51 Conn. 562 | Conn. | 1884
It is clear from the facts found in this casé that William Gilligan, the husband of the plaintiff, by his deed of July 15th, 1881, intended to make a gift to' his wife both of the real estate conveyed and of his personal property. This gift he had’ a perfect right to make. He was not in debt, and this transaction was not affected in any way by fraud. The only question is, whether as to the personal property there was the delivery necessary to perfect a gift, and such a transfer of possession to the plaintiff as to make her title good against creditors.
Whatever question there might be as to the sufficiency of the delivery if there had been no conveyance of the real estate, yet we think that with that conveyance the delivery was sufficient. The- deeds were put on record, and were notice to all the rvorld of the change of title. In Elmer v. Welch, 47 Conn., 58, where-personal property was sold with
It is true that it is here found that the plaintiff and her husband continued to occupj- the real estate as a homestead until after the property was attached; but the occupancy ■of the wife was none the less an occupancy because she shared it with her husband. It is also found that her husband continued to use and control the personal property as before, and so used and controlled it -down to the time of the attachment. But it is difficult to see how the wife could well have kept a possession and use of the property-distinct from her husband’s. It was necessarily on the premises occupied by them both, and naturally, and almost necessarily, under his care and subject to his use. Considering the nature of the property it is difficult to see how she could have kept it under her exclusive and visible control, except bjr withdrawing it wholly from family use, which could hardly have been required.
While the relation of husband and wife gives special opportunities for fraudulent transfers of property, and therefore transactions between them are open to a special suspicion, yet this is only in relation to actual fraud. Where, as here, a transfer of property is made by a husband
It is found that the horse that was attached was not the one originally given to the wife, but one taken in exchange for that one. As the first horse was the property of the wife, the horse taken in exchange for it with her consent would of course become hers. And as this horse had never before been the husband’s, but became at once the wife’s, his use of it was not a retention of possession, but from the first a use of it as hers. Wheeler v. Wheeler, 43 Conn., 503.
It is claimed on the part of the defendant that the gift of the personal property was intended as a donatio causd mortis, and upon the recover}? of the donor became of no effect. But in the first place it is not found that the gift was of .that character; it is only found that the moving cause of the execution of the deed was the expectation of the
As the court below found that the lap-robe and light harness were never the property of the plaintiff, but belonged at the time of the attachment to the husband, the judgment below was correct as to them.
There is error in the judgment complained of and it is reversed, except as to the lap-robe and light harness.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.