50 Neb. 83 | Neb. | 1896
This was an action by Eggleston against John D. Slusher and others, the object of which was to have the proceeds of a certain policy of fire insurance, issued in favor of Henry Burcham, applied to the satisfaction of a judgment recovered by Eggleston against Burcham. There were several claimants of the fund, and the case can perhaps be best elucidated by stating, without reciting the numerous pleadings, the claims of the interested parties, together with a preliminary statement of certain facts not in dispute.
Henry Burcham was, in 1891, the apparent or actual owner of a grain elevator, together with certain machinery, grain therein, and other property connected therewith, on which he held a policy of insurance for $3,000. This property was destroyed by fire. After the loss Burcham’s rights under the policy were assigned to the defendant Slusher to secure certain indebtedness from Burcham to Slusher. Slusher prosecuted an action against the insurance company, recovering a judgment, which was paid by the insurance company. After deducting attorneys’ fees, together with another claim upon the fund, the validity of ivhich is not disputed in the evidence, there remained in the hands of Slusher $1,950.35, upon which Slusher claims only a lien for $365; the remainder he is willing to pay to the party adjudged entitled thereto. Hannah Burcham,'the wife of Henry
The argument takes a wide range, covering, in a more or less specific manner, many of the. problems which confront the court whenever a married woman becomes involved in litigation with creditors of her husband. In order to determine the case it is not necessary to consider many of these arguments. It will be observed that Mrs. Burcham’s claim rests on the ground that with money which she obtained by inheritance she made her husband a loan, that he used this money in business, and that the assignment of the policy was an act on his part intended to secure her a preference, and to repay the loan. It may be conceded, as many of our cases indicate, that the effect of our Married Woman’s Act is to validate such transactions between husband and wife; that when they occur they are to be measured according to the rules of law which govern similar transactions between strangers; that while it is true that the relationship existing between the parties shifts the burden of proof as to bona fieles, and may raise other questions involving complications, still, when such exceptional facts arising out of the married relation are eliminated, the fundamental rules of law are the same, and a husband has the same right to prefer his wife as any other creditor, good faith being the main consideration for the courts. In order, however, for a wife to claim the advantage of such a conveyance, it is not sufficient for her to show that she has supplied her husband with money or property. The relationship of debtor and creditor must be established. The special findings in this case do not establish such a relationship. The finding merely is that “by the year 1871 she had received from her father’s estate about $2,600, which was, immediately upon its receipt, turned over to her husband.” The finding thus far is amply sus
Affirmed.