51 W. Va. 405 | W. Va. | 1902
E. B. Enslow brought this suit in the circuit court of Cabell County against Sarah A. Sliger and others, alleging that Thomas J. Sliger, husband of Sarah A. Sliger, had purchased four lots in Central City, and paid for them, and caused them to be combed to his wife by deed the 8th of December, 1891, when he was largely in debt, but doing a large business; that on May 9, 1892, and March 16, 1892, Sliger and his wife made two deeds of trust to a loan society for a loan of one thousand and fifty dollars; that after said conveyance Sliger furnished lumber and built a house on the lots as a home for himself and his family; that ever since and up to the’ date of the suit Sliger had been largely indebted, and was insolvent at the date of the suit; that on 24-tli December, 1896, Sliger executed a note for five hundred and twenty dollars and sixty-five cents to E. B. Enslow, which was endorsed to F. B. Enslow. The bill charged that the conveyance of these lots to Mrs. Sliger was intended by her and her husband to defraud creditors, and it sought to subject the property to the payment of the plaintiffs debt. The bill was dismissed, and Enslow appealed.
The bill charges that of the indebtedness of eight thousand dollars or ten thousand dollars, which Sliger owed when he purchased the lot, there remained unpaid at the commencement of the suit one thousand eight hundred dollars, and that a part of it was this note of the plaintiff; but the answer denied this allegation, and it is not proven;' hence wo eliminate the question whether the property would be liable itself as a voluntary settlement by the husband upon the wife. Only two questions
As to the other question, that is, whether the property is liable on the theory that Sliger put his means into the building of the house. First, the building was put up before the in-currence of -the plaintiff’s debt; at least it is not otherwise shown; but if even the debt then existed, as Sliger then had means far above debts, according to Hume & Warwick v. Condon, 44 W. Va. 553, the property would not be liable. But the evidence fairly shows that Sliger did not put any of his means into the house. It was built with one thousand dollars which in 1892 the wife derived from the sale of her own lot in Cumberland, and from interest coming from a note therefor given by her brother, and a little money derived from another kinsman, and the one thousand and fifty dollars borrowed of the loan society. The showing of the defence of .these things is fairly full, and not met by anything to the reverse. If this woman had not these separate means, we suppose inquiry would have offered something to repel her statement. Tame, the case •being between husband aaid wife, is open to more or less suspicion under our decisions. But the fraud is not established, and the whole case iaiduees us to believe that the woman’s property built the home, and ’her showing is aiot adequately met and overthrown. Therefore we affirm the decree.
Affirmed.