75 Ark. 127 | Ark. | 1905
(after stating the facts.) We need not pause to consider the question whether the parties to the first conveyance intended the same to be an absolute conveyance, or a security for debt. It is conceded by appellants that the consideration named in the deed was a past-due indebtedness from Hanna-ford to the Commission Company, that the reconveyance was agreed upon before the execution of the first deed, and that both deeds were prepared at the same time, and were practically a part of the same transaction. Whatever the intention of the parties may have been, the only effect of the execution of the two deeds, the last reserving a vendor’s lien for the amount of the consideration, was to give to the Allen-West Commission Company security for the debt. So it is a matter of little concern, so far as the rights 'of the creditor are affected, whether the first conveyance be treated as a deed or a mortgage.
It may be treated as a mortgage, so far as the grantee is concerned; but as an absolute conveyance by the grantors for other purposes. It is contended by appellants that the grantors, Hannaford and wife, intended the conveyance as a vehicle by which the title was to be lodged in the former. We see no reason by which they could not legally accomplish the desired result by that method, even though another part of the scheme' was to have the title pass through the Commission Company for the purpose of giving them a security for debt.
The case of Scogin v. Stacy, 20 Ark. 265, is like the case at bar except that the conveyance was by the husband. The husband conveyed lands to another by absolute deed which was intended only as security for debt. Later the grantee executed to the wife of the grantor, by the latter’s procurement or consent, an agreement to reconvey the land to her upon payment of the secured debt, and after the death of the wife the husband sued to recover the lands. Chief Justice English, for the court, said: “In equity, upon the allegations of the bill, the transaction must be regarded as a provision by complainant for the voluntary settlement of the land upon his wife, and which he had the right to make and she to accept, in the absence of any showing that there were any intervening rights of creditors to prevent it.” The same rule should prevail as to a conveyance by the wife, except that a court of equity will scrutinize it with greater care than a conveyance by the husband. Either spouse may legally convey lands to a third person to be reconveyed to the other. Rodgers, Dom. Rel. § 252; Wilks v. Dean, (Ky.), 44 S. W. 397. The Kentucky court, in the case cited above, said concerning a conveyance of this kind by the wife: “This court has held in numerous cases that the wife, her husband joining her, can convey her property to a third person, with the understanding that that person convey it to the husband. If the conveyance is thus made to the husband, it is valid. The only way to set it aside is to show that it was procured by fraud, coercion or undue influence.” To the same effect see Todd’s Heirs v. Wickliff, 18 B. Mon. 866.
Appellant Hannaford testified that he and his wife both had some property at the date of their intermarriage, and that both repeatedly expressed their intention to each other to leave the property to the other; that, pursuant to such intention, he carried insurance upon his life in a large sum, payable to her, and executed his will, leaving all his property to her; that his wife frequently expressed her intention and desire that all her property should go to him, and preferred to make a deed of conveyance to him, rather than a will, and that, when the deed to the Commission Company was executed, she knew that the land was to be reconveyed to him, and agreed that it should be done, so as to accomplish her- purpose of conveying the lands to him. He was a competent witness in his own behalf to prove those facts, and no rule of evidence was violated in allowing him to so testify. The husband or wife can testify concerning contracts and transactions between each other, where they may do so without breach of the confidential relation. Rudd v. Peters, 41 Ark. 177; Rodgers, Dom. Rel. § 302; Leonard v. Green, 30 Minn. 496.
Appellees invoke the elementary rule of law that gifts from the wife to the husband are to be scrutinized with great jealousy. Citation of authority is unnecessary to sustain this salutary rule. But, after all, the demand for such scrutiny is to ascertain, and not to defeat when ascertained, the real intention of the parties, where the transaction is free from fraud. Notwithstanding that relation, the court will, after having ascertained the intent of the parties to the transaction and found that there has been no fraud or imposition, uphold rather than frustrate their acts.
Transactions between husband and wife, when fairly entered into, are as binding upon the courts as between other parties. This testimony of Hannaford stands uncontradicted, either by positive testimony of witnesses or by circumstances. In fact, all the circumstances, so far as they throw any light upon the transaction, strongly corroborate him. He and his wife had, at the time of this transaction, been0 married about twenty-six years, and were childless. It is not disputed that they were devotedly attached to each other by the strongest ties of affection. Mrs. Hannaford had, for some cause not satisfactorily explained, became estranged from her nearest relatives, and expressed to other persons her wish that they should not have any of her property at her death, but that her husband should have it. It is not unnatural for her to have entertained such feelings, and certainly that was not such disposition of her property as a court of equity, after having found that she intelligently and freely consummated it, will frustrate.
Learned counsel for appellees argue with much force that Hannaford either induced or permitted his wife to do an improvident thing by conveying the title to his creditor at a time when he was in embarrassed financial condition, and that for that reason it is improbable that she intended an absolute conveyance. Conceding this to be true, the improvidence of the act was in conveying it to one of his creditors, and it affords no evidence that she was unwilling for him to have the title. The evidence shows that she had, years before, mortgaged the property to secure his debts, thereby demonstrating her willingness to make it liable for his debts.
Upon the whole, we think the evidence fully warrants the conclusion that, as claimed by Hannaford, the property was conveyed by Mrs. Hannaford to the Allen-West Commission Company with a knowledge that that grantee would immediately reconvey the same to her husband; and that she joined in the conveyance for the purpose of vesting the title in him.
This being true, the decree of the chancellor must be reversed and remanded, with directions to dismiss the complaint for want of equity, and to enter a decree upon the cross-complaint for the amount claimed by appellant, Allen-West Commission Company, against J. T. Hannaford. It is so ordered.