96 A. 1027 | Md. | 1916
The appeal in this case is from a decree dismissing a bill of complaint whose object was to procure the annulment of certain gifts made by a deceased debtor in his lifetime and alleged to have been in fraud of the plaintiffs as his creditors. From the voluminous record before us, in which the real and simple issues of the case have been encumbered with a great mass of irrelevant testimony, we have extracted the following material facts:
In the year 1883 Dr. Richard H. Dixon, of Dorchester County, was indebted on open account to Rebecca H. Stewart, the mother of his deceased wife, in the sum of $3,997.28, with interest from January 1st of that year. This account was assigned by Mrs. Stewart, on July 21, 1883, to the four children of Dr. Dixon, being her own grandchildren, in the following proportions: To Helen S. Dixon, $600 of the amount due, and the remainder to James S. Dixon, Helen S. Dixon, William Lee Dixon and Nannie S. Dixon in equal shares. A second marriage was contracted by Dr. Dixon in the year 1885, and two children, Richard H. Dixon, Jr., and Marie Dixon, were born of that union. On April 15, 1912, Dr. Dixon died, survived by his wife, Helen V. Dixon, and all of his above named children by both marriages. About two years prior to his death he acknowledged in writing the existence of the indebtedness to which we have referred. In March, 1903, Dr. Dixon made and delivered to his wife a promissory note payable to her order for the sum of $500. On April 7, 1905, he gratuitously released of record a mortgage of $4,000 which he held against her property. In January, 1907, he conveyed to her as a gift, by deed duly recorded, the home in which they were living, estimated in the evidence to be worth $10,000. Towards the close of the same year he *3 assigned by way of gift to his son, Richard H. Dixon, Jr., a real estate mortgage for the sum of $1,000, and to his daughter, Marie, ten shares of the capital stock of the National Bank of Cambridge, valued at $1,750, the latter transfer being confirmed in March, 1909, when this daughter became eighteen years of age. These dispositions in favor of the wife and the two younger children are sought to be set aside, in this suit by the four children of the first marriage, as being in prejudice of their rights as creditors under the assignment made to them by their grandmother in 1883.
In addition to the property involved in the transfers just mentioned, and during the period when they were being made, Dr. Dixon was the owner of real and personal estate aggregating about $14,000 in value. From 1905 to 1907 he paid more than $8,000 as surety on obligations of his son, W. Lee Dixon, who assigned $3,000 worth of securities to his father by way of partial reimbursement. The assets thus received were transferred by Dr. Dixon to his daughter Nannie as a gift, sometime in 1911, together with other securities amounting in value to $1,450. At the time of his death in 1912 Dr. Dixon's estate was worth only a few hundred dollars. After he had conveyed the home property to his wife in January, 1907, he was still the owner of real estate to the value of $7,600, and of securities to the amount of $9,900. During the year 1907 he sold his remaining realty, and at the close of that year, after he had assigned the $1,000 mortgage to his son Richard and his Cambridge bank stock to his daughter Marie, his estate consisted of personal assets having an estimated value of $8,500.
When Dr. Dixon made the various transfers to the wife and children of his second marriage, he was indebted to the plaintiffs, according to their theory, in an amount approximating $8,300 on the open account previously mentioned, the greater part of the sum thus alleged to be due representing interest charges on the original debt. The proportionate amount of this claim to which W. Lee Dixon may have been entitled was largely exceeded by the liability he incurred to *4 his father on account of the payments made by the latter as his surety. The interest of Nannie S. Dixon in the claim is likewise of much less value than the gifts she received from her father's estate subsequently to the transfers now being contested. It is apparent that neither of these parties can equitably complain of donations to the defendants, as prejudicing the plaintiff's rights as creditors of their father, when the benefactions they have themselves received from the same sources have served to reduce the estate to a much greater extent than the amounts of their respective shares of the claim here sought to be enforced. For the purposes of this case, therefore, the interests of the two last-named claimants may be dismissed from further consideration.
The combined claims of the other two plaintiffs, James S. and Helen S. Dixon, on account of the indebtedness stated in the original bill of complaint, amounted with interest to about $5,000 when the last of the gifts now in dispute was made at the end of the year 1907. After the cause had been set for final hearing, a petition was filed by James S. Dixon, on May 25, 1914, asking leave, which was granted and exercised, to amend the bill by incorporating in it allegations to the effect that his father was indebted to him in the sum of $1,893.97, upon a guardianship settlement made in 1880. With the bill as thus amended there was exhibited a written acknowledgment of this indebtedness signed and sealed by Dr. Dixon on June 21, 1880, to which was appended his admission in writing, under date of May 18, 1910, that the debt was still owing. The bill as amended in 1914 for the first time proposed that the deed to Mrs. Dixon for the home property be decreed to be invalid as against the plaintiff's claims. A separate proceeding by the same parties to have a resulting trust as to that property declared in favor of Dr. Dixon's first wife, under whom the plaintiff's were asserting an interest as heirs at law, was decided adversely to their contention, on appeal, in
The right of the plaintiffs to have the transactions in question avoided is challenged by the defendants on the grounds, first, that apart from the property embraced in the controverted gifts, the donor had an estate which was amply sufficient for the payment of his debts, and, secondly, that the causes of action now asserted are barred by limitations and laches. As a special defense to the suit, in so far as it attacks the gifts to Mrs. Dixon, the defendants invoke the statutory provision that subsisting creditors who may be prejudiced by an "acquisition of property passing to the wife from the husband after coverture * * * must assert their claims within three years after the acquisition of the property by the wife, or be absolutely barred." Code, Art. 45, § 1. In reply to this defense the plaintiffs testify that they had no knowledge, until after their father's death, as to the gift of the $500 note to Mrs. Dixon, or as to the voluntary character of the release to her of the $4,000 mortgage, and that with respect to the recorded deed for the home property, and the other gifts to the wife as well, their intimate relationship to the donor explains and should excuse their disinclination and omission to institute annulment proceedings within the statutory period in his lifetime. The plaintiffs also deny that they had any knowledge in reference to the stock and mortgage transfers to Richard and Marie Dixon until a short time before the filing of the bill of complaint.
There is evidence in the case tending to show that the promissory note of 1903 for $500 from Dr. Dixon to his wife was based upon a valuable consideration, but if it be treated as purely voluntary, it obviously did not prejudice any rights which the plaintiffs as creditors were entitled to assert. The proof clearly points to the same conclusion in regard to the release of the $4,000 mortgage in 1905. After these transactions the property remaining in Dr. Dixon's ownership, and readily available to his creditors, was much more than sufficient to provide for the payment of all his existing debts. No prejudice, therefore, resulted to the creditors *6
from the execution of the note and the release of the mortgage, and those dispositions in favor of the wife are unquestionably entitled to be sustained as against the present suit regardless of the defense of limitations. Goodman v. Wineland,
The suit having been thus found to be unavailing as against the disposition in favor of the wife, the question yet to be decided is whether it is maintainable for the purpose of avoiding the mortgage and stock transfers to the two younger children. These gifts, as already noted, had a total value of $2,750. It was several years after they were made that Dr. Dixon assigned to his daughter Nannie, as previously stated, securities worth $4,500. The other plaintiffs not only acquiesced in the retention of these assets by the last named sister, after the death of their father, but by affirmative acts they gave definite recognition to her rights as donee. While thus conceding the validity of these substantial gifts to their co-plaintiff, which practically exhausted their father's then remaining estate, they have proposed by this suit to render ineffectual his earlier and much less valuable donations to the children of his second marriage. This object is sought to be accomplished in aid of the enforcement to that extent of claims which have been allowed to lie dormant for nearly a generation. It would be a distinct injustice, under such circumstances, and for such a purpose, to deprive the younger children of the moderate gifts which were prompted by their father's affection and which were made and accepted in the most evident and absolute good faith. The authority of a Court of Equity will not be exerted to produce a result so manifestly inequitable.
It will be unnecessary to discuss the numerous exceptions in the record to the admission of evidence. The conclusion we have reached has taken into consideration all the proof offered on behalf of the plaintiffs, and it would not be affected by the exclusion of all the defendant's proof which might be regarded as open to any valid objection.
Decree affirmed, with costs. *8