Court Opinion

ID: 8844113
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 16:50:59.434131+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:05:17.551692
License: Public Domain

Caldwell, Circuit Judge,
(after stating the facts.) The first error assigned is that the court refused to instruct the jury in writing before argument. We have already decided that the court is not required to charge in chief in writing. Railroad Co. v. Campbell, 4 U. S. App. 133, 49 Fed. Rep. 354. The statement is made in the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error that “the record in this ease discloses the fact that the plaintiffs submitted to the court a series of instructions, and requested the court to give or refuse them before the argument;” but this is an error. What the record does show is that, “the evidence being concluded on both sides, the plaintiffs, by their attorneys, requested the court to instruct the jury, in writing, before argument, which the court refused to do, and to which refusal plaintiffs at the time excepted.” This request and exception obviously relate to the charge in chief, and not to special requests asked by either side. The remaining errors assigned relate to the instructions given and refused. The court told the jury that “fraud is never presumed, but must be proved,” and this was excepted to; and the ground now assigned for the exception is that the court did not in the same connection state that fraud, like any other fact, could be proved by circumstantial evidence. But no suggestion was made to the court at the time, and no request preferred, to that effect. It is the prevailing practice, in cases involving an issue of fraud in fact, for the court to repeat to the jury this trite scrap of judicial phraseology, and it is commonly followed by a statement that fraud, like any other fact, may be proved by circumstantial evidence; but it would be an unwarranted impeachment of the intelligence of the juries of this country to suppose that they' do not have a knowledge of these common truths. Every man knows that fraud, no more than murder, trespass, or debt, is presumed against a man, and that fraud, as well as murder, trespass, or a debt, may be proved by circumstances as well as by the positive testimony of an eyewitness. When the court tells a jury that the burden is on a party to prove a given fact, it is not required to enumerate all the various kinds and degrees of evidence by which the fact may be proved, as that it may be proved by paper writing signed by the party, or by the oral evidence of eyewitnesses, or by the admissions of the party, or by circumstances. The jury knows, without being told so in terms, *901that every fact and circumstance which the court permits to go in evidence before them is put there for their consideration in the determination of the facts of the case. If a party conceives that the evidence discloses any fact or circumstance which the law regards as a badge of fraud, or prima jade evidence of fraud, he may, if the court omits to notice it in its charge, prefer a request for an instruction to that effect.
The court charged the jury that it was the duty of an insolvent debtor to make an assignment of his property for the benefit of his creditors. A similar charge was considered by this court in Sanger v. Flow, 4 U. S. App. 32, 48 Fed. Rep. 152, and was hold not to be a reversible error.
The court rightly told the jury that if they found the transfer and delivery of the goods to McAlester, in satisfaction of the debt due from Rooks to him, were made before the execution of the deed of assignment, that the validity of the deed was not affected thereby, and that “ in order to vitiate the deed of assignment on the grounds of fraud the fraudulent intent must have existed, and the assignment was the means by which the fraud was effected, and must operate to the detriment of the creditors of the assignor, or reserve some benefit to the assignor himself. No subsequent act of the parties can affect or invalidate an assignment made in good faith.” The plaintiffs have no reason to complain of this instruction. Estes v. Gunter, 122 U. S. 450, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1275; Hill v. Woodberry, 4 U. S. App. 68, 49 Fed. Rep. 138. The charge was too favorable to the plaintiffs, in that it does not tell the jury that to render the deed void for fraud the trustee must have been cognizant of or participated in the fraud. Emerson v. Senter, 118 U. S. 3, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 981.
Rooks could not by his own act make infants of tender years his partners in business; and, if he was indebted to them, he had an undoubted right to prefer them in his assignment, as was done.
¡Several of the requests for instructions preferred by the plaintiffs related to the sale of the goods by Rooks to McAlester which was, upon the advice of counsel, rescinded, and the parties placed in statu quo, some days before the making of the deed of assignment or the suing out of the attachment. These are conceded facts, and the instructions, therefore, based on that annulled and rescinded transaction, were irrelevant to the issues to be tried.
The plaintiffs asked the court to charge that if Rooks paid to McAles-ter $5,000 in goods to pay a note for that amount, on which McAlester was surety for Rooks, before the maturity of the note, that would be a fraudulent disposition of the goods on the part of Rooks. The assignor had a right to use his property-to pay debts to become due as well as those already due, and he had an undoubted right to protect parties who had become his sureties, whether for debts duo or to become due. Estes v. Gunter, supra.
The plaintiffs asked the court to instruct the jury that it was “incumbent upon the defendant and intervener” to account for any diminution in the stock of goods between the date of their first sale to McAlester, *902in-February, and the date they were levied upon by the marshal, and, “ifthey have not done so to your satisfaction, you should find for the plaintiffs.” This request has reference to the sale of the goods to Mc-Alester, which was rescinded ⅛ toto long before the assignment was made or the attachment issued. McAlester had possession of the goods ohe day under that sale, and then transferred them back to Rooks, who continued to sell and pay debts out of them until the deed of assignment was delivered to the assignee, from whom they were subsequently taken by the marshal. The instruction asserts, in effect, that if there was any diminution in the amount or value of the goods between the time they were sold to McAlester, in February, and the 5th day of March, when they were attached, the burden was on the intervener to account for the diminution, and that, if he failed to do so, his title under the deed of assignment was void. No such burden rested upon the intervener. The intervener is only required to account for the goods he received. He is not required to show, under penalty of a forfeiture of his title under the deed of assignment, what disposition the assignor made of other goods before the assignment was made, or to explain any diminution in the amount of the goods before they came into his possession as-trustee under the deed. If there was any considerable diminution in the amount of the goods between the dates mentioned, it might have been a circumstance tending to support the truth of the affidavit for attachment. But, in the form in which it was asked, it was rightly refused, and cannot be made a ground of exception upon either issue.
We have looked very carefully through the record in this case, and see no error of which the plaintiffs can justly complain. The assignor seems to have done no more than to have exercised his undoubted right at common law to appropriate his property to the payment of some of his creditors to the exclusion of others. This right he could exercise before he made the assignment, as he did to some extent, and he could also exercise it by making an assignment giving preferences, as was done. Judgment affirmed.