37 Mich. 326 | Mich. | 1877
Complainants being judgment creditors of the defendant James Armstrong levied on a farm of two hundred and forty acres he had owned, but of which he and his wife, the defendant Elizabeth, had just given a deed to his son the defendant Andrew.
This bill was then filed in aid of the execution, the complainants alleging that the deed to Andrew was in fraud of creditors. The defendants answered jointly and denied the fraud and set out a statement of the transaction and claimed that Andrew was a fair purchaser in good faith and for a valuable consideration. Testimony was taken and the circuit judge on final hearing decreed in favor of complainants and the defendant Andrew appealed.
On the 2Sth of February, 1873, the defendant James, as the answer states, was eiglity-five years old and very infirm and incapable of managing his affairs. He was indebted to complainants and also to other parties besides his son Andrew in the sum, as the answer further states, of about two thousand dollars. The farm in question was then owned by him but it was mortgaged for other debts for about $3,000. He was owner at the same time of personal property which the answer admits to have been worth $300. All the property real and personal was at that time formally transferred to his son, the. defendant Andrew, the deed for the farm expressing a consideration of $2,000 and purporting to convey the entire premises for that sum subject to the incumbrance by mortgage. No writings except the deed were executed and no securities were given to the old gentleman or his wife. Whatever were the undertakings of Andrew they were verbal. The old gentleman, the judgment debtor, was left without a dollar. The farm at this time as the proof shows was worth more than $14,000 and the answer admits it was valued in the trade at $12,000.
One or two matters may be mentioned. The defendant Andrew contends that the expressed consideration is quite untrue and very much too small, and that in fact there was a large amount of consideration which consisted of debts his father owed him, and he at first testified that among these ■debts was the large item of $400 for his services in clearing twenty acres of land. His counsel accepting this representation as correct, has placed the item in the catalogue in his brief of the matters claimed to make up the purchase price of the farm, and has put special stress upon it. The record shows however that on cross-examination Andrew finally admitted that this $400 was fully paid him by his father long before the' deed was given. There is also some
In fine, the versions given by the immediate parties are so full of inconsistencies and so chaotic and uncertain that no one can derive therefrom any clear notion of the main elements of the transaction as the defense undertake to represent it. It would be difficult to overlook such con-, siderations.
When a transaction of this class is legitimate, when it is actual and straightforward, when it is free from 'all sinister doings and all deceptive appearances, there can be no difficulty in describing it clearly and precisely in pleading or in explaining it distinctly and lucidly on the stand. The perplexity begins when it is attempted to make a good case out of a bad one. But it is unnecessary to dwell upon the cause under this view of it.
It is admitted that $5,000 of the consideration was a promise to provide support for the old gentleman and his wife during their lives, and that $3,000 more was a further promise to expend certain sums in gifts in his behalf to his children and grand children. It is likewise admitted that the arrangement left him without a cent of property to meet complainant’s debt, and the case will not justify belief that either party to it was ignorant of the existence of that debt. There can be no question concerning Andrew’s connection
The reciting part of the decree contains some few useless expressions which are perhaps hardly appropriate. Omitting these, the decree should be affirmed, with costs.