149 Ind. 443 | Ind. | 1898
This was an action by appellant upon two promissory notes; also to set aside, certain deeds made in fraud of the rights of appellant and other creditors, and to subject the lands conveyed to the payment of the debt due appellant. The complaint is in two paragraphs, the first counting on a note for $742.00, given January 28,1896, by the appellees John A. Smith and John Enright, and the second on a note for $1,000.00, given February 15, 1896, by the same appellees. It is alleged that at the dates of execution of the notes, and for many years prior thereto, the appellee John Enright was the owner in fee simple •
The court, having heard the evidence, found for the appellant against the appellees John A. Smith and John Enright on the notes in suit, and for the appellees Ann Enright and Levi H. Enright for their costs; and over a motion for a new trial judgment was entered in accordance with -such finding.
It is assigned as error that the court overruled the motion for a new trial. The chief reason urged in favor of a reversal is that the decision is contrary to law and to the evidence. That the evidence shows that John Enright made the deeds in question with the intent to prevent appellant from collecting its debt does not seem to be seriously controverted. The deeds were plainly fraudulent as to him.
In 2 Thompson Trials, section 2016, it is said that one badge of fraud consists in “the transfer by a debtor in failing circumstances of all or most of his property to his near relations.” And in 2 Rice Ev. 955, the author says that slight evidence will be sufficient proof of fraudulent intent between parties who occupy confidential relations. In Hoffman v. Henderson, 145 Ind. 613, it was held, citing Bump. Fraud Conv. (2d ed.) 565, that evidence of other fraudulent transactions at or about the time of the transfer in controversy is also competent to prove the fraudulent intent of the debtor; and that there is, moreover, a probable connection in a series of sales nearly at the same time, the result of which is to strip a man of his available property.
Whether the evidence shows the deeds to have been fraudulent as to the appellee Ann Enright, is a more difficult question. It is alleged in the complaint that the deed to her and that to their son, Levi, were without consideration. It is also there alleged that at the time of said conveyance to her by her husand, as well as at the time of the conveyance by her and her husband to their son, Levi, the facts in relation to these transfers, which include the fact of her husband’s “intent to cheat, hinder, and delay his creditors,” were “fully known” to her, as well as to her said husband and son. If either of these -allegations, the want of consideration for the deeds, or the knowledge on her part of the fraud about to be practiced on appellant and other creditors of her husband, were established by the evidence, then the law would impute fraud also to her, and the deeds should be set aside.
The evidence shows that the land was held in John Enright’s name for nearly twenty-two years before he conveyed it to his wife, and that there was no con
If the deed to Ann Enright was fraudulent as to her, then the deed by her and her husband to their son, Levi, was confessedly fraudulent also, and that as to all the parties, for it is admitted that there was no consideration whatever for the deed to him.
On January 28, 1896, the day on which the first of the renewal notes in suit was executed, John Enright filed in the circuit court, as replevin bail, in a cause there pending, his affidavit that he was worth, in unincumbered real estate, over and above all indebtedness, the sum of ten thousand dollars. So far as the public records then showed, he might well take this oath. Those records represented him to be the owner in fee simple of 400 acres of land, with no lien whatever standing against it; and it is admitted that this land was then worth $40.00 an acre, except sixty acres, which was worth $35.00 an acre; in all about $16,000.00 worth of unincumbered real estate. In less than two months he had completely stripped himself of his property: On March 25, he deeded to his wife 200 acres without consideration then paid. On the same day he and his wife deeded to one daughter 140 acres additional, admitted to be wholly without consideration. Again, on the same day, there was placed on record a deed to another daughter for the remaining 60 acres. It is shown that this last deed was executed by him, without his wife joining, on the 27th Of November previous, on which day was also executed by him alone a deed to the other daughter for
Counsel may well admit, as they practically do, that this whole series of transactions was tainted with fraud. But it is insisted that Ann Enright, the wife, was not a participant in the fraud, that she knew nothing of the false representations made by her husband, or that he was indebted to the appellant or to any one else, or that any one had given her husband credit by reason of his ownership of the land, as shown upon the public records. It must be confessed that counsel for appellant has not pointed out any positive or satisfactory evidence in opposition to the claim of innocence so made in favor of Ann Enright, nor have we been able to find any such evidence, though we have carefully read the record. It does seem strange that she should be entirely ignorant of this wholesale scheme of fraud, but she and her husband both swear positively that she had no part in it, and we have been unable to find any evidence in contradiction of their positive testimony, however improbable that testimony may seem.
Neither do we think that appellant has established the allegation that the deed to Ann Enright was wholly without consideration. Some of the money that came to John and Ann Enright from her father’s estate is unquestionably shown to have been a gift to the husband. The first money so coming to them she testified was her “dowry” from her father; and she says further that she used a part of this herself, and gave the remainder to her husband, and that it was mostly used to buy furniture. That money,' consequently, constituted no part of any debt from the husband to the wife, and furnishes no support to the
If the foregoing were all the evidence in support of a consideration for the deed to Ann Enright by her husband, it would clearly have been quite insufficient. But as to $650.00 given to her by her father in 1869, the case is different. The evidence by her and by her husband is positive, and the same is corroborated by her brother, that this money was received by her from her father, and that it was given by her to her husband in trust for her. She says, “I told him I wanted him to take that and take care of it for me.” And John Enright says, “I told her I would take care of it for her.” Then, as to the deed itself, her testimony is, “Well, he gave it to me for the money that he had received from my estate, and he had always promised that he would give me back the money.” He said, as
But, conceding that it is thus shown that John En-right held $650.00 of his wife’s money in trust for her, and that the deed to her was made in satisfaction of this obligation, the question arises whether the consideration was sufficient as against creditors. The land was worth about $8,000.00, and the only legal consideration for the conveyance was this $650.00.
If the wife paid nothing for the deed, the law would treat the transaction as showing positive fraud against the creditors on the part of the husband. Moreover, for reasons of public policy, and to protect the rights of creditors, the law would also treat the sale as constructively fraudulent on the part of the wife, even though no actual fraud were brought home to her. “Although she may not be actually a party to the fraud of her husband, yet,” as said in Roberts v. Farmers’, etc., Bank, 136 Ind. 154, “she is affected by all the equities which might be enforced against him, and the conveyance will be set aside.”
It does not seem that the rule could be different in case the consideration were merely nominal, or even where, though considerable in amount, it should be yet wholly inadequate as compared with the value of the property conveyed. Not only, therefore, ought the inquiry be as to whether the purchaser made any payment, but also as to whether the payment made was a reasonably adequate price for the property, or whether it was so grossly inadequate as to shock our sense of natural justice. Brookville National Bank v. Kimble, 76 Ind. 195, 202; Fulp v. Beaver, 136 Ind. 319; Prosser v. Henderson, 11 Ala. 484.
In Wait, Fraud. Conv. (3d ed.), section 209, it is said: “The consideration must be adequate; not that the courts will weigh the value of the goods sold and
In Sandman v. Seaman, 84 Hun 337, 32 N. Y. Supp. 338, a conveyance by a husband to his wife of property worth $5,000.00, subject to a mortgage for $1,000.00, and for a consideration of $1,000.00 additional was set aside. In Wilson v. Jordan, 3 Woods (U. S. Cir. Ct.) 642, where the value was $7,700.00, and the estimated consideration $1,537.00, the transaction was held to be conclusively fraudulent. It was there said, “The difference between the property conveyed to her and the consideration paid ‘was so great as to shock the common sense of mankind, and furnish in itself conclusive evidence of fraud,’ ” citing Kempner v. Churchhill, 8 Wall. 362; Ratcliff v. Trimble, 12 B. Monroe, 32; Borland v. Mayo, 8 Ala. 104.
In Smith v. Selz, 114 Ind. 229, this court, speaking by Judge Mitchell, said: “In the exercise of its flexible jurisdiction, a court of equity may set aside a conveyance as fraudulent in law, when the disparity between the actual value of the property conveyed and the purchase price is so great as to be legally injurious to the creditors, and to constitute a fraudulent diversion of the debtor’s property, or it may, under like circumstances, compel the purchaser to account for the difference in value.” •
In the case at bar, the learned judge who presided may have been of opinion that all the property that came to the husband from the estate of his wife’s father, amounting to about $3,500.00, might be considered as the consideration for the $8,000.00 farm deeded to her. If that were true, and if we should deduct the wife’s inchoate interest in the land from the total value, there would not then seem to be such
We think that this is such a case as was perhaps in the mind of the court in Smith v. Selz, supra, where it was further said that if the “property has been purchased from a failing debtor, without any positive fraud on the part of the purchaser, and yet under such circumstances as make it highly injurious and inequitable as to creditors that the transaction should stand, a conveyance may be set aside upon such terms as will protect a purchaser whose purchase is only constructively fraudulent;” that is, “upon the condition that the equities of the purchaser who was guilty of no actual fraud be protected.”, Not only should Ann Enright’s inchoate interest in her husband’s land be guarded, but also the debt of $650.00 due her from her husband, as also .other debts due her by him, if any, that formed a part of the' consideration. Her rights as to these interests in the land are quite as
Judgment reversed, with directions to grant a new trial.