Court Opinion

ID: 8505215
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-23 01:26:24.757671+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:50:51.345278
License: Public Domain

Woods, J.
Of the numerous points brought up by this case, the first relates to the qualifications of a juror, objected to by the plaintiff on account of his relationship to the deputy for whose act the present action is pending against the sheriff. He was father of the deputy. But the deputy himself bad no interest in the event of the suit, having been released and admitted a witness on the trial. It might, indeed, have been very naturally supposed that before that release was executed, and while the deputy was liable to the sheriff upon his bond, or while he was liable himself to an action for the alleged trespass, a bias might have been created in his mind, by conversations on the subject of the controversy. But such distinctly appears from his own answers not to have been the fact, and it is difficult to imagine any ground for imputing to him any desire that the cause should result one way any more than another. He was properly admitted to serve on the trial. Rollins v. Ames, 2 N. H. Rep. 349.
2. The general rule that the party having the affirmative of the issue, or the party on whom the burden of proof, in the first instance, devolves, has the right to open and close at the trial, is the one always referred to on questions of this kind. Its application, however, has not in all instances been free from doubt and difficulty, and many cases are reported, in which much discussion has arisen upon it. But in the case before us there is a rule which is decisive, and which appears to be founded on good authority. It is that *355where the defendant, by his plea, admits the whole cause of action stated in the declaration, and undertakes to remove or defeat it by the new matter set up in his bar, he has the affirmative or the primary burden of proof, and is entitled to its benefits. “ The cases,” says Parker, C. J., in Ayer v. Austin, 6 Pick. 225, “ have usually been trespass, where the defendant acknowledges the act, and claims in his plea the soil and freehold, in himself or some one under whom he acts as a servant — slander, in which a justification only is pleaded,” &c. This seems to us a rational and just construction of the general rule, and the illustrations are apposite to our case. The only plea here was the special bar by which the defendant assumed to prove the new matter, and with the burden of that proof he takes its advantages. The ruling was accordingly correct.
3. The defendant was correctly permitted by the court to prove by one of his witnesses a fact which had been denied by another. This may well be done without impeaching the character of either, and is the only way by which the party may supply imperfections in the testimony of his witnesses, caused by want of memory, or a mistake of facts and circumstances. This right is wholly independent of the rule which precludes a party, ordinarily, from impeaching the veracity of a witness whom he has offered to sustain his cause. A party may show, in this way, that his own witness is mistaken in his relation of facts, although by a general rule he cannot be allowed to impeach him.
4. But what Hills said on a former trial, or otherwise, was not a proper subject of inquiry, and the judge who tried the cause, properly, at first, rejected the evidence offered to prove it. On that precise ground it ought not to have been admitted at all.
In the cross-examination of witnesses, a great deal of latitude is allowed for the purpose of testing the memory, the capacity or the honesty of the person under examination; and for that purpose inquiries may be pushed even to mat*356ters not positively material to the issue. But this license has various restrictions. In the first place, it does not extend so far as to authorize a party to prove, by a witness on cross-examination, things positively improper to be proved at all; and, secondly, he cannot, for the purpose of discrediting a witness, contradict, by other evidence, his statements that are improper or immaterial. In other words, he may, for the purposes before indicated, ask questions not strictly relevant to the issue, provided they do not tend to elicit testimony that is injurious or improper. But when a question of either kind has been put and answered, the party cannot introduce other evidence to contradict the witness, whether for the purpose of discrediting him, or for any other purpose. It is a very plain corollary to that rule, that a question not otherwise material or proper, does not become so by force of any purpose of the examining party to make use of it to discredit the witness, by contradicting his answers to it. The reason assigned by writers for these rules are, that a contrary course of proceeding would introduce issues in interminable numbers, and perplex and harass litigants in questions which do concern their cause.
A witness, therefore, shall not be interrogated on a subject not pertinent to the issue, for the mere purpose of contradicting him. If it was immaterial what Hills stated on a former occasion, it was still less “ german to the matter ” whether or not Bassett falsely testified to those irrelevant-statements. The defendant had, therefore, no right to make the inquiry for such a purpose, and was improperly permitted to do so.
5. We think that the court correctly instructed the jury that the sign of E. W. Hills, remaining upon the store after the sale, was a circumstance from which the jury might infer a fraud in the transaction, because it certainly had a tendency, however slight, to indicate that the store continued in his occupancy and under his control, and that the possession of the goods remained in him. And possession of the *357goods sold continuing with the vendor is one of the badges or evidences of fraud, which, left unexplained, have been held to fix the imputation of it upon the parties to the transaction. Coburn v. Pickering, 3 N. H. Rep. 415; Clark v. Morse, 10 N. H. Rep. 236. But such possession, after sale, is not such conclusive evidence of fraud as to exclude explanation, according to the authority of those cases. Still less should it be held that a fact which tends to prove such possession may not be explained, and its tendency repelled by other evidence throwing light upon the transaction. The plaintiff’s sign remaining upon the shop was by no means conclusive proof that he was in possession of it, and it might have been accounted for in various ways. The plaintiff proposed to show that it was a common custom for the old sign, under such circumstances, to remain. If such were the fact, no false impression would have been likely to be given by the sign in question, and the evidence otherwise deducible from the fact would have been of little or no weight. We think the explanation offered by the plaintiff ought to have been received.
6. The testimony of O. W. Penhallow was clearly admissible within the rule established by practice in this State and recognized elsewhere. Alvord v. Collin, 20 Pick. 418; Doe v. Parkins, 3 Term Rep. 749; State v. Batols, 2 Nott & M'Cord, 331. An original memorandum or other writing made by a witness at the time of a transaction for the precise purpose of preserving the evidence of it in all its particulars, is better than the fading memory of man in most cases, and in very many the only full and accurate proof that the transactions are capable of. It has been admitted in cases in which the party making it in the ordinary transaction of business is, for sufficient cause^ not produced as a witness, from the presumption that if produced he would testify in conformity with his memoranda. Washington Bank v. Prescott, 20 Pick. 339; Welch v. Barrett, 15 Mass. Rep. 380. It would be impossible to find better evi*358denee of the protest, than that which was admitted and became the subject of the exception. But the question was fully examined in Haven v. Wendell, 11 N. H. Rep. 112, and the doctrine settled in harmony with these views. The memorandum made at the time of the transaction for the purpose of stating it truly and circumstantially becomes evidence, having been first shown, by other proper proof, that it was so made.
7. The next question relates to the instructions of the court as to what intentions and purposes on the part of Hills in selling the goods to the plaintiff would constitute the sale a fraudulent one as to creditors, and what degree of suspicion and what means of and incentives to inquiry on the part of the plaintiff, would suffice to charge him as a participant in the fraudulent intentions of Hills.
The statute of 13 Eliz., to which the law on this subject is usually traced, renders void all conveyances, whether of real or personal property, made with the intent to disturb, hinder or defraud a creditor. And the language of the statute, and the decisions under it, make no distinction between conveyances for value and those which are merely voluntary, provided there be evidence by which this vicious purpose becomes exposed. Such was the doctrine of Twyne’s case in the Reports; and the instructions of the court, that if the design of Hills in selling the goods, was to place his property out of the reach of legal process, and to delay his creditors more than they would have been delayed but for the sale, such a design was fraudulent, appears to have been clearly within the meaning of the statute and the decisions under it.
But it is plain that any such fraudulent purpose ■ of the party conveying his property for a good and valuable consideration paid by the purchaser unsuspicious of his design, should not vitiate the sale. Roberts v. Anderson, 3 J. C. Rep. 377; Hildreth v. Sands, 14 Johns. 498. “ Such a construction is not to be made in support of creditors as will *359make third persons sufferers. Therefore the statute does not militate against any transaction bona fide, and where there is no imagination of fraud.” Lord Mansfield, in Cadogan v. Kennett, Cowp. 434.
As to what participation of the purchaser-in the illegal and fraudulent act and intent of the vendor shall involve him in the consequences of it, it is plain that a knowledge of such intent is sufficient. Lord Mansfield, in the case last cited, puts a ease, where there had been a decree in the court of chancery, and a sequestration. A person, with knowledge of the decree, bought the house and goods belonging to the defendant, and gave a full price for them. The court said the purchase being with a manifest view to defeat the creditor, was fraudulent, and, therefore, notwithstanding a valuable consideration, void. So if a man knows of a judgment and execution, and with a view to defeat it, purchases the debtor’s goods, it is void, because the purpose is iniquitous.
These remarks of Lord Mansfield, commonly cited in discussing this subject, embrace the rudiments of unquestionable doctrines. He who purchases with knowledge of the fraudulent design of the vendor to defeat and delay his creditors, is in law charged with participation in the fraud, though he pay a full consideration and take immediate and open possession of the goods. In the absence, therefore, of the various circumstances which raise the legal presumption of knowledge, the question is narrowed to this, whether, in point of fact, the plaintiff knew of the fraudulent intention of Hills in selling his goods.
The books contain many cases, both at law'and in equity, and criminal as well as civil, turning upon this question of knowledge, and a great deal of disquisition may be found as to what amounts to sufficient notice of a fact to charge one with knowledge of it, or to estop him from denying such knowledge, whether, in fact, the notice have prevailed over his incredulity or not.
*360The general rule of equity is that notice sufficient to put a party upon inquiry is sufficient to charge him with what he might have learned by such inquiry. Fonb. Eq. B. 2, ch. 6, § 3. But the value of that rule as a guide is not great, because its application has been limited and qualified by so many decisions, that it has become unsafe to apply it without a precedent.
Besides, it is a rule for the court, and not for the jury; who should in this case have found, as a matter of fact, a fraudulent intention on the part of the plaintiff to collude with Hills against his creditors, in order to have founded a verdict for the defendant. Such knowledge of the purposes of Hills as should have fixed upon the plaintiff the imputation of such collusion, must therefore have been something beyond the crassa neglige,ntia, and the knowledge that had become merely possible to a person having an interest to detect the truth ; and something beyond the suspicion that the facts, probably known to the plaintiff, would, in the opinion of a jury reviewing the transaction, have awakened in a common spectator. The question was not what would a common spectator know or suspect, but what knowledge had the plaintiff of Hills’ purposes in making the sale, and what were his own purposes in making the purchase ? These were the appropriate questions for the consideration of the jury. The law does not charge the purchaser in such circumstances to inquire into the inducements of the vendor to sell, if the sale be free from secresy, inadequacy of price and the other tokens of fraud, which the law itself applies to settle the character of the transaction. •
The true issue presented is the question of actual knowledge. The burden of proving it is on the party imputing the fraud. The evidence required is that which shall convince a jury that the party did know the unlawful purpose. This evidence may be found in the acts of the party himself, or from those extrinsic facts which must necessarily *361have indicated the truth so strongly as to raise in the minds of the jury a conviction that the plaintiff believed it.
The evidence required by the instructions given to the jury at the trial comes short of this. Instead of knowledge, they were required only to find such facts as would have led an observer of common intelligence to perceive and understand the motives of Hills; such facts being sufficient, according to the instructions, to have put the plaintiff upon inquiry, and to have charged him with knowledge. The effect of this language was to charge the plaintiff upon a mere constructive or implied knowledge of the fraud, and was therefore erroneous.
8. The instructions were correct upon the point last raised in the case. If the plaintiff fraudulently purchased the goods, he may properly be regarded as holding them for those who afterwards asserted their right to them as creditors, and as being subjected to the common rule regarding the confusion of goods. This rule is plainly stated in 2 Kent. Com. 264. If A. wilfully mingle his goods with those of B. so that it is impossible to distinguish between» them, the whole belongs to B. And it belongs to the party causing the confusion to point out satisfactorily his own, or to lose them.
By reason of the several errors in the rulings and charge of the court of common pleas, the verdict must be set aside, and a

New trial granted.