Court Opinion

ID: 9418006
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-02 20:46:33.558577+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:21:54.078196
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Brewer,
after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
For the purposes of this case it may be conceded that the contract made before the patent was, by virtue of the policy of the United States as disclosed in its statutes, void, and could not have been enforced by the Norwood and Butterfield Company, but the contract was not inherently vicious or immoral. It was simply void because in conflict with the Federal statutes. Anderson v. Carkins, 135 U. S. 483. When the patent issued the full legal title passed to the patentee. He could do with the land that which he saw fit, sell or give it away, and if he voluntarily conveyed it he could not thereafter repudiate the conveyance. He may well have thought that having received money from the company to enable him to pay for the land it was equitable that he should convey that interest which he had agreed to convey. At any rate, he had a right to exercise a choice in the matter, and having exercised it he at least cannot complain. Whether the Government could challenge the conveyance we need not determine, for if it had any right to interfere, it has not chosen to do so. Jt is generally true that an executed contract, voluntarily executed, without fraud or duress, is binding and cannot be repudiated by the party who executed it. In Bibb v. Allen, 149 U. S. 481, 497, Mr. Justice Jackson, speaking for the court, tints stated the law:
*338“It is well settled by the authorities that the defense of the statute of frauds cannot be set up against an executed contract. Dodge v. Crandall, 30 N. Y. 294, 304; Brown v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company, 117 N. Y. 266, 273; Madden v. Floyd, 69 Alabama, 221, 225; Gordon, Rankin & Co. v. Tweedy, 71 Alabama, 202, 214; Huntley v. Huntley, 114 U. S. 394, 400; Browne on Statute of Frauds, § 116. This rule proceeds and rests upon the principle .that there is ‘no rule of law which prevents a party from performing a-promise which could not be legally* enforced, orvwhich will permit a party, morally but net legally bound to do a certain act or thing, upon the act or thing being done, to recall it to the prejudice of the promisee, on the plea that.the.promise, while still executory, could not by reason of some technical rule of law have been enforced by action.’ Newman v. Nellis, 97 N. Y. 285, 291. ” St. Louis Hay &c. Co. v. United States, 191 U. S. 159, 163.
It is also well settled that one whose interest in land is acquired subsequently to a conveyance thereof by the owner has no higher right to question the conveyance than the grantor had. This does not conflict with the rule that a conveyance fraudulent against creditors may be set aside at their.instance; for their rights exist prior to the conveyance, or if not, the conveyance was made with the purpose on the part of the grantor of defrauding them out' of debts subsequently contracted. Nothing of that kind appears here. Hartman, at the time of the conveyance, had no claim against the patentee. The conveyance was not made with the purpose of subsequently contracting a debt and defrauding him out of payment thereof. His trust deed was executed after the conveyance to the Nor-wood and Butterfield Company and for the purpose of securing debts thereafter to be contracted, and he took with knowledge of the conveyance.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Mississippi was right, and it is

Affirmed.