28 Ind. App. 9 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1901
Appellee was plaintiff below, and prosecuted her action against the appellant Derk De Ruiter for divorce, and to recover alimony. Appellants Vanderwerf and Vanderwerf are husband and wife, and were made parties for the reason that it was. charged in the amended complaint that appellant De Ruiter had conveyed to> appellant Eva G. Vanderwerf, who was his daughter, all of his real estate, and that the purpose of said conveyance was to defraud appellee, etc. It was therefore sought, not only to procure a decree of divorce and secure alimony in favor of appellee, but also to set aside such conveyance as fraudulent. The
By his separate assignment of error, appellant De Ruiter attacks, for the first time; the sufficiency of the amended complaint, and brings in review the action of the court in overruling, respectively, his motion to modify the judgment and for a new tidal. The assignment of errors of appellants Vanderwerf and Vanderwerf is joint and is as follows: (1) The amended complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against them; (2) that “the court erred in overruling the appellant Eva G. Vander
Counsel for appellant have not discussed the assignment of errors in their order, but have taken up the overruling of the motions to modify, and for a new trial, in the order stated. If the amended complaint, does not state a cause of action against either of the appellants, as counsel assert, it seems to- us that that question should be first disposed of, for if it does not, it would be wholly unnecessary to' decide the remaining questions.
No argument is directed against the complaint on the ground that it does not state sufficient facts, to constitute a cause of action against appellant De Ruiter for divorce, but that it does not state facts sufficient to .warrant the setting aside of the conveyances of real estate to- appellant Eva Gr. Vanderwerf as fraudulent. The objection urged to the complaint is that at the time of the conveyances it is not alleged that appellant De Ruiter was insolvent, and also that he was insolvent when the present action was commenced. The averments of the complaint upon this point are brief and we quote them in full, viz.: “That said Derk De Ruiter was on the date last aforesaid [referring to- the date of the conveyance] largely indebted to various persons in various sums, and since has become and is now insolvent, and at the time said conveyances were made he had not, nor has he since had, nor has he now, sufficient other property, subject to execution, to- pay his debts, or any judgment that may be rendered plaintiff for alimony herein, or any part hereof. That plaintiff is informed that defendant Derlc De Ruiter is possessed of a large amount of money and bonds which he secretes, but she is unable to give the particular facts in relation thereto.” If we are to regard this latter averment equivalent to an 'averment that appellant De Ruiter, at the time this action was commenced, was possessed of a “large sum of money and bonds,” etc., then
The statement in the complaint, that he was possessed of a large sum of money and bonds, is somewhat indefinite, and is modified by the further statement that such money and bonds are secreted. If the money was in a bank it was not subject to execution, and if either the money or bonds were secreted they could not be levied upon. The point is that the party who is charged with having fraudulently conveyed his property did not retain sufficient property, and did not have, at the time the action is commenced to set it aside, sufficient property, subject to execution, to pay his debts, etc. So, money, whether it be secreted or deposited in bank, is not subject to levy and execution. See, McMillan v. Richards, 9 Cal. 365; Scott v. Smith, 2 Kan. 438; Moorman v. Quick, 20 Ind. 67; Carroll v. Cone, 40 Barb. 220. We are inclined to the view that the allegation in the complaint that appellant De Ruiter had a large amount of money and bonds is so indefinite and uncertain that -it cannot be regarded as contradicting the essential averments just preceding it, and hence the complaint upon this point must be held good as against an original attack in this court.
Before taking up for decision the questions raised by the motions to modify and for a new trial, it is important to give a brief history of the case as disclosed by the record. August 15, 1896, appellee instituted a suit in the Marion Su
There is no reasonable explanation given for the conveyance of De Ruiter’s real estate to his daughter. The whole transaction, resulting in such transfer, is inconsistent with his obligation and duties to appellee, as his wife. It is unnecessary to recite, in this opinion, even a resume of the many acts and the conduct of appellant- De Ruiter, of which appellee complains, and upon which she relies to establish the averments of her complaint, charging cruel and inhuman treatment. It is sufficient to say that the record discloses sufficient facts to warrant the trial court in its conclusion, adjudging that appellee was entitled to a divorce. In fact, this proposition is not seriously controverted. There is evidence to support the fact that appellant D.e Ruiter proposed to appellee to purchase her real estate for $2,500, on credit, to pay her six per cent, interest on the purchase money, and secure her in its payment. Also that when she made the deed, she believed she was conveying it to him, when in fact the conveyance was made to his daughter.
Before appellee executed the power of attorney above referred to, there is evidence from which the court could have found that the only conveyances the De Ruiters had talked .about, before going to the scrivener to execute the papers,
By the motion of Derk De Ruiter to modify the judgment and decree, he sought to have stricken out absolutely the following: (1) That part which declares that appellants had oral notice of the appellee’s petition for an allowance; (2) to have the amount of alimony reduced from $4,000 to $1,000, for the reason that it was excessive; (3) to have the amount allowed appellee as attorney’s fees reduced from $500 to $250; (4) to have stricken out and eliminated from the judgment and decree all that part that adjudged that the conveyance of real estate by him to his co-appellant, Eva G. Vanderwerf, was fraudulent as against appellee, and that said conveyance was made with the fraudulent intent, etc., and also to eliminate that part which subjects said real estate to sale to satisfy the judgment for alimony and the allowance for attorney’s fees.
The motion of appellant Eva G-. Vanderwerf to' modify the judgment was: (1) By striking out that part which finds and adjudges that the conveyance to her of the real estate described was fraudulent; that said conveyance was made to and accepted by her with the fraudulent intent to cheat, binder, and defraud appellee; (2) by striking out that part which adjudges and decrees that said conveyance was fraudulent as against appellee as a “special” creditor of Derk De Ruiter, and subjects said real estate to sale, etc.; (3) by striking out that part relating to' an allowance for
It is first urged that appellee was not entitled to have the conveyance set aside, because she has not shown that she was a creditor of the grantor. Counsel refer to the rule that, to constitute a fraudulent conveyance, there must be: (1) A creditor to be defrauded; (2) a debtor intending to' defraud and (3) a conveyance of property out of which the creditor could have realized. 8 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 749. It must be conceded that if appellee was not a creditor in any legal sense, she has no debt to' enforce, and hence the conveyance would not be fraudulent as 'to her.
We are told in Anderson’s Law Dictionary that a creditor is one “who has a right by law to demand and recover of another a sum of money on any account whatever.” In Bishop v. Redmond, 83 Ind. 157, a creditor is defined as “one having a legal right to damages, capable of enforcement by judicial process.” Appellants concede that there are two kinds of creditors, viz.: (1) Actual creditors, ’or holders of claims, and (2) subsequent creditors, or holders of equities which afterwards ripen into claims. So if appellee comes within either class she must be regarded as a creditor.
That a wife has equities in her husband’s real estate is no longer debatable. That such equities may subsequently ripen into legal, subsisting claims, there can be no doubt. A wife, in our judgment, is a present and continuous creditor of her husband. This necessarily must be, from the marital relations. She is presently and continuously dependent upon him. His first and highest obligation is to provide and care for her. He can not alienate her inchoate
The second reason suggested is answered by the record. If it be conceded that there is no direct proof of fraudulent intent, it does not necessarily follow that such intent was not established. It is a recognized rule that it is not necessary, in order to establish fraud, that direct, affirmative proof of fraud be given, but that fraud may be inferred from facts that are established. Kerr on Eraud and Mistake, p. 450. Chancellor Kent says that a deduction of fraud may be made, not only from deceptive assertions and false representations, but from, facts and circumstances which may be trivial in themselves. It is seldom that fraud is proved by positive evidence, and it may be presumed from facts and circumstances proved. Farmer V. Calvert, 44 Ind. 209; Kane v. Drake, 27 Ind. 29; Levi v. Kraminer, 2 Ind. App. 594. In the case before us, the court found in favor of appellee on the question of fraud and intent, and it is sufficient for us to say that from all the facts, surroundings of the parties, and circumstances disclosed by the evidence, the court was fully justified in its conclusion upon this question. It would unduly lengthen this opinion to state, even in detail, the facts and circumstances upon which ■such finding and judgment rest.
•Counsel next direct their argument to the asserted propo
It is next argued that the coux-t exned in ordering the sale of the real estate described — the conveyance of which was set aside as fraudulent — to satisfy the judgment for alimony, etc., and hence it was error to ovex-rule the motion to strike out, that part of the finding and judgment. There is no real merit in this contention.' That a creditor may go into court and attack a conveyance of his debtor as fraudulent, and ask that such conveyance be set aside, and the property be subjected to execution and sale to satisfy his claim, when reduced to, judgment, there is no doubt. Sec
It is urged that the motion to strike out the allowance made to- appellee for attorney’s fees should have been sustained. ■ It is made the duty of a trial court, in decreeing a divorce to the wife, or on refusing one on the application of the husband, to require, by order, that the husband pay all reasonable expenses of the wife in the prosecution or defense of the petition, etc. §1054 Bums 1901. Such allowance has been held to include attorney’s fees. McCabe v. Britton, 79 Ind. 224; Musselman v. Musselman, 44 Ind. 106. Under the statute and the decisions, it is made the imperative duty of the court to malee such allowance on the final disposition of the case. We do not think there was any error in this ruling.
Erom the whole record, we do not feel justified in reviewing the action of the court in overruling the motion to modify by reducing the amount of alimony and attorney’s fees. The amount of alimony as fixed by the decree is, in our judgment, both moderate and reasonable, when considered in connection with the value of De Ruiter’s real estate. The amount fixed by the court was about one-fifth of the value of the real estate. True, as counsel contend, appellee was a childless second wife, but this fact does not change the rule that the award for alimony shall be in such sum as to leave her in at least as good condition pecuniarily after the divorce as she would have been in as a surviving widow. Musselman v. Musselman, supra; Graft v. Graft, 76 Ind. 136.
Again, 2 Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, §468, lays down this rule: “No one should be permitted to suffer in purse for another’s wrong. Hence, alimony, when given to
Our Supreme Court in Yost v. Yost, 141 Ind. 584, quotes approvingly the above rule. The rule prevails in this State that the trial court has a broad discretion in awarding alimony, and an appellate court will not interfere therewith unless an abuse of such discretion is manifest. Gussman v. Gussman, 140 Ind. 433, and authorities there cited.
In this case the trial court certainly did not abuse its discretion. Neither do we think that the allowance for appellee’s attorneys was unreasonable. Counsel urge that because appellee owned property of the probable value of $2,500, which was encumbered $600, it was error of the court to allow her attorney’s fees. The authorities cited— Kenemer v. Kenemer, 26 Ind. 330, and Sellers v. Sellers, 141 Ind. 305—and relied upon by appellant, are not in point, for they relate to temporary allowances pending the case. Under the statute above cited, and the authorities, the court was justified in making the allowance. See, Harding v. Harding, 144 Ill. 588; Sellers v. Sellers, supra; Lumpkin v. Lumpkin, 78 Ill. App. 324; Merritt v. Merritt, 99 N. Y. 343.
The third reason for a new trial is that the decision and judgment are not sustained by sufficient evidence, and counsel have discussed the question thus raised at some length. It is unnecessary for us to go over the evidence, even in the abstract. A careful consideration of all the evidence leads us to the conclusion that the decision and judgment are fully sustained by it.
The fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth reasons in appellant De Ruiter’s motion for a new trial question the action of the coui;t in certain of its rulings on the admission of evidence. Without going into detail, it is sufficient for us to say that we do not find any reversible error in any of such rulings.
She was asked the following questions, and was allowed to answer them: “What is the fact as to whether or not you relied upon what Mr. De Ruiter said concerning those instruments as to their nature?” Another question was identical to this. The third was: “What is the fact as to wdiether or not any of those papers were delivered to you ?” Counsel contend that, as she could read, she was bound to know what papers she had signed, and had no right to rely upon what her husband told her, and that no confidential relations existed between them. It is fairly inferable from the evidence that appellee believed that all differences between her and her husband had been amicably settled, and that they would continue to live together as husband and wife. This, being time, she was not dealing with him at arm’s length, but in confidence, fully relying upon his promises and representations.
The following rule is laid down in 14 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2nd ed.), 194: “It is well settled that where it appears that a fiduciary or confidential relation existed betwmen the parties at the time of the transaction alleged to-be fraudulent, such as trustee and cestui que trust, * * * husband and wife, * * *, or that one of the parties for any reason possessed a power or influence over the other, or
The relations existing between husband and wife are most intimate and confidential in their character, and it is the rule that no relation known to the law affords so great opportunity for the existence of undue influence as that existing between them. 27 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 480, and authorities there cited. This being true, where the husband and wife contract together, and the agreement is such as to operate to the advantage of the former, equity will closely scrutinize the transaction. See authority last cited.
At the time of the transaction complained of, appellant De Ruiter and appellee were husband and wife. It is clear from the whole record that he exerted an undue influence over her, and, by misrepresentation, induced her to' place herself in a position by which she might have been deprived of all her property rights as a wife. Under these circumstances and conditions, it was competent for her to testify as to what was said and done leading up to the consummation of the transaction in question.
Before concluding this opinion, it is proper to remark that appellant Eva G. Vanderwerf paid no consideration for all the valuable real estate conveyed to her. Taking all the circumstances, conditions, and surroundings disclosed by the record, we are firmly convinced that there was a well laid and devised plan or scheme between appellants to defraud appellee out of her property rights as the wife of appellant De Ruiter, and the evidence fairly supports the conclusion reached by the trial court.
Judgment affirmed.