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WATSON v. ORR

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1831
14 N.C. 161 (N.C. 1831)

Summary

In Watson v. Orr, 3 Dev. Rep. 161, the Court had occasion to construe this statute in reference to this point; and held that it did not affect the parties as between themselves. It is a satisfaction to be now informed, that the Court followed the construction given to the act by the Courts of Virginia.

Summary of this case from Baird v. Brady

Opinion

(December Term, 1831.)

1. The law of the country where a contract is made is the rule by which its validity, its meaning, and its consequences are to be determined.

2. But where a law of Virginia gives bona fide purchasers from a bailee, who has had possession more than five years, a good title against the bailor, unless the bailment be registered, if a purchase, pending a suit by the bailor against the bailee would not be valid in Virginia, so neither would it be in this State, although the suit was pending in Virginia, and therefore was not notice to the vendee here.

3. In construing the law of another State, the decisions of that State, if known, are to be followed.

4. Upon questions of legal title notice has no influence; it does not affect a valid one, nor is a defective one aided by want of it.

DETINUE for a slave, tried before his Honor, Martin, J., at MECKLENBURG, on the last spring circuit.

Iredell for plaintiff.

Devereux contra.


Upon non detinet pleaded the case was, that the slave in dispute was the property of the plaintiff, a resident of Virginia; that the plaintiff in the year 1816 loaned the slave to one Greers, his son-in-law, who continued in possession until the year 1824, when the plaintiff instituted a suit for the slave against Greers, and in November, 1825, obtained a final judgment. Pending that suit, Greers brought the slave into this State and sold it to the defendant, who had no notice of the suit in Virginia nor of the claim of the plaintiff.

(162) The defendant offered a certified copy of an act of the Legislature of Virginia, entitled "An act to prevent fraud and perjuries," passed 30 November, 1785, the second section of which is as follows:

"Every gift, grant or conveyance of lands, tenements, hereditaments, goods or chattels, or of any rent, common or profit out of the same, by writing or otherwise, and every bond, suit, judgment or execution had or made and contrived of fraud, malice, covin, collusion or guile, to the intent or purpose to delay, hinder or defraud creditors of their just and lawful actions, suits, debts, accounts, damages, penalties, or forfeitures, or to defraud or deceive those who shall purchase the same lands, tenements or hereditaments, or any rent, profit or commodity out of them, shall be from henceforth deemed and taken (only as against the person or persons, his, her or their heirs, successors, executors, administrators or assigns and every of them, whose debts, suits, demands, estates, interests, by such guileful and covinous devices and practices, as is aforesaid, shall or might be in any wise disturbed or hindered, delayed or defrauded), to be clearly and utterly void, any pretense, color, feigned consideration, expressing of use, or any other matter or thing to the contrary notwithstanding. And, moreover, if a conveyance be of goods and chattels, and be not, on consideration, deemed valuable in law, it shall be taken to be fraudulent within this act, unless the same be by will duly proved and recorded, or by deed in writing, acknowledged or proved, if the same deed include lands also, in such manner as conveyances of land are by law directed to be acknowledged or proved, or if it be of goods or chattles only, then acknowledged or proved by two witnesses in the general court, or court of the county wherein one of the parties lives, within eight months after the execution thereof, or unless possession shall remain really and bona fide with the donee; and in like manner, where any loan of goods and chattels shall be pretended to have been made to any person with whom or those claiming under him, possession shall have remained by the space of five years without demand made, and pursued by due process of law on the part of the pretended lender, or where any reservation or limitation shall be pretended to have been made of a use of property, by way of a condition, reversion, remainder or otherwise, in goods and chattels, the possession whereof shall have remained in another as aforesaid, the same shall be taken, as to the creditors or purchasers of the persons aforesaid, so remaining in possession, to be fraudulent within this act, and that the absolute property is with the possession, unless such loan, reservation or limitation of use or property were declared by will, or by deed in writing, proved and recorded as aforesaid."

His Honor charged the jury that if the defendant had purchased after the rendition of the judgment in Virginia, it would have altered the relation between him and the plaintiff, but that having purchased before that judgment, a different right had accrued to him under the laws of Virginia. That the question as to him was, whether his purchase was bona fide; that if he had notice of the pendency (163) of that suit his purchase was not bona fide; that a suit pending in another State was not of itself notice to a purchaser in this; that as the loan was made in Virginia, this suit arose out of that contract, and was to be determined by the laws of Virginia; and that by the law of 1785, if there was a loan by the plaintiff to Greers, and possession held under that loan for more than five years, without the registration of any instrument showing the terms of the bailment, the defendant was entitled to a verdict, provided he was a fair purchaser.

The jury returned a verdict for the defendant, and the plaintiff appealed.


There cannot be a difference of opinion upon some of the general principles involved in this case. Such as these: that the law of the country where the contract is made is the rule by which the validity of it, its exposition and consequences are to be determined; and that where property in a particular country becomes, by the law of that country, rightfully vested absolutely in the possessor, as against another also in that country, his right is recognized, for his own benefit and that of his assignees, all over the world. The difficulty here is to determine whether the right of property was determined in Virginia by the law of that State; and whether if it were not, the law can follow the thing here for any purposes. In the Superior Court it was admitted that a purchaser pendente lite in Virginia would not have a good title, but it was supposed that a purchaser here was not affected by that suit because it was in another State and he was not bound to take notice of it; and, therefore, it was held that the statute of 1785 gave a good title to the defendant, as a purchaser here from the bailee who, as to the defendant, continued to be a bailee, notwithstanding the action against him.

I cannot agree in this reasoning, because it is a contradiction in terms to say that a purchase out of Virginia gives, by force of (164) the law of Virginia, a good title, when by the same law a purchase in that State would confer no property.

It might well be doubted whether the statute of our sister State follows the chattel here at all, unless the whole title be consummated according to it in that State. In other words, whether a purchaser, to be within the act, must not be a purchaser in that State. His title is then consummated under the law, where that law operates, and is therefore sustained wherever that title is discussed. But it is not so easy to see how one can by virtue of a law of a particular place, acquire a title at another place, where that law has no obligation, as to the requisites and effects of a contract made at this latter place. If in this case, therefore, I understood the statute of Virginia in the way it is put in one part of the argument for the defendant, as not conferring on him the title, but only the power of conveying a good title to another, I should not hesitate to say that everything must be transacted there, so as to complete the title in that State; for we can only take notice of laws conferring rights there, and not those giving a power there, to be exercised elsewhere. The law of the place where the power is exercised determines the extent and the validity of the title obtained under it. But I do not think that the fair meaning of this statute. In putting a construction upon the statute of a sister State, this Court would certainly adopt that of her own tribunals, if known to us. But none such have been furnished to us, and we are therefore obliged to understand the statute in the sense which its words convey to us. It is in this part of it a remedial statute against fraudulent conveyances; and as against creditors and purchasers from the possessor of a chattel for five years, a loan of such chattel, or reservation of a use therein shall be taken and deemed to be pretended and fraudulent, and the absolute property to be with such possessor, unless such loan or reservation of use be declared by will, or by deed proved and recorded. But the clause has this further and important provision in it: that such possession for five years shall be without demand made and pursued by due process of law on the part of the lender. The inquiry is, what title the (165) bailee gets by this law? It was obviously made for the protection of creditors and purchasers from the holder only, and it is to be taken, fair ones. It is observable and singular that the same policy should be in the two states have produced a legislation diametrically opposite. The policy is to suppress fraud. To effect it, our system as contained in the Acts of 1784, 1806, and the proviso in 1820, is to avoid the gift to and title of the bailee, in protection of the first donor or bailor and his creditors and purchasers. Virginia avoids the rights of the donor and his creditors, in aid of the creditors and purchasers from the bailee, and for them turns an express loan into a valid gift. But the statute does not profess to interpose between the lender and borrower themselves. Possibly and probably such a possession may endue the latter with a prima facie right, and enable him to maintain trover or even detinue against a stranger. But as between the parties it remains a loan; and the law gives no rights to the borrower for his own benefit, but only for the benefit of his creditors or purchasers from him. The bailor may at any time, then, after the lapse of the five years, maintain his action against the bailee. For the possession is not to be deemed adverse until there is a refusal by the bailee to redeliver, or until it be set up by a creditor or purchaser, as to whom the bailee is to be taken as having the absolute property. Then what creditor or purchaser is meant? Certainly not one within the five years, unless the two possessions united make that period. And as certainly, I think, not a purchaser (however it may be as to a creditor), who becomes so after the possessor ceases to be a bailee, and has become a trespasser within the act. It cannot be argued that if the bailee at the distance of ten years return the chattel he can afterwards sell it. Why? He ceases to be the possessor under the loan, and the purchaser cannot be imposed on. So if he be made a trespasser by a demand of the lender, followed up by a suit successfully prosecuted, he cannot after judgment make a good title. Why? For the same reason, because he does not rightfully hold under (166) that loan, which is declared in the act to be fraudulent. Can he sell pending such a suit? It would seem strange if he could, for the demand and consequent action have precisely the same effect upon the character of the possession as the judgment therein rendered has. And there is this absurd consequence to which such a position leads: the law allows the action to the lender against the borrower, but enables the latter to defeat it by a sale posterior to the bringing of the suit. What is the value of such a right of action? There is no middle ground. Either the bailee has, by the five years possession without suit, an absolute title against the bailor, as well as the rest of the world; or he cannot, if I may use the expression, discontinue by alienation. And the former is not even contended; and from the result of the suit in Virginia I presume cannot be. It is true the common doctrine of lis pendens does not extend beyond the jurisdiction of the forum, and as such does not affect this defendant, unless by force of the Constitution of the United States, and act of Congress, giving to the judicial proceedings of one state full faith and credit in the others. I do not stop to investigate the operation of that principle, because I conceive the case does not depend on it. For the cause turns upon the inquiry, what purchaser is meant by him, for whom the possessor shall be said to have the title? Is he within the act who becomes so after the borrower has ceased to have the possession, or has ceased to have the forbidden fiduciary possession? If he be then neither a lis pendens nor a final judgment can annul the title acquired by him, because he holds above the plaintiff whose title is declared fraudulent and void, as to the purchaser protected by that act. But it has been shown, I think, that such a purchaser is not within the statute. This, then, is not upon the ground of a lis pendens, but upon the higher and more general one, extending to persons out of Virginia, as well as those in it, namely, that the nature of the possession is changed, and from a rightful one has become wrongful towards the bailor, and therefore that the possessor is not such a (167) possessor in whom the title shall be adjudged for the benefit of one claiming by purchase from him. The defect of the defendant's title then does not consist in his having notice that his vendor was a trespasser, but in the fact that he was. He could convey no title here nor there, because in the state of facts existing he had, by the law of Virginia, no title in that State. Upon a question of legal title, notice has no influence. The want of it cannot constitute that a right which is not a right, nor can notice of a defective title in another make that better. Legal claims depend upon their intrinsic strength. And the rule is caveat emptor — see that your vendor has good right; or, in case he has not, secure yourself by covenants.

I conclude therefore that Greers, under the law of Virginia, had at the time of the sale to the defendant no title in himself for any purposes, and therefore that the sale set up here passed none. Consequently there must be a new trial.

It will be seen that the opinion of the Court turns entirely upon the construction of the statute of Virginia, which we have reluctantly been compelled unaided to make. A second trial will enable the parties to correct a misconstruction by evidence, or cases showing the construction made in that State, which the Court would feel every inclination and acknowledge the obligation to follow. I entertain much diffidence in saying what is the meaning of that statute. But I cannot but have confidence in the opinion that if the title of a purchaser in Virginia is bad, that of one here is not good.

PER CURIAM. Judgment reversed.

Cited: Blair v. Brady, 19 N.C. 344; Satterwhite v. Doughty, 44 N.C. 317; Taylor v. Sharp, 108 N.C. 381; Cannady v. R. R., 143 N.C. 443.


Summaries of

WATSON v. ORR

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1831
14 N.C. 161 (N.C. 1831)

In Watson v. Orr, 3 Dev. Rep. 161, the Court had occasion to construe this statute in reference to this point; and held that it did not affect the parties as between themselves. It is a satisfaction to be now informed, that the Court followed the construction given to the act by the Courts of Virginia.

Summary of this case from Baird v. Brady
Case details for

WATSON v. ORR

Case Details

Full title:JOSIAH WATSON v. JOHN H. ORR

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1831

Citations

14 N.C. 161 (N.C. 1831)

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