10 Paige Ch. 618 | New York Court of Chancery | 1844
If the complainant had filed his bill as a judgment creditor of N. Havens, for the purpose of reaching an interest in this property which still belonged to his debtor, or to reach it upon the ground that it had been conveyed to the children in fraud of the complainant’s rights as a creditor, the objection made in behalf of these infant defendants that the judgment debtor should have been made a party, would have been well taken. And as infants cannot be prejudiced by the neglect of their guardian ad litem to make such an objection in the answer,
But the assistant vice chancellor was clearly right in supposing that the complainant acquired no title to the premises, either legal or equitable, under the conveyance from the assignees. I have not been able to find any evidence whatever from which I can pres.ume that the conveyance was intended to be made in payment or satisfaction of the complainant’s judgment, or of any part thereof. That judgment was for several hundred dollars; and yet the nominal consideration inserted in the conveyance from the assignees is but one dollar. Even that nominal sum was not paid; for the assignees were examined as witnesses, and both testified that they received no consideration whatever for the conveyance. And no agreement appears to have been made between the parties to that conveyance that even the one dollar mentioned therein should, in any event, be applied upon the judgment. Nor does the complainant allege in his bill that there was an agreement to receive that conveyance in payment, or in part payment, of his judgment against N. Havens. On the contrary, he expressly avers and charges, that with the exception of a very small sum collected by the sheriff upon the execution, the whole amount of the judgment, with the interest thereon, is still due to him. Even if there were no other creditors in this case who "were entitled to share in the proceeds of the assigned property, the assignor would be entitled to have whatever his interest therein was worth applied upon the judgment ; so that his future earnings might not be liable for the whole amount of the debt.
Again; I think, upon the facts of this case, that the assistant vice chancellor was wrong in supposing that there was even a resulting trust, as to the premises in question, in favor of N. Havens. The wife had an equitable right to. a support for herself and her infant children, out of the moneys given to her by the will of her brother; which equity the court would have protected and enforced at any time before the legacy was reduced to possession by her husband. That equity was a sufficient consideration for the agreement between her and her husband, that the balance of the legacy still due from the administrator should, if collected by the husband, be ap
Both conveyances in this case, however, were but different parts of the same transaction, and were intended to carry into effect the agreement by which the wife consented that
The general rule, previous to the revised statutes, undoubtedly was, that if a man purchased real estate and paid for it with his own funds, and took a conveyance therefor in the name of a third person, there was a resulting trust in his favor •, unless the person in whose name the conveyance was made could introduce some evidence to rebut the legal presumption of such a trust. But no such presumption arose where a parent advanced the purchase money, or consideration, and took a conveyance in the name of his child. For in such a case the law presumed the conveyance was intended as a gift or advancement to the child. (Lew. Law of Trusts, 169. 3 Sug. Law of Vend. 10th Lond. ed. 262.) Here the children were wholly unprovided for. And the testimony, instead of rebutting the presumption that the intention of the parents was to vest a beneficial interest in the premises in the children, shows that such was evidently their intention.
The decree appealed from must therefore be afiirmed, with costs.