124 A. 715 | Conn. | 1924
George Scard devised to his three sons, Moses, George and Simeon, all the remainder of his estate including a farm in Wallingford, provided they should support his wife so long as she remained his widow, and also his daughters, Charlotte and Rosina, so long as they remained unmarried. The widow deceased and Charlotte married. The three sons had been since the death of their father in the sole and exclusive possession and ownership of the farm. Subsequently the three sons became interested as stockholders and otherwise in the Suffield-Berlin Trap Rock Company, and on October 25th, 1919, endorsed with others a note for $25,000 made by that company and payable in one year to the plaintiff. During the year the company was in financial difficulties and a receiver in bankruptcy was appointed, and it developed that these endorsers, who were liable jointly and severally, would be asked to meet their liability, and it *714 did in fact accrue. Plaintiff instituted suit on January 15th, 1921, against the receiver, not citing in the Scard brothers, because it did not know they owned property, but on January 27th, 1922, they were made parties defendant.
On June 23d 1921, the Scard brothers conveyed by warranty deed this farm to their sister, the defendant, Rosina, and received from her no consideration for the transfer and took back no mortgage in payment. The conveyance to Rosina was for the purpose of preventing its being taken or levied upon to satisfy the obligation of the brothers arising from their endorsement upon this note. The farm was at the time of the conveyance, and now is, worth from $15,000 to $16,000, and is subject to a mortgage of $11,000. At the time of the conveyance the Scard brothers were possessed of other land of the value of $2,500, and personal property not exceeding in value $3,000, and were possessed of no other property.
The court reached the conclusion from these subordinate facts that this conveyance was made without consideration, and with the full knowledge and intent of the grantors and grantee to avoid the obligation of the grantors arising from their endorsement upon this note. The facts found amply support the decree. The conveyance was made without consideration of any kind from defendant; the purpose and intent of the grantors was to prevent the property conveyed being taken or levied upon to satisfy their obligation arising upon their endorsement upon the note; this was with the full knowledge of the grantee, defendant herein, and the property of the Scard brothers, grantors, was at this time inadequate to meet the judgment obtained in the action upon the note. The facts found are those alleged in the complaint, which was not demurred to. They depict the making of this fraudulent conveyance *715 for the purpose of preventing the plaintiff from having the property so conveyed appropriated toward the payment of this judgment, and that all of this was done with the knowledge of the defendant grantee of this purpose.
The defendant's argument, that there are no facts found showing that an injury was done the plaintiff, or that there was any intent on the part of the Scard brothers to prevent the plaintiff obtaining satisfaction of the judgment for $27,508.33, or that the plaintiff was in any way defrauded, is completely refuted by the facts found; against these it is futile to contest these points without securing the correction of the finding, and the evidence does not support such correction.
The further claim, that the evidence showed that there was a valuable consideration for this conveyance, overlooks the fact that there was a conflict in the evidence as to the fact of a consideration, and the trial court found, as the evidence justified it in doing, against the contention of the defendant.
Likewise the issue as to whether defendant, Rosina Scard, had any knowledge of any fraudulent intent on the part of her brothers, was a fair inference for the trial court to draw, and this it has drawn against the defendant.
The defendant makes as her final point, that the remedy at law must be exhausted before equity will aid the plaintiff creditor to set aside the conveyance to the Scard brothers, and that the exhaustion of the legal remedy is only evidenced by an execution returned unsatisfied. There is no occasion to allege in the complaint, in terms, that there is no adequate remedy at law. "It is enough if it appear from the facts disclosed in the bill, that such remedy does not exist." Botsford v. Beers,
In the finding appears this specification. The equity in the farm conveyed was from $4,000 to $5,000; all other property of the Scard brothers was in value $5,500; while the judgment plaintiff had obtained against them was $27,508.33. It is apparent from these facts that no adequate, certain and complete remedy at law exists for this plaintiff unless it can have this conveyance to defendant set aside and the Scard brothers' equity in the farm appropriated pro tanto to the payment of this judgment.
The plaintiff's action may be denominated a creditor's bill under our Practice Act. It pleads the obtaining of a judgment against Scard brothers, that it has no adequate remedy at law, by which to satisfy its debt, and prays that a conveyance made by Scard brothers in fraud of creditors be set aside and for other equitable relief. In Vail v. Hammond,
Our own law differed before our Practice Act with that of many jurisdictions. Thus in Botsford v. Beers,
The only error of the trial court was in not adding to its decree under the prayer for other equitable relief, its decree appropriating the interest of Scard brothers in these premises toward the payment of this judgment.
Error in part; decree to be modified by the adding of a clause appropriating the interest and title of Scard brothers in said premises toward the payment of the judgment in favor of plaintiff and against Scard brothers.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.