Amaker v. New

Decision Date21 April 1890
Citation11 S.E. 386,33 S.C. 28
PartiesAMAKER v. NEW et al.
CourtSouth Carolina Supreme Court

Appeal from common pleas circuit court of Orangeburg county; HUDSON Judge izlar & Glaze, for appellant.

Glover & Bowman, for respondents.

McIVER J.

I understand it to be well settled that an existing creditor who wishes to subject property to the payment of his debt which has been conveyed by his debtor, by a voluntary deed to another, before judgment obtained, has two remedies, to either of which he may resort, to-wit, he may disregard the conveyance as fraudulent and void, and proceed to sell the property under his execution, leaving the validity of the deed to be determined in an action of the purchaser at such sale to recover possession of the land, or he may, by an action on the equity side of the court, have the deed set aside on the ground of fraud, and the land conveyed by it subjected to the payment of his debt. If he resorted to the latter mode of relief, then it was settled in the court of equity that he must commence his action within four years after the discovery of the fraud, or such action would be barred; and this equity rule is now made statutory by section 112 of the Code, the time being enlarged from four to six years. But I do not see how this doctrine can be made applicable in a case where the creditor resorts to the former mode of relief from the fraud. In such a case, the creditor brings no action to set aside the deed, and there is nothing to which the plea of the statute of limitations can be made applicable. That statute confers no rights except simply that of immunity from suit, and therefore, until some action is brought against one who seeks to avail himself of the benefits of the statute, there is no room for its application. For example, where an action is brought on a note after the time limited for the commencement of such action, while the statute affords perfect immunity from such action, it does not operate as payment of the debt evidenced by such note, and if the holder thereof can obtain payment in any other way than by resort to an action he has the right to do so. See Wilson v. Kelly, 16 S.C. 216. The statute of limitations is nothing but a "statute of repose," as it has been called, founded on motives of public policy; that it is best for the general welfare that after the lapse of a prescribed time, fixed arbitrarily, a person shall not be allowed to enforce a claim by the use of the legal machinery of the courts,--that is, the doors of the court are no longer open to him for the enforcement of a claim which he has neglected to assert within the prescribed time. Now, in this case, treating it as though the action was brought by Sistrunk, in whose shoes the real plaintiff stands, where has there been any delay on the part of the creditor in asserting his rights? The voluntary deed was made in November, 1866. Sistrunk recovered his judgment, on cause of action arising prior to the deed, in August, 1867. The land was levied on and sold by the sheriff in January, 1868, and possession was surrendered to the purchaser at such sale, Sistrunk, of the entire tract of 300 acres. By proceeding instituted in March, 1869, that portion of the tract (158 acres) now in dispute was laid off to the widow of the grantor as her dower, and she held possession until her death, in March, 1886, and within about a year thereafter this action was commenced. From this statement it appears that the creditor proceeded promptly, after obtaining his judgment, to subject the land to the payment of his debt, in one of the modes permitted by law, to-wit, a sale under his judgment, notwithstanding the prior voluntary deed, and, having thus acquired possession, retained the same until required to surrender the portion now in dispute, temporarily, to the superior claim of dower, and, very soon after that estate terminated by the death of the widow, this action was commenced to regain possession of that part of the land which had thus been temporarily surrendered under the superior claim of dower. There never was, therefore, any occasion for the creditor to bring his action to set aside the deed for fraud, (and such is not the nature of the present action;) for he had availed himself of the other remedy afforded by law, by selling the land under his execution as the property of the grantor, notwithstanding the prior execution of the voluntary deed. This being an action to recover possession of real estate, and not an action to set aside a deed for fraud, I am unable to see how the plea of the statute of limitations can be applied; for certainly the right of action did not arise until the estate of dower fell in by the death of the widow, and the action was commenced within a year after that event occurred. The plea of the statute, as it is called, (improperly, as I think, for such a plea must be directed to the cause of action set forth in the complaint,) is not directed to the plaintiff's cause of action, but is interposed as a protection against an attack made by the plaintiff upon the defense set up by defendants.

The plaintiff having made out a prima facie title, as is shown by the refusal of the motion for a nonsuit, to which no exception was taken, the defendants undertook to show a superior title in themselves under the deed in question, and surely, the plaintiff was entitled to show any defect in that deed which would render it insufficient to vest title in the defendants, either by showing that it was non under seal, or not executed in the presence of two subscribing witnesses, or that the grantor was non compos, or that it was not recorded. If so, why may it not also be shown that it was void for fraud? I do not understand that it ever was the rule that a deed or other instrument could not be attacked for fraud after the lapse of the prescribed time, in any way, but only that it could not be attacked by an action instituted for that purpose. I can very well understand how the law, from consideration of public policy, may forbid one from invoking its aid by bringing an action to set aside a deed for fraud, after the time limited for the purpose, but I am unable to understand upon what principle, either of law, equity, or good morals, one who has made out a prima facie case for the relief he demands can be forbidden from showing that the defense set up against his claim is founded in fraud, simply because such fraud had been committed so long ago as to bar an action brought to obtain relief from such fraud: but I do not think any case can be found which would sanction such a doctrine. It seems to me that any other view would render the conceded right of the creditor to disregard the fraudulent deed and sell the land under his execution absolutely nugatory; for, in such a case, all that the grantee under the fraudulent deed would have to do would be to wait until the expiration of six years, and then assert his claim under such deed, when, under the view contended for, it would be shielded from attack on the ground of fraud by the statute of limitations. If it should be said that the creditor, after purchasing the land under his execution, could protect himself by bringing an action to remove a cloud from his title, by having the deed declared void for fraud, this is only saying that one...

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