32 W. Va. 203 | W. Va. | 1889
On the 20th of November, 1874, the Kanawha Valley Bank
Ellen Atkinson answered admitting the debt of plaintiff, her husband’s insolvency and the deed of trust to the Commercial Bank for money borrowed by her husband, but denying that the consideration of the conveyance to her of said lot was paid by her husband, or that he purchased, or that he used her name in the conveyance to defraud his creditors, or that she never paúl any consideration deemed valuable for the lot. She averred, that she married on 8th December, 1868, and when she married she and her sister owned a lot in Charleston vested in a brother as trustee, and, she having bought her sister’s share, it was convoyed to her 21st March, 1870; that on the 8th February, 1871, Bessie Eagan, her sister, purchased a lot in Charleston, and on 10th March, 1871, she, Ellen Atkinson, and Bessie Eagan traded properties, and said Ellen received in the exchange a property in Charleston called the “Moore Property;” that on 1st of November, 1872, she, her husband joining in the deed, conveyed to Smith and Gilligan a portion of said lot for $4,000.00
George W. Atkinson answered admitting the indebtedness and his inability to pay his debts. He alleged, that it was not true,- that the consideration for the Wheeling property was paid by him, or that he used the name of his wife in its purchase to defraud his creditors, and averred, that the consideration for the property was paid wholly with money belonging to his wife; .that when he married her she owned real estate in Charleston, which was exchanged for other real estate, from, the sale of which $4,750.00 was realized; and said Wheeling property paid for out of it. He admitted, that the deed of trust to the Commercial Bank was for a loan to him. Depositions were taken. On the hearing plaintiff'’s bill was dismissed, and it appealed here.
It is clear from the evidence of George W. Atkinson and Mrs. Atkinson, that the proceeds of the sale of her Moore property went into his hands and with her knowledge; that he gave her no note for it nor any memorandum touching it. She declined to receive a note for it, as he definitely states. No written account of moneys proceeding from her property, though there were several transactions, or of rents arising from it was kept by either of them. He made no deposit in bank or elsewhere to her credit, or to himself as her- trustee or agent in any-manner designating it as a special fund distinct from his own money. Other moneys he certainly had during the years covered by the transactions pertinent to this case, for he-was holding lucrative offices under the United States government, — postmaster at Charleston, collector of internal revenue, and United States marshal, — and he had a bank account, as he speaks
He said: “The $3,300.00 was paid by me as agent for'my wife out ©f her funds, which I held in trust for her.” When asked how long he had held in trust funds of his wife, he answered : “ From the time it came to my hands from the sale' of the Charleston property until it was paid over for the Wheeling property.” Being asked as to the character of the trust, he answered: “ It was a positive understanding between us that the money was hers; that it should not be taken from her but be forthcoming, when her needs required it. I offered to give her notes, but she declined to receive them, for the reason that she knew, that I would not defraud her out of it, and the further reason that neither of us considered it necessary, in a legal point of view, to pass notes be: tween us.” He further said : “ It was a verbal contract. It ■was at various times, and, as I have stated above, no notes were given. The only evidence of the contract was the verbal acceptance of it. It was a verbal contract between man and wife, which should be held sacred, and I have ever regarded it such.” Asked to state definitely the time, when he received $4,750.00 which he admitted- having received from her property, he answered: “I can not. I have no means of arriving at the exact date.” When asked to state, what he did with the money immediately on its receipt, he says: “ I can not for the life of me answer that question.” He stated also, that the money was received at different times, and he could not say definitely the disposition he made of the money at the time; and that $2,000.00 of it was paid on the Methodist Episcopal Church lot in Charleston, and some of it was on the purchase of the lot in Wheeling.
He was asked to state, outside of the $2,000.00 paid the Methodist Episcopal Church, what disposition was made of any part of the $4,750.00, where it was, or how it was used up to the time of the purchase of the Wheeling lot, and he replied: “ I can not definitely furnish you the desired in
He was asked, “ Was the money held by you in trust for your wife so held or placed, that you could distinguish it from your own money ?” and answered, “ It was not in the general handling of it, but at all times I kept a careful account of the same, so that I could at any time answer the question as to how much of her funds I had in my possession.” When asked when and how the account was kept, and where it was then, he answered “ The transactions involved only real estate, and, when a piece of property was sold, the amount of course was known to both. It was therefore a very easy matter to keep track of the amounts without keeping a written record. I do not remember whether either of us ever made any entry of these transactions in writing. There never was a time, however, when it was not known to both of us the exact amount I held for her.” He then stated he owed her a balance of $350.00 exclusive of interest.
He was then asked if the above moneys constituted all that he held in trust for his wife, and he answered : “ I presume it does not, although I can not now think of any sum.” His wife stated that he collected rents. He further stated that his wife did not directly exercise direction or control as to any property held in trust for her, but always felt that her funds would be forthcoming “at her call, should-I live, without any note o.r bond, and, if I should die, I carry enough-life insurance to make her comfortable.” When asked where he got the $500.00 cash payment on the Wheeling lot he answered : “I can not answer that question, as I do not remember.” When asked where he got the money to pay the second $500.00 payment, he answered : “ I can not answer that definitely, as I kept no separate accounts from, whom T received funds due me from persons with whom I had business transactions.” He made the same answer as to the third $500.00 payment. When asked by whom a further $500.00 payment was made, he answered: “ My recollection is, I paid it as the agent of my wife.” These quotations furnish, substantially, the case as put by the defendant G. W. Atkinson. The defense rested on the evidence of G. W. Atkinson and wife.
It can not be said, that the specific money from her property was paid on the purchase of the Wheeling property. It came from his general funds. He denominates it a “trust.” He may honestly so regard it, but to merely denominate it a “trust” does not make it a trust, unless the facts in law make it one. A trust must have a definite, certain subject-matter.
And here it is proper to say, that the contention, that a trust existed, is not set up in either of the answers of George W. and Ellen Atkinson; the position taken by way of defence in them being that the Wheeling property was paid for not by George W. Atkinson but by the proceeds of the'sale of her separate estate, and neither answer alleges, that the money therefrom went into the husband’s hands by way of trust for any purpose. This defence is first found in the depositions, but the depositions can not be read to support a trust not set up in the answer, for the rule of pleading is that the allegata et probata must both exist and correspond, and the probata can perform no function unless preceded by 'allegata. Matters not charged in the bill or averred in the answer can not be considered on the hearing. Hunter’s
Wells, Mar. Wom. § 370, p. 371, on the authority of Schaffner v. Reuter, 37 Barb. 49, and Savage v. O’Neil, 44 N. N. 298, says: “As to loans between them, it has been held that where a conveyance made by a husband to a wife is only a fair equivalent for money borrowed of her, and is free from actual fraud, although executed after the debt has been incurred by him, it is supported by the antecedent equitable obligation to pay it, and in legal effect relates back • to the time of the loan, so as, of course, to cut out any intervening creditor of the husband. Being equitably bound to pay, he may do so voluntarily, either in money or other property; and, if a creditor undertakes to impeach it, the burden is on him to show mala.fieles; that is, where a loan or the indebtedness of the husband to the wife is prima facie established; for, where a wife claims a debt due her, she must, like any other person, show it in some way.” And in French v. Motley, 63 Me. 326, it is held that other creditors of a husband can not complain if he prefers to discharge a debt to her rather than to-them. So in Bank v. Kimble, 76 Ind. 195, this position is'said to be well settled in that state by several cases. So in Steadman v. Wilbur, 7 R. I. 481.
To the general proposition, that, if a clearly valid subsisting debt in favor of a wife against the husband were fully proven, he might pay it directly or indirectly, if he preferred to do so, by paying another for conveying property to her in discharge of said indebtedness, I would accede. But it is to be noted, that under the rule above quoted from Wells, a loan, a distinctive loan, as distinguished from a gift, must be established. In the Rhode Island case, which is as liberal as any towards the wife in this matter, it is held : “ The law will not from the mere delivery by her of her money to him or from the permitted receipt by him of her separate income, imply a promise by him to repay her, but will require more, — either an express promise or circumstances to prove, that in such matter they dealt with each other as debtor and creditor.” The Ghief Justice in delivering
It would be exceedingly dangerous to the business world to have a loose principle' in this matter, and would open a wide door for the defeat of honest creditors. A husband and wife embark on thewoyage of life together, expecting to meet the waves together, devoting to the support of themselves and children and to his success their common efforts. and their several means. She is always willing from affection for her husband and interest in his success to extend him the help of her means, his business interests being in a large sense her interests, never expecting any return of the means she commits to his hands; and if, after he has had those means employed in his business for years, mingled indiscriminately with his, it were permitted to her, when misfortune overtakes him, to raise up loans to the prejudice of his creditors and suppoi’t them by hig own and her evidence, after creditors had trusted him in total ignorance of such loans, and he were allowed to use his means in purchasing real estate in her name, a wide road would be opened for the promotion of wrong against honest creditors. Better that there should be individual cases of hardship, than that such dangers should stand in the way “of the business world. If any one must suffer, better that even the helpless woman suffer than honest creditors, whose means or property were perhaps consumed in furnishing shelter, food and raiment to the wife and her children.
In this case the husband had had the proceeds of the sale
Here the husband mingled the wife’s money with his own; no note was ever given by him to her; no account kept; and he used it in his business. He collected some rents from the realty, as his wife says, and no account is kept. This is all right — as between husband and wife, very natural; but it does not answer the rigid requirements of the law, when the wife after her husband’s insolvency seeks to set up indebtedness in her favor. And again, the fact, that the wife in 1-885 united in a deed of trust conveying the Wheeling property to secure the large sum of $1,500.00 purely a loan by the bank to her husband, tends to confirm the idea, that it was substantially his property.
A line of decisions in our State made up of many well-considered cases goes far in behalf of creditors against fraudulent conveyances; and there is perhaps no state in the Union, whose decisions go further to vindicate the rights of honest creditors over such conveyances, especially when be
In Burt v. Timmons, 29 W. Va. 441, (2 S. E. Rep. 780) it is held: “A transaction between father and child, husband and wife, brother and sister, or between others between Avhom there exists a natural and strong motive to provide for a dependent at the expense of honest.creditors, if such transaction be impeached as fraudulent, may be shown to be fraudulent by less proof, and the party claiming the benefit of such transaction is held to a fuller and stricter proof of its justice and of the faii’noss of the transaction, after it is shown to be prima facie fraudulent, than would be required if the transaction was between strangers.” And that “ when a wife purchases land or other property the burden is on her to prove distinctly that she paid for the land or other property -with funds not furnished by her husband. Evidence that she purchased amounts to nothing, unless it is accompanied with clear and full proof that she paid for it with funds furnished by some one other than her husband.” And the court also held that “ a transfer of property, either directly or indireeth7, by an insolvent husband to his wife, is justly regarded with suspicion, and unless it clearly appears to have been entirely free from intent to withdraw the property from the husband’s creditors, or the presumption of fraud be overcome by satisfactory affirmative proof, it will not be sustained.”
Herzog v. Weiler, 24 W. Va. 199; McMasters v. Edgar, 22 W. Va. 673; and other cases of same general principle? might be cited. Particularly in McGinnis v. Curry, 13 W. Va. 29, where a transaction, by which the proceeds of the sale of the wife’s land went into the husband’s hands, was held to be a gift by her not a loan, there is a strong leaning towards the position, that, whore a wife allows the proceeds of the sale of her separate estate to go into her husband’s hands and so remain for years, especially when he uses and invests it in business, it is to be taken, that the parties did not deal as debtor and creditor, that they did not contemplate the creation of debt but a gift rather than a loan.
I may say, that I have struggled hard to sustain this conveyance, but under the facts of the case and the decisions re
Reference is made by counsel for plaintiff to the fact, that Mrs. A.’s earnings went to pay her sister for her interest in the home property, which was exchanged by Mrs. A. for the Moore property, and that such earnings were the property of the husband, and that, as the Moore property entered into the purchase of the Wheeling lot, such earnings may be followed up. Such earnings would be the husband’s. Bailey v. Gardner, 31 W. Va. 94 (5 S. E. Rep. 636). So the ready .money, which she owned at marriage, and the furniture, which she sold, which money, furniture and earnings went to acquire the sister’s half in the home property, would bo the husband’s. But on March 21, 1870, the home property was.conveyed to Mrs. A., and fit does not appear, that the plaintiff’s or any debt then existed against the husband, and he could lawfully allow such earnings, furniture and money to be invested for her use; he could give it to her. True, the fact may not be wholly irrelevant, to be considered with the other circumstances in determining whose property is the Wheeling lot, but its weight does not seem to be important.
The decree complained of is to be reversed with costs against Atkinson and wife, and the cause remanded to the Circuit Court of Ohio county with instructions to ascertain the amount of the debt of the Commercial Bank under its deed of trust,' which appears to have priority, and enter a decree subjecting the said lot on Twelfth street, Wheeling, to said Commercial Bank’s debt and plaintiff’s judgment in the bill mentioned, and for further proceedings.
Reveesed. Remanded.