30 Kan. 401 | Kan. | 1883
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action of ejectment, brought by plaintiff in error, plaintiff below. Trial by jury. Verdict and judgment were for defendant, and plaintiff alleges error. The facts are these: On May 3, 1877, one Charles Ahrendt was the owner of the land in controversy. On that day he conveyed to Caroline Schutt, who took possession and placed her deed on record. Afterward, and on June 21,1877, plaintiff, a creditor of Ahrendt, attached the land as the property of Ahrendt. The attachment proceedings culminated in a judgment against Ahrendt, and a sale of the land to plaintiff. Defendant claims title by virtue of a deed from Caroline Schutt. Defendant’s title is therefore perfect, unless avoided by the attachment proceedings against Ahrendt.
As heretofore stated, the verdict and judgment were in favor of. the defendant, and the defendant insists that this court cannot inquire into the errors complained of by plaintiff, for the reason that the sheriff’s deed upon the sale in the attachment proceedings was not made until after the commencement of this action; hence he claims that plaintiff had at that time no title. We think this objection is not well taken. Prior to the commencement of this action, the sale was made, and confirmed; and while the deed offered in evidence bears
We think the conclusions of the district court are correct; that this is a case of an alleged fraudulent sale, and that participation in the fraud on the part of the grantee, or at least knowledge of the intended fraud of the grantor, must be shown, or the sale will be upheld. This is the general doctrine as to ordinary fraudulent sales as recognized by the decision of this and other courts. (Diefendorf v. Oliver, 8 Kas. 365; Wilson v. Fuller, 9 Kas. 176; Bump on Fraudulent Conveyances, pages 227 and following, and cases cited in the note on page 229.) In this latter work, on page 59, speaking in general terms of the statutes of frauds and. perjuries, the author says:
“ It must not, however, be so strained as to make it receive an interpretation which it was not intended to bear. Such a construction, moreover, is not to be made in support of creditors as will make third persons sufferers when they act in good faith; ” citing Cadogan v. Kennett, 2 Cowper, 402.
In Fifield v. Gaston, 12 Iowa, 218, the court says: “A fraudulent purpose on the the part of the grantor is not sufficient. A like intention must be traced to the grantee, and unless shown, the conveyance will be upheld; ” and so run the authorities generally. Neither does the fact that Ahrendt by this conveyance paid one creditor instead of another, vitiate the transaction, for a debtor has a right to prefer one creditor to another. (Kayser v. Heavenrich, 5 Kas. 338; Cuendet v. Lahmer, 16 id. 527; Avery v. Eastes, 18 id. 505; Dodd v. Hills, 21 id. 707; Campbell v. Warner, 22 id. 604.)
It is doubtless true that when the conveyance is entirely without consideration, or when such consideration is entirely some reservation or benefit to the grantor, or when the conveyance is upon some secret trust for the benefit of the grantor, or to one having no personal interest in the conveyance, such as a mere assignee, the knowledge and intent of the grantee are immaterial, and the conveyance may be set aside at the
“It is because both law and justice recognize the equitable interest of creditors in the property of the debtor, that a transfer of such property to defeat their demands is declared to be void, and the right of a bona fide purchaser for a valuable consideration is protected by the statute, because the equity of such purchaser is superior to that of a mere general creditor, for the obvious reason that the purchaser has not like the creditors trusted to the personal responsibility of the debtor, but has paid the consideration upon the faith of the debtor’s actual title to the specific property transferred.” (See also Seymour v. Wilson, 19 N. Y. 417.)
Now there is nothing inherently wrong in an agreement for future support; nothing which vitiates it as a consideration for a conveyance. It is always a sufficient consideration to sustain a conveyance as between the parties thereto; and when the grantor retains enough property to pay all his debts, creditors have no right to challenge the conveyance on the ground that it is based upon such a consideration. It is only when they are wronged, and to the extent that they are wronged by a conveyance based upon such a consideration, that they have any standing to complain of it. Creditors have equitably a right to insist that the present property of the debtor shall be applied to the payment of his present debts, and only so far as his conveyances tend to defeat this equitable right may they complain. If the entire consideration is an agreement for the future support of the grantor, and he has no other property out of which these debts can be satisfied, they may have the conveyance set aside. So, if the conveyance be partly for value and partly upon the agreement for the grantor’s future support, and the grantee knows of the grantor’s indebtedness and.intent to place the property
We conclude, therefore, that the ruling of the district court is right, and that the conveyance is not to be treated as a nullity at the instance of the plaintiff, a creditor of the grantor, and that the judgment must be affirmed. It may be remarked that doubtless a creditor would have a right to treat the agreement for future support as a mere obligation of the grantee, and charge him and perhaps hold the property for the value of such agreement, that value being the difference between the value of the property and the amount of the consideration paid in money or other property. The consideration under such circumstances may be considered as partially paid and partially unpaid, and the unpaid portion as still responsible for the grantor’s debts.
It is also insisted by counsel for plaintiff that some of the answers are against the evidence: for instance, that the jury placed the value of the property at $1,000, when the testimony showed that it was not less than $1,200, and also that they placed the amount of the indebtedness from Ahrendt to ■Schutt at $800, when it was really much less. We think there is some foundation for the criticism of counsel, but an ■examination of the testimony indicates to us that there is another matter, not covered by the answers to special questions, which makes very strongly in support of the decision, and that is, that Mrs. Schutt seems to have given Ahrendt money for the purchase of the land some time before its purchase, and that he, as the purchaser, was to some extent acting as her agent and buying a home for her. Of course if equitably all the time she had full or partial right to this land, the injustice of subjecting it all to the payment of Ahrendt’s debts would be more apparent. Without pursuing this discussion further, we think the judgment is right, and it must be affirmed.
We might close this opinion here, but another matter has
“First. I do not think your honors ought to have investigated the quality of my moral or professional conduct upon a motion to dismiss a petition in error. The attorney for defendant in error said, by his motion, that as a matter of law such unprofessional conduct with which he charged me was sufficient cause for the dismissal of the case of my client. It seemed to me then, as a matter of correct practice, that I was called upon to say no more than, ‘Admitting everything you say about me to be true, that is no reason that the petition in error should be dismissed; ’ and your honors agreed with me.”
We must most respectfully but firmly dissent from the ideas presented in this claim. It is true, that this court sits mainly as a court of review and to correct the errors in the proceedings of trial courts; but beyond that, it has a duty to discharge to the people of this state, and to the members of