73 S.E. 104 | N.C. | 1911
The plaintiff, at May Term, 1908, of CATAWBA, obtained a judgment against J. O. Moore, one of the defendants, for $300 and costs in a suit for damages for malicious prosecution. At the time the judgment was taken the defendant J. O. Moore owned a tract of land in Alexander County. He gave notice of appeal from the said judgment to this Court, being allowed time within which to perfect such appeal, which *365 appeal was not, in fact, prosecuted. Before the time for perfecting said appeal had expired, and before the plaintiff caused a transcript of said judgment to be docketed in Alexander County, the defendant J. O. Moore, his wife, Dora Moore, joining him, executed a mortgage on the land in Alexander County to secure the payment of $2,000 borrowed from the mortgagee. The defendants, with the $2,000 so borrowed, (464) erected a residence on a lot in the city of Hickory, the title to which was in the defendant Dora Moore. The feme defendant had actual notice of the suit, and of the judgment taken therein, before the execution of the mortgage and the use of the $2,000 in the erection of the dwelling-house on her lot. At the time of the transaction the defendant J. O. Moore was insolvent. After plaintiff had exhausted his legal remedies by execution and supplemental proceedings, he instituted this proceeding for equitable relief.
The jury returned the following verdict:
1. Did defendant J. O. Moore dispose of all of the lands owned by him, and expend the bulk of the proceeds therefrom in the erection of permanent improvements on lands of the defendant Dora Moore, for the purpose of defeating or delaying or defrauding the payment of the plaintiff's judgment against him, referred to in the complaint? Answer: No.
2. If so, did the defendant Dora Moore have knowledge of such purpose on the part of her husband, and participate in the alleged fraud of her husband, as set out in the first issue? Answer: No.
3. What is the value of the lot of land owned by Dora Moore, independent of the improvement placed on it by the money of her husband? Answer: $600.
4. What amount of money of J. O. Moore, referred to in the first issue, was expended upon the lot of Dora Moore with her consent? Answer: About $2,000.
Upon the verdict, the court rendered the following judgment:
"This cause coming on before the undersigned and a jury, and the jury having found the third and fourth issues in favor of the plaintiff; and the male defendant, as it appears from the record, being indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $300 and costs, $48.15; It is, therefore, upon the whole record, considered and adjudged that the plaintiff recover of the defendant J. O. Moore $348.15 and the costs of this suit. It is further considered and adjudged that the value of the lot owned by the defendant Dora Moore, in her own right, independent of the interests of her husband in the house and lot is $600. It is further considered and adjudged that the interest of the defendant J. O. Moore in the house and lot described in the complaint is $2,000, and that said sum was expended by J. O. Moore on the said lot (465) *366 of his wife, with her consent, in making improvements thereon, from his own moneys, and the said wife holds her said lot subject to the equity in the same of her husband in the sum of $2,000, to be pursued by the plaintiff as he may be advised."
Defendants appealed.
After stating the case: We entertain no doubt as to the plaintiff's right to follow the fund invested by his debtor in improvements upon his wife's land. No principle is better settled by our decisions than the one that an insolvent debtor cannot withdraw money from his own estate and give it to another to be invested by him in the purchase or improvement of his property, and when it is done, creditors may subject the property so purchased or improved to the payment of their claims. Guthrie v. Bacon,
It is not necessary to show an actual intent to defraud. The transaction is void per se. Revisal, sec. 962; McCanless v. Flinchum,
Our attention has been called to Thurber v. LaRoque,
We need not agree to all that is said in the passage just quoted for the purpose of disposing of this case, as there is no element of contract in the equity which we are now enforcing.
The case is remanded, with direction to reform the pleadings (470) in accordance with the principles declared in this opinion. Issues should be submitted for the purpose of ascertaining the amount invested by the husband for his wife in the improvement, less the personal property exemption therein, and also the amount by which the property has been enhanced in value by reason of the improvement, with such other issues as may be necessary.
New trial.