20 S.D. 314 | S.D. | 1906
This appeal is from a judgment for defendants in an action to set aside a warranty deed of the homestead from a husband to his wife, on the ground that such conveyance was made to defraud plaintiff, a creditor of the grantor, and the material facts established by the evidence, and found by the trial court, may be briefly stated as follows: In the year 1898 the premises in question, consisting of a house and two- lots in the city of Salem, now worth $1,600, were purchased by the defendant Ponsonby Kendall, and had been continuously occupied as the homestead of himself and family for more than five years prior to January 18, 1904, when he conveyed the same to his wife, Mary M. Kendall, for the purpose of vesting in her an absolute fee-simple title, and without any intention to defraud his creditors.
In view of the undisputed evidence plainly showing that the transfer of this homestead to the wife was not colorable, nor for -
As fraud upon creditors cannot be predicated upon the disposition of the homestead, the husband had a right to vest the entire estate in his wife, and, such being his honest intention, a resulting trust in favor of plaintiff was not created by the conveyance. Bates v. Callender, 3 Dak. 256, 16 N. W. 506; First National Bank v. North, 2 S. D. 480, 51 N. W. 96; Noyes v. Belding, 5 S. D. 603, 59 N. W. 1069; Balz v. Nelson, 171 Mo. 682, 72 S. W. 527; Vaughan v. Thompson, 17 Ill. 78; Smith et al. v. Rumsey et al., 33 Mich. 183; Skinner v. Jennings, 137 Ala. 295, 34 South. 622;
This conclusion being decisive of the case, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.