Court Opinion

ID: 6315053
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 20:24:49.974887+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:59:13.638169
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered
by Black, J.
— The land in dispute was sold at coroner’s sale as the property of Blocher and Shoemaker, and bought by George E. Hogg, the present plaintiff, who claims it now under his deed. It is alleged, on the other hand, that Hogg agreed to buy it and hold it for Shoemaker and Blocher, and that his declarations to that effect prevented other persons from bidding, in consequence of which he got it at an under-price. There is no legal evidence of a contract on the part of Hogg to hold the land for the use of Blocher and Shoemaker. The allegation rests on a loose declaration made by Hogg to a witness when the other parties were not present, and it was without specification of terms or condition. This would be insufficient even to establish a parol sale partly executed. The Statute of Frauds applies to the purchase of an equitable use in lands as much as it does to the transfer of a legal title. When one sells land, of which he is already the owner, he is the trustee of the legal title for the vendee until he conveys it; but the execution of the trust cannot be enforced unless the contract be in writing. In reason and in law the rule must be the same where a vendor makes the contract of sale in anticipation of his own purchase. It can make no odds whether the intended purchase is to be made at a judicial or a private sale; *71and if it be the former, it is equally indifferent whether the parol vendee be the defendant in the execution or a stranger. In any case, it is simply an agreement for the sale of lands, which, by the statute, must be in writing, or else it will give no title. If the mere violation of such a contract were a fraud, which would take it out of the statute, then the statute would be a nullity. Let it be understood, however, that we speak this only of trusts based on contracts. There are other species of trusts which may be established by parol.
Neither is there anything in this case which, to our eye, has the look of a trust ex maleficio. ■ Such trusts are usually raised by the violation of some other trust previously existing: as where an attorney buys in an outstanding title, about which he has been consulted, over the head of his client; or where a guardian, executor, or other person invested with a fiduciary character, abuses the confidence reposed in him, by taking and claiming for himself an estate which he ought to have protected for the benefit of another. But no such relations appear to have existed between these parties. If Hogg had been the agent of Blocher and Shoemaker, or (perhaps) if it could be shown that he promised to buy for them, and thereby fraudulently prevented them from getting the land in some other way, he might be compelled to convey upon being refunded the sum he paid. But the case does not seem capable of being put on this ground. The utmost assertion that the evidence allows anybody to make is, that he bought with his own money, as he had a right to do, and promised that he would convey to the defendants in the execution at a future time, on the payment of a stipulated price. This, as we have already said, created no other relation than that of vendor and vendee.
The whole case is a much simpler one than the counsel of either party seem to have thought it. There is but one point in it, and that is whether the purchase was honest or not. Here the plaintiff encounters serious difficulty. It is alleged, (and the allegation is not without evidence to support it,) that he declared his intention to purchase and hold for the defendants until they could redeem it — that he fraudulently made this declaration to persons who intended to be his competitors at the sale, whereby he kept them away, and so got the land at a price considerably less than it would have sold for if his conduct had been fair. If he did this thing, he has no interest or right whatsoever in the land; his purchase was entirely void; the title remains where it was before the sale; he does not hold as trustee, for he does not ‘hold at all. The law has always been so ruled, and in one very recent case, not yet reported, the subject was carefully considered. It is not necessary to repeat the reasons and the authorities on which the rule is founded.
*72If there was a contract such as Mr. Hogg is supposed to have mentioned in the declarations imputed to him by the witnesses; if he intended at the time to perform his part of it; and if he spoke of it with no design but to inform his neighbor of an existing fact, then he was guilty of no fraud which can hurt his title. If he subsequently changed his mind, and determined to disregard his promise, he is liable to respond in damages for his breach of faith; but it does not defeat his right to the land, because the title itself is not brought in contact with any fraudulent practice. If, on the other hand, he never made such a promise to the defendants, or made it without intending to keep it, it is difficult to assign any motive but a bad one for telling it to a bidder, who is kept away from the sale by hearing it. Hogg now denies that there was any contract, understanding, or promise at all. If his denial be true, it puts him into the worst position his opponents can desire. But they themselves, on the contrary, assert that his statement was truth. If they are to be believed, Hogg is innocent of any falsehood, and innocent, it may be, of any design to use the truth for a foul purpose. It is the interest of both parties to change sides on this question.
To avoid misconstruction, it may be necessary, at the risk of repetition, to say that Hogg’s title can only be impugned by proof: (1), that he falsely declared his purpose to buy the land for Shoemaker and Blocher, upon their refunding to him the purchase-money, with interest; (2), that this declaration was made with the fraudulent design to prevent or diminish competition by persons who might be bidders; and, (3), that by this means he got the land at a price less than its value, and less than it would have brought at a fair sale. If this be established to the satisfaction of a jury, he has no shade of a claim either in law or equity. Of course we give no opinion upon the weight of the evidence.
It is no matter about the tender. If Hogg’s fraud be proved, there is an end of his title, and the defendants are not bound to reimburse him what he expended in the effort to injure them. It is all or nothing with-both parties.
The declarations of George Hogg, the plaintiff’s father, were immaterial, for they, related principally to the tender. What he said, tending to show' that there was an agreement before the sale, to purchase for Blocher and Shoemaker, is certainly not in favor of the defendants, because, as far as it goes^ it takes away the bad ingredient of falsehood from George E. Hogg’s statement on that subject to the Overholts. In every other view, it is wholly unimportant what were the relations of the plaintiff with his father. George E. Hogg became the purchaser, and has the coroner’s deed in his own name. If he got it by a fraud, it is worthless to him and everybody else. If he got it honestly, it is *73none of tlie defendants’ business whether George Hogg’s repre-* sentatives have an interest in it or not.
The declarations of Stauffer and Painter, made to Overholt, come very near to the line which divides spoken acts from hearsay. After some doubt and hesitation, a majority of this court have reached the conclusion that those declarations were not admissible. It is not worth while to discuss the subject further than to say, that the present judgment does not in the least impugn the correctness of the decision in Walter v. Cf-ernant, (1 Harris, 515.)
Judgment reversed, and venire facias de novo awarded.