Oberdorfer v. Meyer

Lewis, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is clear from the evidence that the complainants’ goods were obtained by fraud, as charged in the bill; and if this were a contest between them and the fraudulent buyer alone, their right to reclaim the goods would be unquestionable. But, unfortunately for them, rights of innocent third, persons have intervened, which presents a very different case; for the doctrine is now established both in England and Virginia that a sale of goods, although the owner has been fraudulently induced to make it, passes the title to the vendee. The contract, however, in such a case is voidable, at the election of the vendor, as against the vendee, but not a subsequent bona fide purchaser for value; that is to say, the vendor, on discovery of the fraud, may disaffirm the contract and reclaim the goods, provided they have, not passed into the hands of a bona-fide purchaser.

The latter buying, as he does, without notice of the fraud, is protected on the principle that when one of two innocent persons must suffer by the fraud of a third, the loss shall fall on him who has enabled such third person to do the wrong. 1 Benj., Sales (6th Am. ed), sec. 648; Williams v. Given, 6 Gratt. 268; Wickham v. Martin, 13 Id. 427; Old Dominion S. S. Co. v. Burkhardt, 31 Id. 664; Donaldson v. Farwell, 93 U. S. 631.

The case of Wickham v. Martin is much like the present. There an insolvent merchant, fraudulently misrepresenting his *387pecuniary condition, purchased goods not intending to pay for them, and afterwards conveyed them in trust for the benefit of creditors, the trustee, and beneficiaries in the deed having no notice of the fraud. This court decided that the trustee, as an innocent purchaser, took an indefeasible title, which entitled him to recover the value of the goods in an action of trover against the original vendors, who, after the date of the deed, had obtained possession of the goods.

This principle is decisive here; for there is no proof, nor is it even charged, that the trustee or beneficiaries in the deed had notice of the fraud by which the purchase of the goods ■was effected; nor is it. proved that they were privy to, or colluded with the grantor in accomplishing, a fraud, if, in fact, there was any such design on his part when the deed was executed. So that the case is not within the condemnation of the statute of fraudulent conveyances, which enacts expressly that' nothing therein shall affect the title of a purchaser for valuable consideration, unless it. appear that he had notice of the fraudulent intent of his immediate grantor, or of the fraud rendering void the title of such grantor. Code, § 2485; 2 Min. Insts. 602; Paul v. Baugh, 85 Va. 955 ; Jones v. Christian, 86 Id. 1017.

It is true the deed was drawn by Craig, the trustee therein, and after, as counsel of the grantor, he had made an examination into his affairs. But nothing, for aught the record shows, was disclosed by that examination sufficient to charge him with notice of any fraudulent intent, if any such existed. He soon discovered, as he testifies, that the grantor was, and for some time had been, insolvent; but that circumstance was in itself no bar to a valid assignment, with preferences as between creditors. He also knew, when he drew the deed, that the remnant of the goods which had shortly before been purchased from the complainants was embraced in the assignment, and that the goods had not been paid for. But that circumstance does not vitiate the deed, especially as he knew nothing of the *388circumstances under which the goods had been purchased. Hor was there anything to justly awaken suspicion or to put a reasonably prudent man on further inquiry as to the bona fides of the debts due the grantor’s father and brother-in-law, respectively, and which were put in a preferred class. In fact, they have since been reported by the commissioner as bona fide, and the question has not as yet been passed on by the lower court.

The trustee, moreover, testifies that the grantor was averse to making an assignment; that he tried, but without success, to borrow money with which to tide over his embarrassment, and that he consented to make an assignment only after his real situation had been fully explained to him. He says further, that the season being late, cold, and wet, he (the grantor) was disappointed in making sales sufficient to meet his obliga■tions, which were then about to fall due, for goods purchased the previous year, and that lie advised him that unless an assignment was made, his friends who had loaned him money would be left out in the cold,” and that he ought to protect them in preference to other creditors. Pursuant to this advice, he says, the assignment was made.

In short, we are of opinion that the alleged invalidity of the deed is not established by the evidence, and that, to this extent, the decree must be reversed.

Decree reversed.