48 W. Va. 99 | W. Va. | 1900
The Farmers’ Bank of Fairmont seeks to set aside as fraudulent a deed executed by Jacob 1ST. Gould, deceased, to John E. Gould, his brother, on the 13th day of August, 1887, for certain real estate, and subject the same to the payment of a judgment confessed to said bank by the deceased on the 12th day of August, 1891, for the sum of thirty thousand dollars. The facts are as follows: John E. Gould was the owner of the property in controversy, and, being threatened with litigation in the state of Indiana, owing to an accident occasioned by certain machinery belonging to him, and at the same time being indebted to his brother Jacob N. Gould in the sum of about two thousand dollars, he conveyed such property to his brother, in consideration of two thousand five hundred dollars expressed on the face of the deed, for the purpose of securing such indebtedness, and placing the property beyond the reach -of the threatened suits, with the understanding that, on request, the brother would deed the property back to him. He afterwards paid a portion of the indebtedness, and built a new house on the property, at a cost of about two thousand two hundred dollars, and, all danger from the Indiana litigation having passed by, his brother, on the 13th day of August, 1887, deeded the property back to him. In the meantime Jacob N. Gould, who was the cashier thereof, had become involved in his accounts with the plaintiff bank. The amount of his indebtedness was not known until some years thereafter, and he was believed to be solvent until it was fully discovered. He appears to have been engaged in various speculations, and lost heavily. Some time after he had made the deed to his brother,
Reversed.