132 Va. 166 | Va. | 1922
delivered the opinion of the court.
In essentials, the case is this: On September 12, 1917, R. C. Canada, a merchant, conveyed to his wife, Annie C. Canada, for a consideration expressed in the deed as “$10 cash in hand and the further consideration of love and affection,” a certain lot on which was situated his storehouse and dwelling- attached; and by the same conveyance he transferred to his wife his stock of goods and fixtures in
On the last-named date, February 21, 1918, R. C. Canada was adjudged a bankrupt upon a petition filed by him on the day before. In the schedule of assets filed in the bankrupt court he included the lot and buildings and personal property described in his homestead deed and all other property of every.kind owned by him, but indicated in the schedule, conformably to the forms and practice in bankruptcy proceedings, his claim under the State law to the exemption already set apart by him under the homestead deed.
At the first meeting of the creditors, March 4, 1918, before the referee in bankruptcy, three appraisers were appointed for the estate, and William Leigh was named as trustee and took charge of the property. The appraisers subsequently valued the stock of goods at $2,800.00, fixtures and furniture in the store at $165.70, personal property in Canada’s dwelling house, $226.70, and real estate (lot and buildings aforesaid), $2,000.00; total, $5,192.40.
At the creditors’ meeting on March 4th, mentioned above,
On March 27th, the trustee made his report, in which he recited, among other things, the conveyance of September 12, 1917, from Canada to his wife, and her reconveyance to him of January 26, 1918, and then said: “Under these circumstances the trustee has grave doubt as to whether the bankrupt’s claim of exemption should be allowed. He has set apart the property in the foregoing schedule merely in the automatic performance of a ministerial duty. And he respectfully asks leave of the court to- litigate the question of the bankrupt’s right to said exemption, and to employ counsel to assist him in said litigation.”
On April 3, 1918, Quinn-Marshall Co., one of the creditors represented by the same counsel as Beasley and Bros., excepted to the allowance of the homestead exemption. The exception, however, was not based upon the ground indicated in the trustee’s report as his reason for questioning the exemption, but on the ground that the property claimed in the homestead deed amounted in the aggregate to more than $2,000.00. The referee, on July 31, 1918, passed upon, this exception, the only one made by any creditor to the allowance of the exemption, as follows:
“I am, therefore, of the opinion and decide that the trustee’s report setting apart the homestead exemption should be, and the same is hereby, approved and confirmed. It is, therefore, ordered that the trustee deliver the property in his hands, if any there be, to the bankrupt in accordance with said report.”
The stock of goods surrendered by the bankrupt, valued in his schedule at $3,000.00 and appraised at $2,800.00, was sold by the trustee for $2,025.53, Beasley Bros, and Co. claiming and being allowed its share therein a.s a general creditor of R. C. Canada.
The decrees from which this appeal was taken were ren
The prayer of the bill is that R. C. Canada and Annie C. Canada be made parties defendant; that the deed of January 26, 1918, be set aside and declared null and void as to the complainant and other creditors of Annie C. Canada,; that the homestead deed of February 20, 1918, be likewise set aside and declared null and void as to the creditors of Annie C. Canada; that the property included in the homestead deed be sold or rented, and the proceeds be held by the court for the benefit of complainant and other creditors of Annie C. Canada “subject to the terms and conditions of the said deed from Canada to his wife bearing date September 12, 1917.”
To this bill, R. C. Canada a,nd his wife filed certain so-. called exceptions and also filed their separate demurrers and answers, and, in addition thereto, R. C. Canada filed a plea of res judicata, this plea being based upon the bankruptcy proceedings hereinbefore set out. Evidence was taken in the cause, and the court entered the several decrees appealed from, the effect of which was to overrule the “exceptions,” demurrers, plea of res judicata, and all defenses set up in the answers, and hold that Annie C. Canada was the owner of the property embraced in the homestead deed; that both Canada and wife were liable to the plaintiff, and that the lot and buildings embraced in the homestead deed should be sold and'subjected to the payment of the complainant’s debt.
The effort to hold Mrs. Canada as a creditor has, therefore, in any view, entirely failed, ¡and this is conclusive of the whole case. The complainant is not seeking to set aside the deed of September 12, 1917, from Canada to his wife, but expressly relies thereon, and the sole purpose of the suit is to set aside the deed of January 26, 1918, from her to him, basing this effort solely upon the theory that Mrs. Canada is a debtor of the complainant. . As we have just seen, she is not such debtor, and this destroys the foundation of the suit. There is an averment in the bill to the effect that R. C. Canada, by reason of his purchase through
Reversed[.