84 Ky. 519 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1886
delivered the opiiuon op the court.
This action was instituted in the Kenton Chancery Court by the appellant, Alicia T. Pennessey, against Janies E. Pennessey and others, to recover dower in certain houses and lots in the city of Covington alleged to have been owned by her husband in his lifetime, and conveyed by him to his children by a former wife in fraud of her marital rights.
John Pennessey was married to the appellant on the 24th of September, in the year 1867, and three days before thé marriage conveyed the houses and lots, in which dower is claimed, of the value of nine thousand dollars, to three of his children by his first wife, who are the present appellees.
This is the second time the case has been in 'this court, the first appeal presenting the question alone as to the sufficiency of the petition; to which a demurrer had been sustained and the judgment reversed.
It is insisted by counsel for the appellants that any conveyance, without consideration, to children or others by one party pending a marriage treaty, on the eve of its solemnization, without the knowledge or concurrence of the other party, is actual and positive fraud that admits of no explanation or exception, and, therefore, all the proof as to the claims of the first wife and her children upon the husband’s bounty, connected
If one, when about to consummate a marriage contract, should make a voluntary conveyance of his estate or the greater portion of it to his children, without the knowledge or consent of the wife, the conveyance would doubtless be of such a character as to make the charge of fraud conclusive to the mind of the chancellor, but to hold that from every conveyance voluntarily made by the intended husband or wife, lessening the value of the interest that the one might have in the estate of the other by reason of the marital relation, arises a conclusive presumption of fraud, would often work great injustice' and defeat bona fide conveyances made by those whose legal and natural duty requires them to provide for the maintenance and education of their children.
A distinction is attempted to be drawn by some of the authorities between conveyances made by the husband on the eve of marriage and those made by the wife, the authorities holding that while a-» conveyance
If is not necessary that we should follow or adopt such a doctrine, and, in the consideration of this case, will regard the marital rights of the one as sacred as those of the other.
This court said, when the case was here, that the facts alleged made out a prima facie case, and if facts, existed rendering the conveyances valid, those facts, must be pleaded.
The promises made by the husband to his first wife-to execute these several conveyances, and his continued purpose to do so, can not defeat the claim to dower of the present appellant, if the deeds were made with the fraudulent purpose of depriving the appellant of dower in this realty, and such testimony is admissible for the purpose only of showing that the conveyances were made in good faith, and, if so made, must be held valid, although their legal effect is to bar the appellant’s right of dower.
If the property conveyed constituted the bulk of the husband’s estate, or was such an advancement to his children as was unreasonable when compared with the value of his entire property, we should have no hesitation in adjudging the conveyances fraudulent as to the wife. The testimony on the part of the appellees con
After the second marriage the husband and father was unfortunate in business, unhappy in his marriage relation, became reckless and dissipated, and wasted nearly the whole of his estate.
The second wife, appellant, brought nothing to the common fund, and we see no reason why the father, worth not less than fifty thousand dollars, could not make advancements to his children by his first wife amounting to nine thousand dollars. He doubtless thought it best to execute the deeds before the existence of the potential right of dower by his second wife; but this act was not fraudulent, although made in contemplation of his second marriage. It was not done to prevent the wife from the enjoyment of his estate, or to deprive her of such an interest in it as she might reasonably have expected when becoming his wife. That the appellant regarded the realty as belonging to the husband may be conceded, but it can be scarcely argued that, if informed of the conveyances, she would have declined to enter into the marital relation.
Adams on Equity, in treating of the right of a woman to convey away her property after the contract of marriage has been entered into, says “ that it is for the court to determine in each case whether, having regard to the condition of the parties and other attendant
Bigelow on Fraud, in discussing the same • principle, says that the burden of impeaching the validity of the conveyance rests on the husband if he objects to it. “The mere non-disclosure of an antenuptial conveyance would not of itself render the transaction impeachable by the husband, nor where provision was made by a widow for the children of a former marriage could the deed be invalid. The equity which arises in cases of this nature depends upon the peculiar circumstances of each case as bearing on the question whether the facts do or do not amount to fraud upon the intended husband.” (Bigelow on Fraud, page 51.)
In this State the substance of the decisions are that, for the husband, before marriage, to convey the whole or the greater portion of his estate away, without the knowledge óí the wife, is a fraud on her rights, and this view is sustained by the weight of authority; and it may also be regarded as settled, that where any such voluntary conveyances are made, without the knowledge of one of the contracting parties, it presents a .prima facie case of fraud, subject to be explained by the parties interested, and the burden is on the grantees to establish the validity of the deed. We find no case establishing the proposition that a deed of conveyance made by the husband or wife, at the time possessed of an ample fortune, by which their children by a former marriage ha,ve been vested with the title to a reasonable portion of the estate, and such as a father or mother in his or her pecuniary condition might reasonably ad
To hold that such advancements can not be made that are reasonable, looking to the condition of the father’s estate, would prevent any bona fide alienation or advancement by him to his children by a former wife, and require that he should hold his entire estate, except from purchasers for value, that his intended wife may assert her inchoate right of dower. The actual purpose or intent to defraud must appear, and, when made in good faith, such a settlement upon the children as was made in this case by the father will be sustained by a court of equity.
All the cases cited by counsel, from Thayer v. Thayer, 14 Vermont, 107, to Reynolds v. Vance, 1 Heiskell, 344, show a disposition by the husband of all or nearly the whole of his estate, with circumstances attending the transaction that show a plain case of fraud.
Mr. Story, in his work on Equity Jurisprudence, 1st vol., sec. 273, says that a secret conveyance made by a woman in contemplation of marriage, to her separate use, will be held void and in derogation of the marital rights of her husband, or a conveyance in favor of a person for whom she is under, no moral obligation to provide. “But,” says the same author, “if she only reasonably provides for her children by a former marriage under circumstances of good faith, it would be otherwise.”
Where the intention is to provide for the children, and not to defraud the wife, and the advancement or'
Judgment affirmed.