49 F. 506 | 8th Cir. | 1892
The facts necessary to be stated for a proper understanding of the issues arising on this appeal are the following: Prior to the 9th day of April, 1878, Charles B. Wills was indebted to A. D. Hawkins in the sum of $150 and interest, and was also indebted to other parties for amounts aggregating a few hundred dollars. On the 30th day of December, 1879, Hawkins brought suit against Charles B. Wills before a justice of the peace for Tittle River county, Ark., upon the indebtedness due him, and caused a writ of attachment to be issued and levied upon certain realty situated in Little River county. Personal service of the summons was had upon the defendant, Wills, and on the return-day thereof a judgment indue form was entered up by the justice in favor of Hawkins, and against the defendant, Wills, for the amount duo, and also sustaining the attachment and the levy thereof upon the realty. On the 30th day of March, 1880, Hawkins caused a duly-certified transcript of these proceedings to be filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of little River county, in accordance with the provisions of the statutes of Arkansas, and thereupon procured the issuance, by the clerk of said court, of a writ oí execution upon said judgment, and the same was levied upon the realty previously attached; and, by due proceedings had, the realty was sold at sheriff’s sale, and purchased by the plaintiff in execution, and, after the expiration of the period for redemption, a deed of conveyance thereof was executed by the sheriff, delivered to Hawkins, and duly recorded, as required by the laws of the state of Arkansas. Upon delivery of the deed, Hawkins took possession of the premises, which, comprised in all 590.46 acres, and in person, or through tenants and others, to whom he had contracted to sell portions of the land, ho has continued in possession, his right so to do not being questioned until in December, 1889, when Mary E. Wills, wife of Charles B. Wills, filed in the United States circuit court for the eastern district of Arkansas an action of ejectment against said Hawkins, and the parties holding under him, claiming to be the owner of said realty, and entitled to the possession. Her claim to be the owner of the property was based upon the fact that on the 9th day of April, 1878, her husband executed a deed, conveying the title of some 2,000 acres of land, including the premises in dispute in this action, to his wife, Mary E. Wills. The validity of this deed was contested by Hawkins on the ground that it was purely a voluntary conveyance, executed without consideration, and for the purpose of defrauding the creditors of the grantor. Not being able to avail themselves of the equitable title held under the sheriff’s deed as a defense to the action of ejectment, the parties named as defendants did not appear therein, and judgment by default, was entered against them in January, 1890. In May following, the defendants to the ejectment suit filed their hill in equity in the United States circuit court, setting forth the title acquired by Hawkins to the realty, and averring that the conveyance to Mary E. Wills was without consideration, fraudulent as to
Owing to the fact that no written opinion or finding was filed by the learned judge who tried the cause'in the circuit court, we do not know whether the conclusion reached was based upon any failure in the title asserted by Hawkins, or upon the question in regard to the validity of the conveyance to Mary E. Wills. Counsel for appellee argues at some length the proposition that the judgment entered in favor of Mrs. Wills in the ejectment suit is a bar to the relief sought in this proceeding. The ruling of the supreme court in Johnson v. Christian, 128 U. S. 374, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 87, fully disposes of this question adversely to the position of counsel for appellee, it being therein held that a judgment in ejectment is only a bar to such legal defenses as could be made available in an action at law, and does not preclude a resort to a proceeding in equity, by the defendant in the ejectment suit, to bar the judgment in that action by reason of equities and rights available in equity, but not available at. law. As the ejectment suit was brought in the federal court, it was not open to the defendants therein to plead any equitable defense or to assert an equitable title as against the prior legal title seemingly held by Mrs. Wills. The defendants in that suit, to secure their rights, were compelled to invoke the aid of a court of equity, and it was therefore open to them to suffer judgment to go against them in the law action, and then appeal to the equity side of the court for relief against the judgment, as well as against the deed upon which i't was based.
We pass, then, to a consideration of the question whether it appears that Hawkins, as against Charles B. Wilis, has obtained a valid right and title to the realty in dispute. As already stated, the Hawkins title is based upon the judgment entered in his favor against Charles B. Wills in the attachment suit brought before the justice of the peace in Little River county. From the record it appears that the justice had jurisdiction of the cause; that the attachment was duly issued, levied, and sustained; that personal service of the summons was had on the defendant, Wills, within the jurisdiction of the court, — and therefore the judgment rendered is valid and binding. It also appears that a certified transcript thereof was duly filed in the clerk’s office of the proper county, an execution -was issued and levied, and the land sold in due course of proceedings, as provided for in the statutes of Arkansas.
The objections taken to the validity of the proceedings on behalf of appellee are twofold: First. That it does not appear that an execution
This brings us to a consideration of the title held by Mrs. Wills, which, as already stated, is dependent upon the validity of the conveyance made to her by her husband in April, 1878. The evidence clearly shows that at the time this conveyance was made Charles B. Wills was indebted to several parties, including the complainant Hawkins, and that the transfer of the realty, amounting in all to about 2,000 acres, left him without available means to pay his debts. The defendant testifies that ot the date of the transfer of the realty her husband bad over 9300 worth of personal property, consisting of cattle, a, horse, farming implements, and a lot of blacksmith tools; but, assuming that this property was available to his creditors, it was less in amount than his indebtedness at the time, and lienee Charles B. Wills was not justified in making a voluntary conveyance of his realty to his wife without first making provision for the payments of Ms just indebtedness. The rule applicable to the case is fully stated by the supreme court in Kehr v. Smith, 20 Wall. 31, in which it is said:
“Surely the voluntary provision for the wife, in such a condition of tilings, Is not sustainable against existing creditors. Nor can it be supported on the theory that the whole estate was worth a few thousand dollars more. Suppose it was, there would still be that extent of embarrassment which would have a*510 direct tendency to impair the rights of creditors. In such a case a presumption of constructive fraud is created, no matter what the motive which prompted the settlement. Meyer was not only largely indebted, for a person in his situation, but it is easy to see it would have been close work for his creditors to have made their debts, if they had tried to enforce their collection by judicial process, — a surer way of ascertaining the real worth of the property than by the opinions of indifferent persons, as experience has proved that this kind of testimony is often unreliable on such a subject. The ancient rule that a voluntary post-nuptial settlement can be avoided if there was some indebtedness existing, has been relaxed, and the rule generally adopted in this country will uphold it, if it be reasonable, not disproportionate to the husband’s means, taking into view his debts and situation, and clear of any intent, actual or constructive, to defraud creditors. ”
Tested by this rule, it is clearly manifest that Charles B. Wills was not justified in transferring the bulk of his property to his wife, reserving to himself only a small amount of personal property, which if sold would have been wholly insufficient to pay the debts he then owed. A voluntary transfer under such circumstances necessarily results in hindering or defeating creditors in the collection of the claims justly due them, and is therefore in fraud of their rights.
It is claimed, however, that there was a valuable and sufficient consideration for the transfer to Mrs. Wills, growing out of certain advances made by her father in payment of expenses incurred in taking care of Mrs. Wills and her children during periods of time when they were all at her father’s house in Indiana. Mrs. Wills testified that in 1875, being then in ill health, she returned to her father’s house for medical treatment. That her husband wrote her that he had no means to pay for such treatment. That he would transfer these lands to her, if her father would advance the money needed for her treatment, and that her father knew and approved of the proposition. That she had estimated that the expense would be about $2,000, but that her husband was to make the transfer whether the amount expended was more or less than the named sum of $2,000. She further testifies that she returned to her husband in December, 1875, and remained with, him until July, 1878, some three months after the execution of the deed to her, when she again went to her father’s house, and remained there about two years, with her daughter Mamie. That in January, 1879, another child was born to her, which died the following August. That her daughter Mamie, after the death of the infant, had the scarlet fever, and was ill for some months. Prom 'the testimony of the father it appears that he paid the expenses in connection with the sickness of his grandchildren, as well as those resulting from the illness of his daughter, and it is the sum total of all these outlays that is relied upon as making up the sum of $2,000, named as the consideration in the deed from the husband to the wife. It is manifest that in 1875, when the defendant testifies that she had the understanding with her husband and father in regard to the transfer of the lands to her, she could not possibly have foreseen the expenses that would be occasioned by the birth and death of an infant in 1878 and 1879, and the sickness of the daughter Mamie,
The decree appealed from is therefore reversed, at cost of appellee, and the cause is remanded to the circuit court, with instructions to enter a decree in favor of complainants, holding the deed to Mrs. Wills void, so far as the same affects the realty in the bill described, and enjoining her from asserting any right or title to said realty j by virtue of said deed or the judgment in the ejectment suit, and further quieting the title to said realty in the complainants.