In Maryland, the distinction between common law and equity, as
known to the English law, has been constantly preserved in its
system of jurisprudence.
The statute of George the Second which made lands in the
American colonies liable to be sold under a
fieri facias
issued upon a judgment in a court of common law, did not interfere
with this distinction, and under it a legal estate only and not an
equitable interest could be seized under a
fi. fa.
In 1810, an act of assembly was passed making equitable
interests subject to this process.
But the purchaser at the sale of an equitable interest under
this process only buys the interest which the debtor had, and thus
becomes the owner of an equitable and not a legal estate.
It is not, however, every legal interest that is made liable to
sale on a
fi. fa. The debtor must have a beneficial
interest in the property, and not a barren legal title held in
trust.
In the action of ejectment in Maryland, the lessor of the
plaintiff must show a legal title in himself to the land which be
claims, and the right of possession under it, at the time of the
demise laid in the declaration and at the time of the trial. He
cannot support the action upon an equitable title, however clear
and indisputable it may be, but must seek his remedy in
chancery.
Where there was a deed of land to a debtor in trust which
conveyed to him a naked legal title, he took under it no interest
that could be seized and sold by the marshal upon a
fi.
fa., and the purchaser at such sale could not maintain an
action of ejectment under the marshal's deed.
But the plaintiff in the ejectment suit offered evidence to
prove that the trusts in the deed were fraudulent, and that the
debtor purchased the land and procured the deed in this form in
order to hinder and defraud his creditors. And this proof was
offered to show that the debtor had a beneficial interest in the
property, liable to be seized and sold for the payment of his
debts.
Page 65 U. S. 399
This parol evidence could not be introduced to enlarge or change
the legal estate of the grantee against the plain words of the
instrument.
If the evidence were admissible, the fraudulent character of the
trusts, as against his creditors, could not enlarge his legal
interest beyond the terms of the deed. Although the debtor may have
paid the purchase money, that circumstance did riot establish a
resulting trust in his favor.
The lessors of the plaintiff had a plain and ample remedy in
chancery, where all the parties interested could be brought before
the court.
The instruction of the court below was therefore correct, that
the plaintiff could not recover in the action of ejectment.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 65 U. S. 401
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case comes up upon a writ of error to revise the judgment
of the Circuit Court for the District of Maryland, in an action of
ejectment brought by the plaintiff in error against the defendant
to recover certain lands lying in that state.
The plaintiff, in order to show title to the land claimed,
offered in evidence, that Smith and Butt, lessors of the plaintiff,
having sold cotton to Fenby & Brother, of Baltimore, in 1857,
drew on them for the sum due, and their bills were protested to the
amount of $13,708. They thereupon brought suit on the 3d of June,
1857, and recovered judgment in the circuit court on the 6th of
April, 1858; and on the 10th of the same month they issued a
fieri facias, which was on the same day levied by the
marshal on the land in controversy, and afterwards,
Page 65 U. S. 402
on the 2d of September next following, sold at public auction.
At this sale the lessors of the plaintiff were the purchasers, and
received from the marshal a deed in due form.
The plaintiff further proved that a certain Robert D. Brown was
seized in fee of the land at the times hereinafter mentioned, and
read in evidence a deed from him and his wife, dated April 6, 1857,
whereby they conveyed it to Richard D. Fenby, one of the
defendants, against whom the judgment was afterwards obtained,
stating at the time he offered it in evidence, that he impeached
the trusts in the deed for fraud, and intended to show such trusts
to be void against him.
The deed purports to be in consideration of $7,800.50, and
recited that the land was purchased by Fenby, from Brown, on the
13th of March, 1852, and then grants to Fenby,
"as
trustee," the lands in question in fee simple, in "trust" for
the sole and separate benefit of Jane Fenby, the wife of the said
Richard D. Fenby, for and during the term of her natural life, in
all respects as if she was a
feme sole, free from all
liability for the debts of her husband, and from and immediately
after the death of the said Jane Fenby, in trust for such child or
children, and descendants of a deceased child or children of the
said Jane, as she may leave living at the time of her death. Such
child, children, and descendants, to take
per stirpes.
The deed gives authority to Fenby to sell and dispose of any
part of the trust property, and to invest the proceeds in safe
securities upon the same trusts.
The plaintiff further offered evidence tending to prove that
Fenby was hopelessly insolvent when this deed was made, and that he
was in possession of the land from the time he purchased it in
1852.
The defendant, McCann, then read in evidence a deed from Fenby
to him, dated March 23d, 1858, purporting to be made in execution
of the power conferred by the trust deed, and conveying the
property in fee simple in consideration of twenty-two thousand
dollars.
And the plaintiff thereupon offered evidence tending to show
that this deed was intended to cover the previous fraud of the one
to Fenby; that McCann was privy to this design,
Page 65 U. S. 403
and cooperated in it; that he paid no money; and that
notwithstanding this deed, Fenby continued in possession after the
land had been advertised for sale by the marshal, and that the
possession was delivered to McCann only a few days before the sale
was actually made.
The defendant offered evidence for the purpose of rebutting the
charge of fraud against Fenby and himself, and upon the whole
testimony as offered, several instructions to the jury were moved
for by each of the parties, which were all refused, and the
following instruction given by the court:
"The deed from Robert P. Brown to Richard D. Fenby, of the 6th
of April, 1857, conveyed only a naked legal interest to said Fenby,
which could not be levied on and sold under a
fi. fa.
issued on a judgment against him, he having no beneficial interest
therein. And as the plaintiff, to sustain this action, has offered
the said deed in evidence, and as without it there is no evidence
of any legal title whatever in said Fenby at the date of the
levying of said
fi. fa., or at any other time, the
plaintiff cannot recover in this action."
As this instruction disposed of the case, it is unnecessary to
state at large the prayers offered by the respective parties, or
the testimony upon which they respectively relied to prove or
disprove the imputations of fraud.
In discussing the question thus presented by the decision of the
court below, it is proper to state, that in Maryland the
distinction between common law and equity, as known to the English
law, has been constantly preserved in its system of jurisprudence;
and the action of ejectment is the only mode of trying a title to
lands. And in that action the lessor of the plaintiff must show a
legal title in himself to the land he claims, and the right of
possession under it, at the time of the demise laid in the
declaration, and at the time of the trial. He cannot support the
action upon an equitable title, however clear and indisputable it
may be, but must seek his remedy in chancery; nor is the defendant
required to show any title in himself; and if the plaintiff makes
out a
prima facie legal title, the defendant may show an
elder and superior one in a stranger, and thereby defeat the
action.
Page 65 U. S. 404
The law upon this subject is briefly and clearly stated by the
court of appeals of the state in 11 Gill & Johnson 358, and 4
Md. 140, 173.
We state the law of Maryland upon this subject, because very few
of the states have preserved the distinction between legal and
equitable titles to land. And in states where there is no court of
equity, the courts of common law necessarily deal with equitable
interests as if they were legal, and exercise powers over them
which are unknown to courts of common law, where a separate
chancery jurisdiction is established. Cases, therefore, decided in
states which have no courts of equity, as contradistinguished from
courts of common law, can have no application to this case so far
as trusts or any other equitable interest is involved. And even in
states where the chancery jurisdiction has been preserved, the
decisions of their respective courts do not always harmonize in
marking the line of division between law and equity. And as the
title to real property, whether legal or equitable, and the mode of
asserting that title in courts of justice, depend altogether upon
the laws of the state in which the land is situated, cases like
that now before the court are questions of local law only, in which
we must be guided by the decisions of the state tribunals.
Since the passage of the act of George 2d, which made lands in
the American colonies liable to be sold under a
fi. fa.
issued upon a judgment in a court of common law, the process of
extent has fallen into disuse, and is regarded as obsolete in
Maryland. But this statute did not interfere with the established
distinction between law and equity, and an equitable interest could
not be seized under a
fi. fa. until the law of Maryland
was in this respect altered by an act of assembly of the state in
1810. But this law does not convert the equitable interest into a
legal one, in the hands of the purchaser. He buys precisely the
interest which the debtor had at the time the execution was levied;
and if he purchased an equitable interest and desires to perfect
his title, he must go into equity, where the court will decree a
conveyance to him from
Page 65 U. S. 405
the holder of the legal title, if he shows that the debtor was
entitled to it at the time of the levy.
But the statute of George 2d, which authorized the sale of lands
under a
fi. fa., did not authorize the sheriff to deliver
them, nor the court to issue the writ of
hab. fac. poss.
upon the return of the process. And the result of this was that the
purchaser was compelled to bring an ejectment to obtain the
possession, in which, as we have already said, he must show a legal
title to the land; and consequently must show that the debtor, at
the time of the levy, had a legal title, and such a title as was
subject to seizure and sale under the
fieri facias. And if
the debtor had but an equitable title, the purchaser was compelled
to go into equity, and obtain a legal one before he could support
an action of ejectment against the party in possession. A more
summary process in certain cases has been since provided by a law
of the state passed in 1825. But up to that time the principles
above stated were the settled law of the state; and remain so,
except insofar as they are altered by that act of assembly. It is
unnecessary to state the provisions of that act, because the
plaintiff did not proceed under it. He has resorted to the action
of ejectment to obtain possession, and cannot recover, unless he
can show a legal title to the premises. It is not, however, every
legal interest that is made liable to sale on a
fi. fa.
The debtor must have a beneficial interest in the property. And in
Houston v. Newland, 7 Gill & Johnson 493, where a
party had sold the land to another
bona fide, but had not
conveyed the legal title, the court held that the title remaining
in the vendors was a barren legal title, in trust for the
purchaser, and could not be sold for the payment of his debts. And
a still later case, 10 Gill & Johnson 443, 451-452,
Matthews v. Ward's Lessee, where land had been conveyed to
a trustee, in trust for third persons, and the
cestuis que
trust had died without heirs, the court decided that the land
escheated to the state, although the heirs of the trustee to whom
the legal estate was conveyed were still living, and said that "the
rights of such trustee, who is a mere instrument, are treated with
no respect, and the state deals with the property as her own."
Page 65 U. S. 406
We proceed to apply these principles to the case before us. The
deed to Fenby, in plain and unambiguous words, conveyed to him a
naked legal title; he took under it no interest that could be
seized and sold by the marshal upon a
fi. fa.; and the
deed of the marshal, therefore, conveyed no title to the lessors of
the plaintiff. Standing only upon this title, derived under this
deed to Fenby, and showing no other title, he certainly could not
recover in an action of ejectment.
But the plaintiff offers evidence to prove that the trusts in
the deed are fraudulent, and that Fenby purchased the land and
procured the deed from Brown in this form, in order to hinder and
defraud his creditors. And he offers this proof to show that Fenby
had a beneficial interest in the property, liable to be seized and
sold for the payment of his debts.
The proposition to enlarge or change the legal estate of the
grantee in a deed, by parol evidence, against the plain words of
the instrument, is without precedent in any court of common law.
And in the case of
Remington v. Linthicum, relied on by
the plaintiff, the evidence was offered, not to change the estate
limited in the grant, but to show that the grant was fraudulent,
and utterly void, and conveyed no interest whatever to the grantee
named in it. The party offering the evidence did not claim under
that deed, but against it. And if, in this case, the evidence was
offered for a like purpose, and the deed proved to be fraudulent
and void, it would defeat the plaintiff's action instead of
supporting it.
He does not, however, offer the parol evidence for this purpose,
but offers it to enlarge the estate of Fenby, and to show that he
had not merely a barren legal title, but a beneficial interest,
which was liable for the payment of his debts. But if the evidence
were admissible, we do not perceive how the fraudulent character of
the trusts, as against his creditors, could enlarge his legal
interest beyond the terms of the deed. It is true he paid the money
for the property. And if this circumstance could be supposed to
create a resulting trust for the benefit of Fenby, it would be a
mere equitable right exclusively within the jurisdiction of a court
of chancery, and a court of common law could neither enforce it nor
notice it,
Page 65 U. S. 407
and consequently it would not be a title upon which an action of
ejectment could be maintained. But it obviously is not a case to
which the doctrine of resulting trusts can be applied; for, as
between Fenby and the
cestuis que trust, he can have no
equity against the express trusts to which he assented, and which,
indeed, according to the plaintiff's allegation, he procured to be
made. And when the deed is offered in evidence by the plaintiff, in
order to derive to himself a legal title under it, the interests
and estates thereby conveyed cannot be enlarged or diminished by
testimony dehors the deed. The deed must speak for itself.
If these trusts are fraudulent, the lessors of the plaintiff
have a plain and ample remedy in the court of chancery, which has
the exclusive jurisdiction of trusts and trust estates. In that
forum all of the parties interested in the controversy can be
brought before the court, and heard in defense of their respective
claims. But as the case now stands, the only interest which the
plaintiff seeks to impeach is that of the
cestuis que
trust; yet they are not before the court, nor can they by any
process be made parties in this ejectment suit, nor even be
permitted to make themselves parties if they desired to do so, and
cannot have an opportunity of adducing testimony in defense of
their rights. Under such circumstances, an inquiry into the
validity of these trusts would not only be inconsistent with the
established principles and jurisdiction of courts of common law,
but also inconsistent with that great fundamental rule in the
administration of justice, which requires that everyone shall have
an opportunity of defending his rights before judgment is
pronounced against him.
The judgment of the circuit court is therefore
affirmed.