42 Barb. 310 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1864
By the Court,
When the evidence in this case was closed, there was no fact really in dispute. The transactions and the acts of the parties which constituted the claim of the plaintiff, as well as those upon which the principal defendant, Margaret Cahill, relied for her defense, were established by the evidence, and the judge was not required to weigh and reconcile conflicting testimony so-as to determine what the facts were. We are to say upon this appeal whether he was right in his conclusion that the plaintiff had failed to make out a case for equitable relief,
The lands owned by Thomas Cahill, the judgment debtor, in the city of Albany, were conveyed by him to John McKnight for the nominal consideration of $3000, and by him conveyed to the defendant Margaret, xxpon receiving the sum of $200, which Thomas Cahill owed him. These lands, however, were sxxbject at the time to a mortgage to one Lemuel Steele for $1400, and another to Taylor & Deforest to secure $264. Steele’s mortgage was foreclosed, and the surplus money was absoi'bed in payment of subsequent incumbrances—mortgages and jxxdgments—against Thos, Cahill. The defendant, Margaret, realized nothing whatever from these lands, and it is quite probable that the $200 paid to McKnight was more than the husband’s interest in the lands was worth. These lands, and the disposition made of them, have no connection with, or influence upon, the principal
The first of these purchases was from Chamberlain and Lawrence and wife, for the consideration of $600. In addition to this sum, Mr. Chamberlain advanced her the sum of $1000 to enable her to build a house and improve the property, and took her mortgage to secure the payment of both sums, making together $1600. The next lot she acquired was by gift from William W. Woodworth and wife. She afterwards purchased another lot from William Radford, another from Josiah Rich and wife, and another from Richard H. .and Mary F. Winslow. She executed mortgages to secure the payment of the purchase money, or a portion thereof, for these lots, except that acquired from Rich and wife, in which her husband joined, and he also joined her in the bond to Chamberlain, because, as one of the witnesses said, the lawyers advised it. She built a dwelling house and made improvements upon the property, and let it, from time to time, to tenants. And she applied the rents realized therefrom to the payment of the cost of the improvements and the purchase money for the lots. She also kept boarders upon the property for some portion of the time, furnishing board and rooms to her boarders, and also applied the profits realized from them to pay for the improvements and the purchase money for the property. The entire cost of the lots, with the improvements, exclusive of the house, was shown to have been $3600, and the cost of the house $3000, in all $6600. The mortgages existing and unpaid upon the property at the time of the trial were $3340, and the rents received from the occupants of the house for three years was shorvn to be $2400, excluding the moneys received from her boarders. The husband furnished no money for the purchase of the property, and he contributed neither services nor advice in the undertakings in which his wife became engaged. He was an engineer by profession, employed for a part of .the time in Virginia and in Chicago, at
The judge, in his findings, has negatived the idea of any fraudulent purpose in the acquisition of the title to the lands by the defendant Margaret. Indeed the case is marked, throughout, by the entire absence of any evidence from which such a purpose can be inferred. This finding, coupled with the express proof that the husband joined in the bond to Chamberlain and the mortgages to the others at the suggestion of the counsel, shows that no inference unfavorable to the bona fides of the defendant Margaret’s title is to be deduced from that fact. He probably so joined for the more perfect security of the obligee and mortgagee, suggested by the recent change of the law regulating the property of married women, rather than because the property was really his own. The facts do not present a case under the 51st section of
The plaintiff next claims that the purchase money of the lands was the fruits of the wife’s labor, and as such belonged to the husband, and may be followed, into whatever form she may have converted them, by his creditors and appropriated to the payment of their debts. At the common law, which obtained when these transactions took place, the husband was legally entitled to the fruits and rewards of the wife’s labor, and might recover and apply them as he thought right. We recognized the authority of this rule of the common law in the case of Rider v. Hulse, (33 Barb. 264,) since affirmed in the court of appeals, (24 N. Y. Rep. 372.) We held this, notwithstanding the acts of 1848 and 1849, for the more effectual protection of the property of married women. And that whatever property she claimed to hold as her separate estate must have been acquired by inheritance,
The judgment at the special term should be affirmed, with costs.
Brown, Serugham, Botl and J, F. Barnard, Justices.]