Court Opinion

ID: 4913938
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-22 00:06:06.687919+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:13:07.421061
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice VanValkenburgh
delivered the opinion of the court:
The first error alleged is that the court erred in stricking out the first, third, fourth and fifth pleas on the plain*158tiff’s motion. The first plea was a disclaimer of possession of the property, and a denial of any interest in the same, except as an heir at law of one E. K. Holliday, deceased, to whose estate the property belonged. The second plea was the general issue. Third, that he held the property claimed as administrator of the estate of E. K. Holliday, deceased. Fourth, general issue as the administrator of such estate. Fifth, that the property was never the property of plaintiff, but was the property of the intestate at his death and was in the hands of defendant as administrator. The statute of this State, (McC.’s Digest, 862, §12,) in relation to the matter' of pleas in such actions, is as follows : “ The defandant may plead that he is not guilty of the premises charged against him, and this plea shall put in issue, not only the right oí the plaintiff to the possession of the property described in the declaration, but all the wrongful taking and detention thereof.” This is the only statutory provision in relation to the plea in such case. Under such plea of the general issue the defendant can give any evidence of special matter which amounts to a defence to the plaintiff’s cause of action. The plaintiff, to recover, must show right of possession in himself, and evidence of his want of propertjT or right of possession is admissible under such plea. Under this statute, under the plea of not guilty, the defendant may give evidence of any special matter which amounts to a defence to the plaintiff’s cause of action. In such actions the plaintiff can only recover upon the strength of his own right of possession. Sparks vs. Heritage, 45 Ind., 66 ; Lane vs. Sparks, 75 Ind., 278 ; Yandle vs. Crane, 13 Kansas, 344; 5 Wait’s Actions and Defences, p. 494, §19 ; Richardson vs. Steele, 9 Neb., 483 ; Child vs. Child, 13 Wis., 17.
In Loomis vs. Foster, 1 Mich., 165, it is said that “the general issue, not guilty, puts in issue every fact stated in *159the declaration necessary to sustain the plaintiff’s action, and not the detention only.”
In Gibson vs Mozier, 9 Mo., 256, the court held that “ under the plea of not guilty evidence is admissible to show that the plaintiff is not entitled to the possession of the property replevied, and that a deed, under which the property is claimed, is void.”
The pleas were properly stricken out.
The second error assigned is as follows: “The court erred in entering a judgment for five hundred dollars worth of property against defendant, when the jury only found a verdict for four hundred and seventy-seven and sixty-four one-hundredths dollars worth of property.” The verdict of the jury on the trial was as follows : “ We, the jury, find for the plaintiff property to the value of $477.64-100 dollars, and damages to the amount of $100.” This verdict was in writing, signed by the foreman of the jury. Upon this verdict, the court entered judgment as follows: “ Whereupon, it is considered by the court that the plaintiff recover of the defendant the property mentioned in the declaration, to-wit: five hundred bushels of corn in crib on the McKinne plantation, in the ear and unshucked, one yoke of black oxen, named Joe and Roily, two wagons, and seventeen head of fat hogs, marked two splits in one ear, over and under-bit in the other, of the aggregate value of five hundred dollars, and the sum of one hundred dollars for his damages, and $190.62-100 dollars, for his costs in this behalf expended, to be levied of the goods and chattels, lands and tenements of the said defendant, and to the said plaintiff rendered, and that execution do issue therefor, and that a writ of possession do issue for the said property as above described.” The plaintiff remitted the sum of one hundred dollars given in the verdict for *160damages, and in consequence thereof a motion which had been made by the defendant for a new trial was denied.
The judgment as entered by the court does not follow the verdict of the jury ; they find that the plaintiff recover “ property,” not “ the property ” in the declaration described, of the aggregate value of five hundred dollars, but “property” of the value of $477.64-100 dollars; the judgment is for a sum twenty-five dollars and thirty-six cents greater than the amount found by the jury, and authorizes an execution for such amount. The judgment further authorizes “ a writ of possession to issue for the said property,” as described in the declaration. No property is described in the verdict, yet the judgment is, that the plaintiff have a writ of possession for the property described in the declaration.
The judgment does not conform to the verdict, and is, therefore, erroneous. There is an entire want of identification. There is nothing in the verdict to show what property is subject to the writ of possession which is authorized to be issued. Patterson vs. The United States, 2 Wheaton, 221; Eason vs. Miller & Kelley, 18 S. C., 381; Thompson vs. Lee, 19 S. C., 489 ; Jenkins vs. Richardson, 6 J. J. Marshall, 441 ; Ridenow vs. Beekman, 68 Ind., 236 ; Noland vs. Leech, 10 Ark., 504; Hanf. vs. Ford, 37 Id., 545 ; Young vs. Lego, 38 Wis., 206.
The third assignment of error is covered in what we have said above with reference to the second assignment.
The fifth assignment is as follows: “ The court erred in permitting J. H. McKinne, the plaintiff, to testify as to the handwriting of E. K. Holliday, deceased, the defendant claiming to hold the property in dispute as administrator of E. K. Holliday.”
The evidence of John H. McKinne was as follows: “I am plaintiff in this suit; I knew E. K. Holliday in his *161life time; E. K. Holliday is dead; -I know his handwriting.” Here the plaintiff’s attorney handed witness a hill of sale of the property in controversy, and asked the witness : “ Is the signature to that bill of sale the handwriting of E. 3L Holliday ? ” To this question the attorney for the defendant did, then and there, object, because E. K. Holliday was dead, and the defendant claimed to hold the goods and chattels involved as administrator of said E. K. Holliday, and that it was not competent for the witness, who was the plaintiff in the case, to testify to any transaction or communication he might have had with the deceased. But the court did, then and there, overrule said objection, and permitted the witness to answer said question, to which ruling of the court the attorney for the defendant did, then and there, except. The witness then answered the question: “ The signature is^ the handwriting of E. K. Holliday, deceased.” The question as to whether MeKinne was competent to prove the signature to the bill of sale is raised by this exception. The statute provides “ that no party to such action or proceeding, nor any person interested in the event thereof, * * * shall be examined as a witness in regard to any transaction or communication between such witness and the person at the time of such examination deceased,” &c., &c. The bill of sale alleged to have been signed by the deceased transferred the title of the property therein mentioned to the plaintiff; was not such transfer the very transaction which consummated the right of the plaintiff to the recovery, and upon which, alone, he based his right of action ? The word transaction is defined to mean “ the doing or performing any business, the management of an affair.” There was some conflict in the evidence iu regard to this signature to the bill oí sale. One witness testifies: “ I cannot swear-*162positively that the signature is the handwriting of E. K. Holliday; it looks like it, and to the best of my knowledge and belief it is his handwriting.”
T. R. Holliday, a witness for the defendant, then said with reference to the signature: “ I am familiar with the handwriting of E. K. Holliday ; don’t think the signature to this bill is the signature or handwriting of E. K. Holliday ; that the E. 3L H. appears to be the handwriting of E. K. Holliday, but the balance of the name does not favor his handwriting, but may be accounted for by his sickness the last year of his life.” Thomas Holliday says upon this point: “ The signature to this paper ” (the bill of sale) “ is not the handwriting of E. K. Holliday.” E. T. C. Dickenson says: “ If I had come across this paper anywhere I would have said the signature to it was E. K. Holliday’s, but will not swear positively to it now; looks like his handwriting.” El J. Barkley testified : “ I knew E. K. Holliday in his life time; I am familiar with his signature; the signature to the bill of sale now shown me is like E. K. Holliday’s signature; like all of them I ever saw ; I have seen him write.” C. "W. Davis testified : “ This signature is a good deal like the signature of E. K. Holliday, but I cannot recognize it as his signature. This signature differs from the signature of E. K. Holliday ; he never, in any signature of his I ever saw, joined the K and H; he only joined the E and K ; this does not look like the signature I have usually had from E. K. Holliday. The main difference is that the EK&H are all joined together.” There was no witness to the bill of sale, which concluded as follows: “ In witness' whereof, I have set my hand and seal this the 9th day of October, 1888, A. D. E. K. Holliday (seal).”
It seems to us that the proof of signature to the bill was proving the very “ transaction,” or proving both the acts *163and doings of the plaintiff and the defendant, which amounted to consummating the sale of the property by the defendant to this plaintiff. The sale of the property and the execution of the hill of sale was the “transaction,” and the proof of the bill of sale was proof of the transaction.
In Holcomb vs. Holcomb, 95 N. Y., 316, the court, in its opinion, says: “ Transactions and communications embrace every variety of affairs which can form the subject of negotiation, interviews or actions between two persons, and include every method by which one person can derive impressions or information from the conduct, condition or language of another.” It is true that a party may testify to an independent fact, not involving a “ transaction or communication,” but he can hardly be permitted to prove the signature of a deceased person to a bill of sale which covers the transaction, and through which he alone can recover in his action as plaintiff. We are of the opinion, therefore, that the testimony of the plaintiff was in contravention of the statute in relation to the admission of such evidence.
The sixth, seventh and eighth assignments of error are to the ruling of the court in refusing the defendant the right to prove that the estate of the intestate was largely indebted to creditors, and that such indebtedness existed at the time of the making of the bill of sale and still continued at the time of his death. That such indebtedness amounted to much more than the value of the property of the estate, including the property in dispute.
The evidence shows that the bill of sale was executed on the 9th day of October, 1883, and Holliday died about the third day of December the same year; that Holliday died in possession of all the property mentioned in the bill of sale ; that the plaintiff was never in possession of it; that E. K. Holliday used and disposed of the property as his own ; *164that he sold a lot of the same com to Dickenson ; that he offered to sell the oxen and one of the wagons. The attorney for the defendant claims that these circumstances, unless sufficiently explained by the plaintiff, rendered the sale fraudulent and void as against the creditors of the estate,, and that the defence might be made by the administrator, and that the property became assets of the estate in the hands of the administrator to pay the creditors.
It is well settled that where a vendor continuously remains in possession of goods and property, it is, as against creditors, evidence of fraud to be rebutted by the vendor, and more especially where such transfer of title is made in secret, or without publicity. Visible, notorious, open possession of personal property is the usual way of determining the title to it.
The case of Edwards vs. Harben, Executor of Tempest Mercer, 2 Term R., 587, seems to be the leading case upon this subject. Mercer offered a bill of sale of his goods, stock in trade, &c., to Harben as security for a debt due from Mercer to him. Harben refused to take such security unless he was permitted, at the expiration of fourteen days, if the debt should remain unpaid, to take possession of such goods and sell them to satisfy his debt, returning the surplus ou such sale to Mercer. To this Mercer agreed,, and executed a bill of sale. Possession of the goods, by the delivery of one cork screw, in the name of the whole property, so included in the bill of sale, was taken by Harben. The property remained in the possession of Mercer until the time of his death, which was .within the fourteen days mentioned in the bill of sale. Immediately Harben, before the expiration of the fourteen days, entered, took possession of the property and sold it. Mercer died intestate. Edwards brought a suit against Harben, he also being a creditor of Mercer, in which he charged Harben, as *165executor, in his own wrong. The question was, whether this bill of sale was fraudulent and void, as being on' its face absolute, and being unaccompanied by the delivery of possession. On the hearing, the court determined it was fraudulent, and say: “ On this case two questions arise: Eirst. Whether this bill of sale be void or not, and secondly, if void, whether defendant, by having taken these goods under the bill of sale, made himself liable de son tort.” It was held by the court that unless possession accompanies and follows the deed it is fraudulent and void as against creditors. The court say: “The first question came before the court in the last term in the case of Bamford vs. Baron, on a motion for a new trial from the Northern Circuit, and after hearing the case argued, we thought it right to take the opinion of all the Judges upon it. Accordingly we consulted with all the Judges, who are unanimously of opinion that unless possession accompanies and follows the deed, it is fraudulent and void. I lay stress upon the words ‘ accompanies and follows,’ because I shall mention some cases, where, though possession was not delivered at the time, the conveyance was not held to be fraudulent.” The judge cites cases where the possession of the vendor was consistent with the terms of the deed. This principle, the judge says, has been long settled, and never seriously questioned. He further says “ it was settled by Lord Coke, in 2d Bulstrode, so far as to declare that an absolute conveyance, or gift of a lease for years, unattended with possession, was fraudulent. But if a deed or conveyance be conditional, then the vendor’s continuing in possession does not avoid it, because by the terms of the conveyance, the vendor is not to have the possession till he has performed the condition.”
In Hamilton vs. Russell, 1 Cranch, 310, Chief Justice Marshall delivering the opinion of the court, cites the *166above authority approvingly, and says: “ This court is of the same opinion. We think that the intent oi the statute is best promoted by that construction, and that fraudulent conveyances, which are made to secure to a debtor a beneficial interest while his property is protected from his creditors, will be most effectually prevented by declaring that an absolute bill of sale is itself a fraud, unless possession ‘ accompanies and follows the deed.’ ” This rule, as thus laid down by the Chief Justice, in this case, has, since that, time, been followed in the Federal Courts, while some of the State courts have established this rule, yet in many States it has been modified. 2 Kent’s Com., 13 Ed., p. 521.
But this question has been settled by this court, and in the modified form, in the case of Gibson vs. Love, 4 Fla., 217, where the court, after citing the authorities very fully, and quoting from many of them, concludes as follows: “We conclude, then, by saying that we think the court below, on the trial of this case, erred in instructing the jury that the question of fraud upon which they were to pass was a question of mere intention. The retention of personal chattels, after a sale is prima facie evidence of fraud, and the appropriate evidence to rebut the presumption is not the proof of the general good faith of the grantor, but an explanation of the intention, to show either that it is consistent with the deed, or is unavoidable, as in the case of a ship af sea, or is temporary, or for the reasonable convenience of the grantee.” Under this decision the court has settled this question, and pronounced the rule to'be in such cases that the retention of personal chattels, after a sale, by the vendor, is prima facie evidence of fraud. Under this rule the property mentioned in the bill of sale, in possession of the intestate at the very time of his death, and passing into the hands of the administrator, became legal assets to be administered by him. Holland vs. Cruft, 20 *167Pickering, 321; Stewart vs. Kearney, 6 Watts, 453, Welsh vs. Welsh, 105 Mass., 229; Danzey vs. Smith, 4 Texas, 411; Buehler vs. Gloninger, 2 Watts, 226 ; Williams on Executors, marg. p. 679.
The administrator offered to prove by himself that “ the estate of E. K. Holliday was largely indebted, much more than the value of all the property of the estate, including the property in suit.” He also offered to prove by the witness, Dickenson, that the intestate, Holliday, “ was, at the time of the alleged execution of the bill of sale to plaintiff, and at the time of his death, indebted to said witness in a large amount, and that his estate was still indebted to the witness in a large amount.”
To the introduction of this evidence objection was made and the court sustained the objection. The counsel for the defendant excepted to the ruling of the court and assigns it as error.
We can see no error in the Circuit Judge’s rulings on this question. The creditors were not parties to the action, nor was the defendant, as administrator, defending in their several behalfs. Had the plaintiff fully proven his ease, and rebutted the prima facie fraud, he would be entitled to his judgment, notwithstanding that the estate of the intestate was insolvent.
Chapter 122, McClellan’s Digest, page 582, of the laws of this State, provides the manner and mode of proving that an estate is insolvent. The executor or administrator must file a written suggestion of such insolvency in the office of the Judge of the County Court in which letters testamentary or of administration shall have been granted. The Judge then makes an order requiring such executor or administrator to file a true schedule of the amount of said estate, consisting of the available funds, choses in action, and other effects, including the real estate. It is only upon *168the finding of the County Judge under this statute that an estate can be declared insolvent. An attempt to prove such insolvency in a court upon a trial of a cause of this character is nowhere authorized by our law. In some States the statutory regulations permit the introduction of such evidence, and it is there held that the administrator is the* trustee of the creditor, but the better rule is not to permit the representative to question such transfers for the benefit of creditors. Creditors of the intestate have their right to question the fraudulent transaction of their debtor by proper proceedings in the courts.
Judgment reversed and a new tidal granted.