116 Mo. 169 | Mo. | 1893
This is a suit in equity in the nature of a creditor’s bill, brought by plaintiff as trustees for the creditors of Josiah Yaughan, to set aside certain conveyances of real estate made to defendant Mary E. Yaughan, by third persons, on the ground that, the consideration was paid by the husband, and the-deeds made to the wife, for the purpose of hindering,; delaying and defrauding said creditors.
The petition charges defendant, Josiah Yaughan, being indebted to divers persons, naming them, and the respective amounts due them, which aggregate-$4,041.25, and being then also the owner of a, large stock of merchandise, in the city of Plattsburg, Mo., did, about the--day of August, 1889, with intent to hinder, delay and defraud said creditors, transfer and deliver the same to Bohart and Goff in exchange for certain real estate (which is described)', consisting of a residence, business house, and some lots-in the town of Lathrop, and with like fraudulent-intent, caused the same to be conveyed to his wife, defendant Mary E. Yaughan. That said creditors had obtained judgments against said Yaughan and caused said land to be sold, under executions issued thereon which was purchased by plaintiff, and is now held, by him, under deeds from the sheriff, in trust for said creditors. A decree setting aside said conveyances, and vesting the legal title of the land in plaintiff, was prayed. The answer was a general denial.
The defense of the wife is, that the several sums raised by mortgage and sale of her land, and the rents, grain, etc., from her farm were loaned by her to her husband, on which he agreed to pay her interest and that the property was conveyed to her in good faith in settlement of the amount due her which she claimed, without interest, amounted to $3,990.
The court found the transaction fraudulent - and set aside the conveyance to the wife and vested the title to the land in plaintiff and defendants appealed.
I. That Mrs. Vaughan inherited from her father seventy acres of land, and that the proceeds from mortgage and sale of the same, amounting to $3,500, was received and used by her husband does not admit of a doubt under the evidence. Of this amount $2,500 was received in the state of Illinois and $1,400 in the state of Kansas. The statutes of these states, which were offered in evidence, do not differ materially in respect to the rights and liabilities of married women. The supreme court of Illinois, speaking of the changes the statute of that state have effected upon the common law rights of the wife uses this language: “No question as to subordination to the common law rights of the husband can arise; for, backward as may be courts, or the profession, to recognize the situation, those rights are by the statute swept away and gone. She is entitled to own, hold, possess, and enjoy such estate precisely as if she were sole and unmarried. As to such estate and her relations thereto, she has no hus
Applying the statute as thus construed, in that-state, to the facts in this case, we think we can properly say that the reception and use by the husband of' the proceeds of the wife’s land implied a promise on his part to repay her, and as between them a valid, indebtedness from the husband to the wife was created.
II. It is well settled in this state, and elsewhere, that a debtor in failing circumstances, may give one-creditor a preference to the exclusion of others, and that a “debt, due from a husband to the wife, stands-on as good footing as a debt due to any other person and she maybe given a preference over other creditors.” Hart v. Leete, 104 Mo. 338; Sexton v. Anderson, 95 Mo. 379; Frank v. King, 121 Ill. 250; Hill v. Bowman, 35 Mich. 191; Bank v. Croco, 46 Kan. 630.
It is equally well settled that the right of one-creditor of an insolvent debtor, to secure a preference over others is not affected by the fraudulent intent of the debtor, or by simple knowledge thereof on his-part, if there was no actual participation therein. Sexton v. Anderson, supra; State to use v. Mason, 112, Mo. 374.
Upon the law and the undisputed facts the case-stands thus: Defendant Josiah Vaughan became indebted to his wife and co-defendant, Mary E. Vaughan, in 1881, in the sum of $1,000, in 1884 in the-sum of $1,100, and in 1887 in the sum of $1,400, and also some smaller sums; and in 1889, becoming insolvent, he caused the bulk of his property to be transferred to her in settlement of these debts to the total exclusion of most other creditors. If this transfer was in good faith, and without fraud on the part of the husband, or if with fraud, but without participation therein by the wife, then it must be upheld.
IV. The unlimited right of ownership of the proprety, inherited by Mrs. Vaughan from her father, implied and included not only the unrestricted right of disposal to her husband, which right is unfettered under the laws of Illinois and Kansas, but also imposed upon her the corresponding duty and obligation of so using and dealing Avith it as not to mislead and deceive others
As was said in a case in which the facts were very similar to those disclosed in this record: “Having constantly consented that he should hold himself out to the world as the owner of this property, and contract debts on the credit of it, up to the very hour of his disaster, it would be against the plainest principles of justice, and utterly subversive of everything like fair dealing, to permit her to step in now and withdraw from the process of the law, put in motion by his creditors, the very property she had permitted him year after year to represent to be his, and the apparent ownership of which had given him his business credit and standing.”
Under the circumstances disclosed in this case, it must be held that Mrs. Yaughan, by her conduct, participated in the fraudulent conveyance of her husband, and the judgment is affirmed.