128 Mo. App. 286 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
This is a proceeding in equity brought by a judgment creditor to procure the cancellation of certain deeds made by the debtor in his lifetime and to subject the real property conveyed therein to the payment of the judgment. The relief is invoked on the ground that the conveyances were made in fraud of the rights of plaintiff as a judgment creditor. The learned trial judge found the issues in favor of plaintiff and entered judgment in her favor as prayed in the petition. Defendants appealed.
The facts found by the trial court, in substance, are as follows: The property in controversy consists of a dwelling house and lot in Kansas City valued at $1,500. In 1889, it was conveyed by warranty deed to “Margaret INhalen and John Whalen, husband and wife.” The grantees, a very aged couple whose family consisted of themselves alone, immediately took possession of the property and occupied it.continuously as a homestead until August 3,1895. In September, 1894, Mrs. Whalen became insane and continued in that condition until the time of her death which occurred April 27, 1904. She died intestate and left no property. In August 1895, Mr. Whalen was compelled to seek a home elsewhere on account of his great age and feebleness, his wife’s helplessness, resulting from her mental infirmity, and their destitute condition. At his request, plaintiff who was conducting a hotel in Kansas City, Kansas, agreed to support him and his wife during their lives and +u
Immediately after the contract between Whalen and
The Whalens lived with Mrs. Bowers, at her expense under the provisions of this contract, until August 1899, during which time, Mrs. Bowers collected and used the rents from the property in suit. Becoming dissatisfied with this arrangement, Whalen applied to defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Haslett, for support. Mrs. Haslett testified that when she was three weeks old, she was left with the Whalens who reared her at their own expense and gave her the same care and attention they would have bestowed upon their own child. Inspired by a sense of duty, she listened to the appeal of the old man and gave him and his demented wife an asylum in her home. She said she did this without hope of reward and was not moved thereto by the consideration that she and her husband were to receive the title held by Mrs. Bowers to the property in suit.
Other facts appear in the record, but those stated afford a sufficient understanding of the case. The arguments of counsel cover a wide range and many interesting questions are discussed, but in the view we entertain, many of them do not require our present considerar tion. We grant for argument, without so deciding, that plaintiff’s judgment could be and was legally revived after Whalen’s death; that when thus revived it afforded a lien on any property fraudulently conveyed by the judgment debtor in his lifetime and that Whalen aban
In Bank of Versailles v. Guthrey, 127 Mo. 189, it was held, “with respect to property which may be subjected to the payment of the debts of a debtor, we fully agree to the rule announced in Wait on Fraudulent Conveyances and Creditors’ Bills (2 Ed.), sec. 211; Crane v. Stickles, 15 Vt. 252; Stanley v. Robbins, 36 Vt. 432; Woodward v. Wyman, 53 Vt. 647; i. e., that he cannot convey his property which is subject to the payment of his debts in consideration, of an obligation for support for life, or any considerable length of time, unless he retain whatever is necessary to satisfy his creditors, as the law will not allow any person having means to make provision for himself and family during life at the expense of his creditors. To do so would be to encourage fraud, by permitting a debtor, possessed of an unlimited amount of property, to place it beyond the reach of his creditors by conveying it, for and in consideration of the support of himself and wife or any member of his family, for and during life of any one or all of them.” To the same effect is Massey v. McCoy, 79 Mo. App. 173. But it by no means follows that the conveyances under which 'defendants acquired Whalen’s interest in the property are tainted with the fraud in the transaction between Whalen and Mrs. Bowers. It is true that instead of reconveying the property to Whalen, Mrs. Bowers, at his request, deeded it to defendants. But this
We are not overlooking the fact that when plaintiff filed the transcript in the office of the circuit clerk, her judgment became a lien on Whalen’s interest. But she permitted that lien to expire by limitation in July, 1900, (Revised Statutes 1899, section 3714), and of course cannot noAV be permitted to assert any rights under a lien thus extinguished. [Christy v. Flanagan, 14 Mo. App. 253; 87 Mo. 670; Chouteau v. Nuckolls, 20 Mo. 442; Christy v. McKee, 94 Mo. l. c. 252; Benoist v. Rothschild, 145 Mo. l. c. 411.] As Whalen had the right to prefer one creditor to another, it remains to be ascertained whether or not defendants paid a fair consideration for the property. If they did, the transaction should not be pronounced fraudulent though Ave should believe from the evidence that Whalen AAras actuated in part by the motive of preventing plaintiff from collecting' her
It must be borne in mind that at the time of the conveyance to defendants, Mrs. Whalen was living and, being insane, her interest in the property had remained unaffected by the various conveyances and contracts which her husband had made. She was younger than her husband, both were feeble and no one could foretell which one would survive the other. Section 4600, Revised Statutes 1899, provides that “Every interest in real estate granted or devised to two or more persons other than executors and trustees and husband and wife shall be a tenancy in common unless expressly declared under such grant or devise to be in joint tenancy.” This leaves unaffected the rule of the common law recognized in this State that under a devise to husband and wife, the grantees take as tenants1 by the entirety and the survivor at the death of his cotenant becomes vested with the entire estate. As was well observed by Judge Sherwood in Russell v. Russell, 122 Mo. 235; “The peculiarities of this sort of tenancy are derived from the fact that in legal contemplation, husband and wife are a unit of personality; there can be no moities between them; they are each seized of the entirety per tout, not per my, and the husband cannot forfeit or alien the estate, except during the period of his life. [Hall v. Stephens, 65 Mo. 670, and cases cited.] And owing to this legal unity of husband and wife, it is said to be impossible
Under this rule, Whalen and his wife were seized of the estate as tenants by the entirety and so held it when she became insane. Any conveyance made thereafter by Whalen conld not affect her estate, and if his demise had preceded hers would be entirely nugatory, since his interest in the estate then would vest in her as the surviving tenant.
It readily will be observed that defendants placed themselves in a position of great uncertainty. In the event Whalen survived his wife, they would become the owners of property valued at $1,500, at an expenditure of less than $400. On the other hand, if his demise preceded hers, they would have no interest in it and no opportunity of acquiring any. In such situation and with no proof in the record relative to the value of Whalen’s interest and with the burden on plaintiff to show that the price paid was inadequate, we cannot do otherwise than to declare that she has failed in her proof. The price paid by defendants^ in our opinion, was not in defect of the reasonable value of the interest they acquired, and that this opinion was shared by plaintiff herself is disclosed in the argument she adduced against the contention of defendants that she was guilty of laches in failing to attempt to enforce the collection of her judgment during Whalen’s lifetime. Her justification for so long a period of inaction is that, with the contingency facing her of the possibility of Whalen’s death before that of his wife, the amount she could have realized from the sale of his interest under execution would not have paid the expenses of the effort. Defendants paid thrice the amount of her judgment for a mere expectancy and, as we have said, paid all it was worth.
Concluding, as we do, that full value was paid, we turn to the final contention that a contemporaneous agreement was made between Whalen and defendants
Point is made by plaintiff of insufficiency in the abstract of record, but we find it to be without merit.
The judgment is reversed.