Cosgrove v. His Creditors

41 La. Ann. 274 | La. | 1889

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

McEnery, J.

E. M. Walmsley & Co., J. A. Duconrnean & Son and Mrs. M. Labyche, creditors of the insolvent, J. H. Cosgrove, oppose the voluntary cession made by their debtor on the ground that he has fraudulently concealed and omitted from his schedule certain property legally subject to their demands. The property omitted is described as *277thirty-three arpents of land with buildings and improvements thereon itpon which he resides, some fifteen head of cattle, one phaeton, one pair of mules, and a lot of furniture and silverware.

Tliis case was once before this court on appeal, and remanded for the purpose of making Mrs. Cosgrove, the wife of the insolvent, a party.

Cosgrove excepted, and Ms wife, after having been made a party, also excepted, alleging that the immovable property alleged to have been omitted from the schedule is the separate property of Mrs. Cos-grove, and stands in her name by public act duly recorded in the •recorder’s office of Natchitoches parish, and that the said property was acquired by her in good faith and with her separate and paraphernal funds, long before the claims of opponents were contracted, and that said property has been under her separate control and administration since the date of her purchase and cannot be inquired into collaterally.

In the answers of Mr. and Mrs. Cosgrove a general denial is pleaded and it is specially averred by Cosgrove that the two mares mentioned in the opposition were sold to his attorneys in discharge of their fees before Ms schedule was filed, and the other mare and phaeton were purchased with Mrs. Cosgrove’s paraphernal means and they are her separate property. The two mules, it is alleged, were given by Cosgrove to his wife in exchange for two others that had been bought by her with proceeds of her cotton crop of 1881, and that lie has since sold one of them, received in exchange by him, to Winhury, and the other has died.

lie denies the ownership of any of the cattle, and avers that the two cows liad been given by Jules Messó to his daughter and the other cattle were purchased by Mrs. Cosgrove with her own funds. Mrs. Cosgrove answers that all the property alleged, by opponents as belonging to the community existing between her and her husband belongs to her separately and individually and she specially pleads the manner in which she acquired this property.

The exceptions were properly overruled.

The law, Art. 1990 It. C. C., gives to creditors, where there is” no cession of goods, and to their representatives where there is one, an action to annul any contract made by their debtor in fraud of their rights.

There is no contract made by the insolvent which it is sought to annul because made in fraud of the creditor's’ rights. The opponents demand that certain property purchased by Mrs. Cosgrove, the wife, from another party during the existence of the partnership of gains he placed on the schedule as community property.

The prcqierty, although in the name of Mrs. Cosgrove, is presumed to *278belong to the community of acquets and gains, and this presumption continues until it is proved by conclusive evidence that it is the separate property of the wife. The burden of proof is on the wife to prove that it is her separate property, purchased with her paraphernal funds, of which she had the administration. Although technically iu the name of the wife, the ownership of the property was apparently and presumptively in the community. And the creditors, finding the property on the records as belonging to the community, had the undoubted right of proceeding directly agajnst it for the purpose of having it placed upon the schedule of their insolvent debtor. E. C. C. Art. 2402; 15 Ann. 119 ; 35’ Ann. 570 ; 39 Ann. 380.

Objection was made and overruled to the admission of the testimony of Cosgrove and wife. In remanding this case the Court said :

“Mr. and Mrs. Cosgrove were married in Fobrualy, 1867, and neither brought any property into the marriage. The community of acquets and gains exists between them, there having been no antenuptial contract providing otherwise nor separation of property since. The presumption of law therefore is that all property now held by either of them belongs to the community.
To rebut this presumption a number of witnesses and papers were introduced in evidence, and among the former was Mr. Cosgrove, to whose capacity as a witness the opponents objected on the ground that the husband can not be a witness for or against his wife, except when they are joined as plaintiffs or defendants, and have a separate interest. The Court overruled the objection, and permitted the husband to testify for the reason that the wife is not a party to these proceedings, and her rights and interests can not be affected by any judgment to be rendered herein.”

Cosgrove, as the pleadings stood before the remanding of the case, was undoubtedly a competent witness in his own behalf, to show that his schedule contained a full statement of the property owned and surrendered by him, and that the property which it was alleged belonged to the community, in fact did not belong to it but to another party, whether to his wife or any one else was not material to him, so far as his insolvent proceedings were concerned. It would, therefore, be an anomalous and strange proceeding for the court to remand the case for her to be made a party thereto, the effect of which would be to destroy material and important evidence in her behalf.

The husband and wife are joined in this suit, one as defendant and the other as plaintiff in the insolvent proceedings. They both have separate and distinct interests, the husband to maintain the integrity of *279Ids schedule; and the wife to prove the ownership of property which she alleges is her separate property. Tim husband is a competent witness for or against his separate interest, and the wife for or against her separate interest. Because the husband, in the insolvent proceedings, has to state and prove, in order to escape the charge of fraud in omitting property from his schedule, that certain property belongs to his wife, is no valid reason why he should not be a competent witness for his own interest. Mrs. Cosgrove’s evidence was in her own favor, touching her separate interest to rebut the presumption that the property belonged to the community, and because the fact was affirmed by her husband that the property was hers, is no valid reason why she is not a competent witness in favor of her interest to prove said fact. It would indeed be a hardship, if the effect of the evidence should determine its admissibility, and the husband and wife should be deprived, on this account, of a legal right to be heard for their respective interests. The law does nor intend any such absurd consequences. The question, to be determined is whether the place known as Erin Villa belongs to Mrs. Cos-grove as her separate property. The determination of this will in a great measure settle the whole contention.

On the 21st day of October, 1879, Jos. P. Johnson sold or conveyed to Mrs. Julia Cosgrove the Erin Villa place.

. The act recites that the price is $830, and declares that this sum is an amount paid to her by her husband in restitution of the sum of $750, with legal interest thereon, being the purchase price of a lot of ground and improvements sold to Boult in August, 1873, by Mrs. Cosgrove, and which was her separate property, and that said sum of $750, for which lie made restitution, was used and appropriated by her husband and that no part thereof in any way inured to her benefit, and that she had the exclusive control and administration of the sum given to her by her husband, with which she purchased said property. R. E. Burke donated the property to Mrs. Cosgrove, which she sold to Boult. On this point we think there can bo no serious doubt.

Cosgrove, with the one thousand dollars which he gave his wife to replace the amount of her separate property which he had used and •spent, could have purchased property, and made a elation on payment to her. We see no reason why he could not give her the money in payment of the amount due her and with his consent purchase property with the money, which would have the same status as the property given in payment.

Mrs. Cosgrove bargained for the Erin Villa place during the absence of her husband. It was purchased in 1ns name, but for her, by John*280son, ancl afterwards conveyed to her on the return of her husband with his consent.

She superintended the building of the house on the place, paid the mechanics, employed the laborers, raised and sold the garden truck, milk and butter, which brought $9 per week. She paid the taxes and she employed the overseer or manager who sold the crops that were raised on the place, and accounted to her for the' proceeds. The husband lived on another plantation, known as the Lower place, and visited his wife occasionally — usually on Saturdays. He had no knowledge of what was going on at Erin Villa, and never attempted to interfere with his wife’s management. He was, in fact, absent from the parish a greater portion of his time. As against those acts of administration, there are offered in evidence orders upon oi>ponents, wiio are merchants, for supplies, household and plantation, some in the handwriting of J. Ii. Cosgrove, and some in that of his wife, and signed by her and who also sometimes signed her husband’s name to orders. These various orders so signed can not outweigh the acts of administration so prominently done by Mrs. Cosgrove.

Mrs. Cosgrove accounts for signing the name of her husband to orders by her, by the fact that her husband raised no hay on the Lower place and that he supplied himself from Erin Villa and she charged him with it and paid herself in that manner. Cosgrove says he kept an account of the amounts due his wife.

We conclude that the Erin Villa place is the separate and paraphernal property of Mrs. Cosgrove.

The phaeton was purchased with her money, the proceeds of a portion of the crop of Erin Villa. The two cows and calves belong to Mrs. Cosgrove’s daughter, having been given to her by Messé.

The value of the furniture is not enough to place it beyond exemption, and the silver and plated ware was given to Mrs. Cosgrove at various times by relatives and friends and belongs to her.

The ten or fifteen head of cattle, it is proved, were purchased by Mrs. Cosgrove with the proceeds of her crops on the Erin Villa place.

The two mares were sold to Chaplin, Breazeale & Chaplin for attorney’s fees for services rendered before ftliug the schedule in his insolvent proceedings, and the third mare ivas purchased by Mrs. Cosgrove when the phaeton was purchased, with her separate funds, the proceeds of her separate paraphernal property. The two mules on the Erin Villa place were given to Mrs. Cosgrove in exchange for two others that had been bought by her with the proceeds of the sale of her crop on the Erin Villa place. All these matters between Cosgrove and wife were at a *281time when he was in good circumstances and he owed no debts, and there was no reason for concealment of his property.

The demand in the oppositions is that the Erin Villa place, with improvements thereon, he placed on the schedule. It is claimed in argument, and there is proof in the record that the improvements were put on the place, in part at least, with community funds.

To determine this question would necessarily require a settlement of the partnership of acquets and gains between the husband and the wife, and this would require also a dissolution of the community, and a separation of property.

Creditors cannot require the separation of property between husband and wife. R. C. C. 1991.

The reason of the law is obvious. The community can only be dissolved by the husband and the wife. It continues at their will, and at its dissolution the wife may be a creditor of the community for the replacing of her dotal and paraphernal property, and for the administration of her paraphernal effects. R. C. C. 2370, 2390.

And the wife may exonorate herself from the debts of the community of acquets and gains by renouncing the same. R. C. C. 2441.

We therefore conclude that Mrs. Julia Cosgrove, wife of the insolvent J. H. Cosgrove, is the owner in her own right of the property described in the petition of opponents and that said insolvent was guilty of no fraud in omitting same from his schedule. It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from be avoided, and .reversed, and that the opposition be dismissed at opponents’ costs.

Associate Justice Watkins, being recused in this case, takes no part in .this opinion.