165 A. 13 | Pa. | 1932
Argued December 8, 1932. Appellant conveyed, for a nominal consideration, several pieces of real estate to his wife and son, and, through his mother-in-law, to his wife and himself as tenants by entirety. He was contingently liable on a bond to appellee in the amount of $30,000. Proceedings were instituted by appellee to have the conveyances set aside because they were made for the purpose of hindering, delaying *221 and defrauding creditors, among whom was appellee. A decree pro confesso was opened and the case heard on bill and answer, appellee offering only such parts of his bill as made out a case. Appellant offered no part of his answer or oral testimony to rebut the implications of the averments in the bill offered in evidence. A decree of reconveyance having been entered, this appeal followed.
Section 7 of the Act of May 21, 1921, P. L. 1045, provides "Every conveyance made . . . . . . with actual intent, as distinguished from intent presumed in law, to hinder, delay, or defraud either present or future creditors, is fraudulent as to both present and future creditors." The act defines "creditor" entitled to the benefit of the act as a "person having any claim . . . . . . absolute, fixed, or contingent" and "debt" as any "legal liability . . . . . . liquidated or unliquidated, absolute, fixed, or contingent."
We might dismiss appellant's objection to the offers of the bill by complainant to sustain his claim without further discussion, as defendant offered nothing to controvert appellee's case, then being heard. Assuming the answer might be considered as proof, appellant's case is not aided. The supplemental answers to the bill were vague, uncertain, and contained no substance to prevent the entry of a decree. For illustration, the 16th paragraph avers the deeds were without fair consideration. The answer says there was a fair consideration as the wife had invested money in the property and paid the carrying charges: when, how, or in what sum is not stated. Similarly defective is the statement that personal services were rendered. The character of such services is not stated nor their time, place, or value. The further claim that the consideration arose through a desire to adjust or prevent a threatened breach in family relations has no weight in considering the relations between debtor and creditors, when the conveyances of the former's lands were for a nominal consideration. When *222
a case is heard on bill and answer every relevant averment of the answer which is well pleaded must be accepted as true: Stone v. New Schiller B. L. Assn.,
Appellants contend that under the Act of 1921 the creditor must show affirmatively actual fraud and insolvency, especially when it is averred in the bill for cancellation. The Fraudulent Conveyance Act makes no mention of solvency. It states that conveyances made with actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors are fraudulent as to present and future creditors. The intent to hinder, delay or defraud must be actual as distinguished from presumptive. In Schline v. Kine,
The court below, however, found that the conveyances were made without full and fair consideration, and with intent upon the part of the grantors to hinder and delay creditors of the defendant, Harry Burstein, among them the plaintiff, and all except two were made to Burstein and wife by entireties, effectually removing the properties from the reach of creditors of the title holders. We have then a finding of fraud supported by evidence (the pleading) without countervailing proof. Appellant argues that paragraphs 16, 17 and 18 show assets of the debtor sufficient to liquidate plaintiff's claim. No averment is made that appellee is the only creditor or that there are no others and there is no proof in the record that such assets exist. It was incumbent on appellants to show the transactions were fair to the creditors, considering the then existing estate.
The bond was given in 1926, but judgment not entered until 1930. The conveyances were all after the date of the bond. As the allegations of the bill relate to the bond on which appellant was contingently liable, if the conveyances were intended to hinder, delay and defraud this creditor it is immaterial when the judgment was actually recovered or the claim actually matured. The statute covers present contingent claims, and this claim was real and in existence when the conveyances were made. Under the general law and the Fraudulent Conveyance Act the contingent liability of a husband for debts has the same status as one that is fixed: Peoples Saving Dime Bank Trust Co. v. Scott, supra. When a conveyance is made with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud a named creditor it is not necessary to show there are other creditors. A conveyance of property fraudulent as to one creditor is fraudulent as to creditors generally: Peoples Saving Dime Bank Trust Co. v. Scott, supra; Ketner v. Donten,
Appellants ask that the case be sent back so that they may present oral evidence. Appellants' witnesses were *225 in court and it was their duty to submit testimony at that time, but they evidently preferred to chance having the case tried on bill and answer alone. Appellee stated he was trying the case on bill and answer and, if any confusion resulted therefrom, it was on the part of appellants alone.
Complaint is made of the decree ordering a reconveyance to the judgment debtor instead of one protecting the creditor through the lien of judgment on the specific lands. No exception raises the question of the form of the decree. What was excepted to was ordering a reconveyance. The reconveyance works for the benefit of all creditors.
Decree affirmed at appellants' cost.