parties defendants, she prayed for an injunction to restrain the sale of the slave, and for general relief.

Haskins and Terry alone answered the bill. They admitted that Robert W. Snoddy died in possession of the slave Shadrick; but denied that he was ever the property of Snoddy, or had ever been claimed by him as such. They say that a short time before Snoddy's death he admitted that this and the other slaves of Tyree held by him were held upon a secret trust for Tyree, to be returned to him whenever he came back to Virginia. They charged that at the time Tyree made the deed of trust, he was considerably indebted, though not to the value of his property; that he did not owe to Snoddy the amount stated in the deed; and that the deed was made to hinder and delay the creditors of Tyree. And they say they have been informed that although John C. Snoddy qualified as administrator of Robert W. Snoddy in 1845, and settled his administration account in 1846, he never would have any of these negroes appraised as part of the estate until December 1849.

There was proof that Robert W. Snoddy repeatedly admitted that Tyree, who had left the state, was to have the slaves again when he returned, and that Robert W. Snoddy was to hire out the slaves, and when Tyree's debts were paid from the hires, they were to be returned to him.

When the cause came on to be heard, the court held that although the plaintiff was entitled to contribution from the distributees of Snoddy, yet that the conveyance was fraudulent as to Tyree's creditors; and dissolved the injunction. And from this decree the plaintiff applied to this court for an appeal, which was allowed.

Irving and Johnston, for the appellant.

The Attorney General, for the appellees.

SAMUELS, J.

A question is made whether this court has jurisdiction to try this cause under the statute, Sessions Acts of 1852, p. 53, § 9. The slave, on which the execution is levied, is alleged to be of the value of six hundred and fifty dollars; but the debt, interest and costs, for which the execution issued, make an amount less than five hundred dollars. It has been said that the appellant, and those having the like interest with her, may relieve the slave from the lien of the execution, by payment of a sum less than five hundred dollars; and further, that the price of the slave, if sold, being first applied to discharge the execution, the residue will go to the appellant; that thus the only amount in controversy is the amount of the execution. The reply to these objections I conceive to be obvious and conclusive. The appellant sought by injunction to restrain the sale of a slave under an execution for the benefit of the appellees Haskins and Terry; the slave is alleged to be worth six hundred and fifty dollars; if the appellees had not been restrained they would have caused the slave to be sold; thus the complainant, if her right be good, as alleged, is in danger of having the slave converted into money. If complainant would be able at law to recover every dollar for which the slave may sell, or to recover his real value, without regard to the price sold for, or to recover the specific slave, still the remedy by injunction is appropriate. At one time it was held in this court that an injunction to a sale of slaves could not be sustained, unless it was averred and proved that such slaves were of some peculiar value, for which money would not be an adequate compensation. Allen v. Freeland, 3 Rand. 170; Randolph v. Randolph, 6 Rand. 194. More recent decisions, however, have settled the law otherwise. Harrison v. Sims, 6 Rand. 506; Sims v. Harrison, 4 Leigh 346; Kelly v. Scott, 5 Gratt. 479. If, then, the object of retaining a specific slave, rather than receive his value in money, or to recover him by suit at law, be in itself a cause of suit in equity, the appellant is rightly before this court. If she have a title to this slave, she may assert it, and this without reference to the amount of money the appellees may propose to give her in lieu of him.

If appellant have the better right, it is error to give her that right, upon terms of paying money, however small in amount; she should not be put to an election to give up such better right, or to enjoy it upon condition of paying money not properly chargeable upon the subject. I am of opinion the court here has jurisdiction to try the cause: The court of four members, however, being equally divided in opinion on the question, the decision must be regarded as settling the law of this case only.

The merits of the case I hold to be with the appellees. The deed of trust given by Tyree to secure a pretended debt to Robert C. Snoddy, and another pretended debt to John C. Snoddy, was made with express intent to delay, hinder and defraud Tyree's creditors. The sale by the trustee and the purchase by Robert C. Snoddy was but the second step in the plan of fraud concocted between Tyree and Robert C. Snoddy. Although this deed and the sale under it may bind the parties to the fraud, yet as against Tyree's creditors, they have no effect whatever. After Snoddy's death his administrator succeeded to the title of his intestate, to be applied in the due course of administration; this title, as already said, was good against Tyree, but void against his creditors. I do not understand the appellant's counsel to insist that this succession of itself gave the title any additional strength. It is insisted, however, that events occurring since Snoddy's death, have perfected the title held by his distributees; that the possession of the slave for five years by the administrator himself gives title under the statute of limitations; or if the administrator held for less than five years, his possession may be added to that of the distributee the appellant, and thus make five years, the limit prescribed by the statute. It is further insisted that the appellant, having received the slave as part of her share in the distribution of her husband's estate, without notice of fraud, must be regarded as a purchaser for value without notice, and be protected as such.

The bar prescribed by the statute, Code of Virginia, ch. 149, § 13, p. 593, cannot be relied on in this case. The legislature thereby intended to protect mere volunteers chargeable with fraud only by construction of law, after five years. But if actual fraud exist, and thereby a creditor have right for a " " cause," other than " want of consideration deemed valuable in law," to impeach the transaction, the plain terms of the statute leave this right as it was before the Code was enacted. That the title of Snoddy is tainted with actual fraud, is alleged in the answer and shown by the proof; and thus the case is not affected by the statute last referred to.

It is somewhat difficult to understand how and against whom the appellant's counsel propose to apply the statute of limitations. It cannot be against Tyree; his title as between himself and Snoddy had passed by the deed and the sale under it: He had no cause of action which could be asserted at any time. The statute cannot be said to bar a cause of action, if such cause never existed. It cannot be against the appellees Haskins and Terry. If their rights in regard to the property shall be held to date from April 1848, when their judgment was obtained, or shortly thereafter when their execution was issued, five years had not elapsed when the levy was made; and for this reason, if no other existed, it must be held that the statute does not apply. Without pointing out other difficulties in the way of the attempt to apply the statute, I am of opinion to rest the case upon the ground so clearly stated by Judge Leigh in the opinion reported in Wilson v. Buchanan, 7 Gratt. 334, 343. Although the case just cited was one growing out of a voluntary conveyance, and thus fraudulent only by construction of law, and although a case like it might now be decided otherwise, under the statute, Code of Virginia, p. 593, § 13, yet at the time it was decided constructive frauds and actual frauds stood upon the same ground, and the decision gave the same rule in regard to both. Actual fraud is not protected by the statute last cited; and thus the authority of that decision applies in all its force to the case before us. Notwithstanding the opinions of some of the judges in the case of Huston's adm'r v. Cantril, 11 Leigh 136, the case cited from 7 Gratt. should be adhered to as well because of its intrinsic justice, as of the unanimous sanction given to it by this court.

The appellant's pretension that she is to be regarded as a purchaser for value without notice is without warrant. This alleged purchase rests upon the single fact that she took this slave as part of her distributive share in her husband's personal estate, thus leaving his value to be applied for the benefit of the other distributees out of the other personal estate. If the distributees were mistaken in regard to the value of the distributable surplus, in holding the slave in question to belong to the estate, the obvious remedy is to correct the mistake, not to perpetuate it. The appellant had her rights in the true surplus only; this surplus, upon the facts appearing in the record, is ascertained by deducting the amount of the lien on the slave from the larger and mistaken amount which had been distributed. By erroneously including this slave the surplus and her interest are made to appear larger than they ought to be.

The case of Huston's adm'r v. Cantril, 11 Leigh 136, relied on by the appellant's counsel, affords no support to the case of their client. If we should concede all that was said by all or any of the judges in that case, yet the facts of this case are so widely different from those in that, as to deprive that case of all weight in the decision of this. In the case from 11 Leigh the conveyance alleged to be fraudulent was made before the marriage, and, as supposed by some of the judges, may in some degree have induced the marriage; in our case it is not alleged that the conveyance was made before the marriage, and it is probable at least, it was made afterwards. In the case from 11 Leigh, the husband claimed, as purchaser by marriage, the absolute title to the slaves; in our case the widow does not claim to have the absolute title but only a life estate in one-third part of her husband's slaves. In our case it is not alleged that marriage entered or could enter into the consideration at all, but the only consideration alleged is the giving up a claim on other portions of the estate, and having received in lieu thereof this slave as part of her distributive share. This is the same as to say that distributees, (mere volunteers) of the fraudulent grantee, by foregoing part of a claim on a surplus which includes the fruit of the fraud, in consideration of the property fraudulently acquired thereby, became purchasers. This pretension keeps out of view the fact that the whole personal estate of such grantee may be held liable to make good to creditors any injury done to them by the fraud. In the case before us the alleged consideration and subject of sale might both be held liable to the creditors, if necessary for their indemnity; and it is clearly wrong to permit the distributees to divide the estate into two parcels between themselves, calling one a consideration, the other a subject of sale, and thus withdraw those parcels, or either of them, from their liability to the superior claims of the creditors.

I am of opinion that neither the statute of limitations nor the alleged purchase should prevent the levy of the execution, and that the decree should be affirmed.

DANIEL, J. concurred in the opinion of SAMUELS, J.

MONCURE and LEE, Js. thought this court had no jurisdiction of the case. But on the merits they concurred in the opinion of SAMUELS, J.

DECREE AFFIRMED.

[a1] The act says, " No gift, conveyance, assignment, transfer or charge, which is not on consideration deemed valuable in law, shall be avoided, either in whole or in part, for that cause only, unless within five years after it is made suit be brought for that purpose, or the subject thereof, or some part of it, be distrained or levied upon by or at the suit of a creditor as to whom such gift, conveyance, assignment, transfer or charge is declared to be void by the second section of the one hundred and eighteenth chapter."

[d1] The act, Sessions Acts 1852, ch. 61, § 9, p. 53, after stating a specific ground of jurisdiction in the court, adds, " or in any civil cause where the matter in controversy, exclusive of costs, is not less in value than five hundred dollars."


Summaries of

Snoddy v. Haskins

Supreme Court of Virginia
May 14, 1855
53 Va. 363 (Va. 1855)
Case details for

Snoddy v. Haskins

Case Details

Full title:SNODDY v. HASKINS & als.

Court:Supreme Court of Virginia

Date published: May 14, 1855

Citations

53 Va. 363 (Va. 1855)

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