64 So. 120 | La. | 1914
Plaintiff sued Andre F. Voorhies on promissory notes and obtained judgment therefor. No appeal has been taken by Voorhies.
In its petition plaintiff alleged that Andre F. Voorhies and his father-in-law, William Voorhies, a resident of Illinois, concocted a plan, to which Mrs. Ida Compton Voorhies, wife of Andre F. Voorhies, and daughter of William Voorhies, was made a party, and to which plan she agreed and in which she acquiesced, whereby she would institute proceedings against her husband setting forth an indebtedness to her on his part for paraphernal funds, delivered him by her, to the amount of $15,000; that thereupon and simultaneously, without awaiting the usual delays and without any publicity whatsoever, said Andre Voorhies would file an answer, and by consent, apparently of counsel, the case would be immediately taken up, and thus a consent judgment entered under the guise and formalities of a contested matter, which judgment would be followed by a
There was judgment in favor of William Voorhies and Mrs. Ida Compton Voorhies; and plaintiff has appealed.
The evidence shows that Mrs. Ida Compton Voorhies, wife of Andre Voorhies, sued her husband for the restitution of her paraphernal effects which she has intrusted to him, and which she alleged to amount to $15,000. The suit was supported by competent evidence, and there was judgment, as prayed for, in her favor.
Plaintiff alleged that this suit was the result of a conspiracy between Andre F. Voorhies and his father-in-law, William Voorhies; but it offered no evidence in support of its allegation of conspiracy. The positive evidence of William Voorhies and his daughter, Mrs. Ida Compton Voorhies, is to the effect that the suit was instituted by Mrs. Voorhies against her husband without the knowledge of her father, William Voorhies, who was not in New Iberia at the time of the filing; that the amount sued for by her was actually given to her, or advanced to her, by her father, William Voorhies; and that William Voorhies had been sent for by his daughter for the purpose of testifying in the suit against her husband for the restitution of' her paraphernal funds without informing him as to the object of her sending for him-to go to New Iberia.
The judgment in the case was immediately followed by a dation en paiement, by which Andre P. Voorhies surrendered to his wife-all of the property which he possessed in New Iberia. Plaintiff alleges that this hasty execution of the judgment and transfer of' property is a suspicious circumstance, sufficient to destroy said transfer. It argues, that the judgment against the husband was entered with his consent and is therefore? illegal.
“It is unfortunate that his (the father’s) intention was not expressed at the time, preserved in such shape as to be valuable to the wife and daughter. It is a noticeable fact that the wife had no appreciable knowledge of this donation, nor of the others which it is alleged the father made to her. The circumstance of an absolute absence of any declaration at the time, or any evidence whatever that the money was intended for the daughter, forces the conclusion that the money was a loan to the son-in-law, or an accommodation to him.”
And we set aside the dation en paiement.
In the present case William Voorhies did not give any money to his son-in-law, Andre F. Voorhies. He sent checks and drafts to the order of his daughter, Mrs. Ida Compton Voorhies, as advances to her out of her share in his estate; and she indorsed these checks and drafts over to her husband. The property thus transferred by the wife to the husband was the property of the wife, and she was entitled to recover the judgment obtained by her against her husband for her paraphernal funds used by him.
That William Voorhies knew that his daughter would deliver her property, given by him to her, over to her husband could not under any circumstances make Andre P. Voorhies a debtor of William Voorhies. The father, under such circumstances, could not have sued and recovered judgment against Andre Voorhies for money which he had given to his daughter, the wife of Andre P. Voorhies. The wife, and no one else, was and remained the creditor of her husband when she transferred her property to him.
Plaintiff called for the production of the checks and drafts sent by William Voorhies to his daughter, Mrs. Ida Compton Voorhies; but they were not produced. Mr. Voorhies answered that he had sent these documents to his daughter; and Mrs. Ida Compton Voorhies testified that she had received them but had misplaced them. And the plaintiff argues that this is a suspicious circumstance, going to show that the checks and drafts were not made payable to the order of Mrs. Voorhies. But the suspicion cannot destroy the positive evidence to the effect that they were made payable to her, and that she had indorsed them over to the order of her husband. And this evidence is sus
Of the $15,000 testified to by William Voorhies and his daughter, Mrs. Ida Compton Voorhies, there is but one apparent discrepancy, to the extent of $1,000, paid in the year 1907, which was sent by express to Andre F. Voorhies direct, at a time when banks were not transferring cash. This transaction is sought to be explained by defendant Mr. William Voorhies saying that the money was sent in that way, it being the only feasable way, because of the financial troubles at that time, and that it was really intended for Mrs. Voorhies. Be that as it may, the item is small, and the amount realized from the sale of the property received by Mrs. Voorhies under the dation was only about $8,000, when the indebtedness of her husband to her was $15,000. So that, even if the $1,000 were deducted from the judgment, it would not affect the dation.
Judgment affirmed.