Court Opinion

ID: 6571670
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:30:02.351211+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:56:55.820519
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Mattock, J.
— The only question in this case is, whether from the facts disclosed in the bill of exceptions, as proved on trial, the sale of the horse by Barker to the plaintiff, was fraudulent in law for want of a sufficient change or transfer of possession by the vendor to the vendee. It has been settled some time since by several decisions in this state, which are well known, that if he who transfers personal property, permits him who sells it to remain in possession after such sale, it is a fraud in law, or that such possession is a fraud, per se. This still remains the settled law of the land; and although some learned gentlemen of the law have supposed that the court would eventually retrace their steps, as the courts in some of the neighboring states have done, that is, leave this as a badge of fraud to the jury, among others; yet we are not disposed to recede a jot, nor to advance a whit; but to remain stationary upon *523this, in other governments, vexed question, so as to give this branch of the Jaw at least the quality of uniformity. Was the vendor suffered to remain in possession of this property, or did possession accompany and follow the sale ? Let the facts found answer. In August, 1831, plaintiff purchased the mare of Barker, and from that time until March, 1832, when she was attached, he kept and used her as his own. — That in the fall of 1831, Barker rode the mare twice to Danville, and once to Greensboro.’ He several times drove her to meeting with some of plaintiff’s family in a wagon, and at a few other times was seen riding and driving said mare in the neighborhood; and when she was attached, Barker and one Ellis were returning from Randolph with her in a wagon. These are the whole facts relating to the possession. What was this but an open and visible and continued change of possession from Barker to the plaintiff for over seven months before the attachment, that is, the general and permanent possession ? And can the few and fitful instances of the use by Barker be considered as a possession, either joint or several, with the plaintiff, within the meaning of the law, when it does not appear that Barker kept the animal in his barn or field a day or night, and it does appear that the plaintiff kept and used her as his own for the time before mentioned ? Reverse the case, and suppose Barker had bought the mare of the plaintiff and what pretence could there have been that Barker had the possession during the seven months, save in the little snatches of time that he had her by the reins, or was astride of her ? Surely these temporary lendings or hirings do not give character to a possession, any more than a few occasional visits will make the house of the host the domicil of the guest. Is every man of property, who buys a horse of a poor man, to be forbid the exercise of the common charities of good neighborhood as to that poor debtor ? And can he not, without subjecting his property to lawful seizure, lend him that horse to go to mill or to meeting, which will deceive no creditor? This, therefore, is not a case that comes within the principle of the adjudged cases of fraud, per se; and so as matter of law, it was correctly so decided by the county court; and the defendant was not entitled to the instruction to the jury which he requested. The remainder of the case was a question whether the sale was fraudulent in fact. No request to charge was made on this subject, and the judge summed up *524the evidence in the manner he thought most suitable to the case, and for aught we see, correctly.
The judgment of the county court is affirmed.