Court Opinion

ID: 6313035
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 20:18:07.466475+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:59:08.725835
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Gibson, C. J.
The Judge made a decisive mistake in putting the question of recovery exclusively on the existence of actual fraud. The purchase belonged to the class of contracts which, for the facility they would offer to the practice and concealment of imposition, are deemed to be constructively fraudulent, prima facie or conclusively, by the policy of the law. They are sparingly indulged by it in any case, or prohibited, as regards particular interests, altogether. Such are contracts between parent and child, guardian and ward, principal and agent, attorney and client; and such emphatically are those betwreen trustee and cestui que trust. These relations are founded on an inequality of condition, which raises a presumption of advantage taken of the more dependent party, that may or may not be rebutted according to circumstances. ..It is a rule of equity that a trustee may not purchase the trust estate directly from the beneficiary, unless the transaction be found, after jealous scrutiny, to be scrupulously fair, purely voluntary on the part of the seller, and without colour of misrepresentation, concealment, or advantage taken of knowledge acquired in the business of the trust, on the part of the buyer. When he appears as both seller and buyer, as he does when the estate has been sold by him and bid in for him at auction, the preventive justice of'a chancellor goes further, and forbids him to acquire an indefeasible title to it against the cestui que trust on any pretence. Indeed, where he is himself the bidder, the contract is void, even at law, for want of parties; for an individual cannot contract with himself, or convey to himself; and where this legal objection is'obviated by the interposition of an agent, equity allows the sale to be avoided at the election of the cestui que trust, who may set it aside without regard to its fairness. This principle is applicable tp every purchase by one who has conducted the sale, whether strictly as a trustee, or as an *154instrument for a specific purpose; and it disposes of .the case before us.
The defendants, being administrators of the plaintiffs’ father, sold by order of Orphans’ Court the real estate for payment of the debts. One of them procured his friend to bid it in for him, who conveyed it back for the original consideration, the moment the sale was consummated by a deed. This was enough for the purpose of the plaintiffs, but it was not all. It was in proof that one of the defendants, in violation of his duty to sell for the best price, had disparaged the estate, both as to its quality and the title to it; that the friend employed to buy, was employed also as the crier; and that the property was sold at an undervalue. Unless, therefore, the witnesses were unworthy of belief, there ought to have been a verdict for the plaintiffs on the ground of positive fraud; and that there was not, is one proof, among many, how little is to be expected from the judgment of a jury when unassisted by the practised discernment of a judge. It has been argued, however, that the plaintiffs and the defendants are proved by the event to have stood in no relation of confidence, as the price realized by the sale did not mount up to the sum of the debts, and that, as the creditors have not objected to the sale, no one else ought to be heard. But it is uncertain whether something might not have been produced for the benefit of the children, had the estate been fairly sold; and they had an interest in the event, however desperate, which entitled them to have the order executed strictly according to the requisitions of the law. But they were conclusively entitled to a verdict on the ground of constructive fraud.
Judgment reversed, and venire de novo awarded.