43 W. Va. 162 | W. Va. | 1897
Lead Opinion
Banmel Bcraggs iiled Ids hill in chancery against A. J. Hill and Nancy Hill, Ids wife, in the Circuit Court of Boone county, at June rules, .1894. The hill is as follows: “The Bill of Complaint of Banmel Bcraggs against Andrew J. Hill and Nancy Hill, His "Wife, Filed in the Circuit Court of Boone County, West Virginia. To the Hon. R. C. MeClaughertv, Judge of Baid Court: The above-named plaintiff complains and says: That on the 25th day of December, 187(1, he contracted and sold to one J. II. Cray a certain tract of lain! situate on Camp creek, in said Boone county, containing 400 acres, for the sum of $1,200, and that thereafter the said J. H. Cray contracted and sold to Bylvester Chambers and the defendant A. J. Hill the said tract of 400 acres of land, reserving to liim-
“That upon the execution of the contract aforesaid, and at the instance of the said J. H. Gray, this plaintiff conveyed to the said A, J. Hill, by deed dated the 10th day of June, 1881, 100 acres of land, the remaining balance of the 400-acre tract of land sold by the plaintiff to the said J. H. Gray as aforesaid; reserving, however, to the said J. H. Gray the timber on said tract of land. A copy of which deed is herewith filed, marked ‘C,’ and prayed to be made a part of this bill. This plaintiff further represents : That to the June rules of the circuit court of Boone county, 188(5, he instituted an action against the said defendant A. J. Hill for breach of covenant, in failing to comply with the terms of the said agreement dated June 10, 1881, and that on 16th day of April, 1894, he obtained a judgment against the said A. J. Hill for the sum of $(500, and costs amounting to $67.58. A copy of which judgment is herewith filed, marked ‘ I),’ and prayed to be made a part of this bill. That on the 8th day of May, 1894, an execution was issued upon said judgment against the said A. J. Hill, and delivered to the sheriff of Boone county, which said execution was returned, ‘No property found subject 'to levy,’ and accompanied by a schedule of the personal property of; the defendant A. J. Hill. A copy of which said execution, with the return thereon, is herewith filed, marked‘E,; and prayed to be made apart of this bill. That on the 8th day of May, 1894, plaintiff caused the said judgment to be docketed on the judgment-lien docket of Boone county. A copy of which is herewith filed, marked ‘ F,’ and prayed to be made a part of this bill. This plaintiff further alleges that the said A. J. Hill, for the purpose1 of avoiding the payment of his debts and contriving to defraud his creditors and especially this plaintiff, on the 26th day of August, 1882, conveyed or attempted to convey
The defendants appeared and demurred thereto, and the 'demurrer was sustained. The plaintiff amended his bill in court in words as follows : “The Amended Bill of Complaint of Samuel Scraggs against Andrew J. Hill and Nancy Hill, Filed in the Circuit Court of Boone County, "West Virginia. To the Hon. R. C. McClaugherty, Judge of Said Court: The above-named plaintiff further complains and says that he has heretofore exhibited in your said court an original bill of complaint against said defendants, which is made a part of this-amended bill, and asked to be read in conjunction herewith, in'which said original bill he charges that ‘the said A. J. Hill, for the purpose of avoiding the payment of his debts, and contriving to defraud his creditors, and especially this plaintiff',- on the
“This plaintiff further charges that at the time the said deed was made by A. J. Hill to his' wife, Nancy Hill (August 26, 1882), the said A. J. Hill was in actual possession of the said tract of land attempted to be conveyed by said deed, occupying1 the same as a home for himself and wife; that he never delivered possession of the same to his wife.under their alleged purchase and sale, but said A. J. Hill remained in actual possession of said laud as aforesaid, and has so remained in actual and notorious possession of said land continuously up to this time, and is still in possession of and cultivating the same, and that his possession has not been broken since the delivery thereof to him by this plaintiff, and that his wife, Nancy Hill, has never had possession of said land at anytime; that the said defendant A. J. Hill, before and at the time of said gift and conveyance to his wife, was indebted to this plaintiff in the sum of money represented by his judgment against said defendant of the date 16th day of April, 1894, and that said gift and conveyance was made for the especial purpose of hindering, delaying, and defrauding this plaintiff in the collection of his claim against the said A. J. Hill; that the said conveyance from said A. J. Hill to his wife,- Nancy Hill, is void because made by a husband to his wife, and for the purpose of defrauding this plaintiff" out of the debt justly due him at that, time, as hereinbefore stated. The said plaintiff" comes and therefore prays that said property may be sold to satisiy his said claim, and further prays as in his original bill lie has already prayed, and that said conveyance from A. J. Hill to Nancy Hill, his wife, be declared null and void, and
The1 defendants demurred to the bill as amended, and tiled their joint answer as follows; “The -Joint Answer of Andrew -J. Hill and Nancy Hill, Defendants, to the Hill and Amended Hill of Complaint of Samuel Scraggs, Plaintilf, Hik'd in the Circuit Court of Boone County, West Virginia, against These Defendants. To the Honorable R. ('. McClaugherty, Judge' of the Circuit Court .Aforesaid: The above-named defendants, saving and reserving to themselves the benefit of the many errors, discrepancies, deliciencies, c/r.. in the plaintiff’s bill and amended bill, by demurrer or otherwise, for answer thereto, or so much thereof as they arc advised it is material, for them to answer, answering, say that it is true that tlit* defendant Andrew -J. Hill did on the 25th day of August, 1882 (not on the 2(ith, as charged in the plaintiff’s bill), convey to the defendant Nancy Hill, his wife, and on the same' day acknowledged the same, and delivered to the defendant Nancy Hill the said deed, together with the possession of the Hit) acre's of land and premises therein conveye'd, which has beam usc'd and controlled by the said Nancy at all time's since to the* pivsent, and which deed was in fact made' without any nioiu'y e-onsidewation, but wholly for the' love* ami aff-'etion of the' said Andrew -J. Hill to tin' defendant Nancy Hill, and with no intemt whatever to hinder, delay, or de'fraud the' plaintiff or any one else whatever; and tlu'se* defendants most positively deny the' charge'in the* plaintiff's bill alk'ging fraud in any manner in said conve'yance', and dennand strict proof thereof to sustain any such charge's. And the'se* deTcmdants further say that the* e'xe'cution, acknowk'dgment, and dedivery of the said conve'yance' from flu1 said Andrew -J. Hill to the said Nancy Hill was more* than edewen years prior to the institution of this suit, as we'll as the' possession and control of the lOO-aere* tract of land afore'said, subjend to the reservations therein sed forth to Ward and Allen, etr.
The defendants further filed an amended answer pleading the statute, of limitations. This, however, was unnecessary, as this Court has determined that the statute of limitations can be taken advantage of by demurrer. Thompson v. Iron Co., 41 W. Va. 574, (23 S. E. 795). No depositions were taken in the case, but it was submitted on bill and exhibits, demurrer, answers, and general
It is admitted that the conveyance from Andrew J. Hill to his wife made the 25th day of August, 1882, was voluntary, and, if it had been attacked within the five-year limit fixed by the statute, might have been held void as to the plaintiff’s debt, if shown to be an existing obligation at the time of the conveyance. The question, therefore, of the legal presumption of fraud on account of the voluntary character of the conveyance and the preexistence of the debt, is by the statute entirely eliminated from the case, leaving the only point for consideration the alleged actual fraudulent intent of the grantor, participated in by the grantee. The burden of establishing such fraud is.on the plaintiff, though it may be inferred from the facts and circumstances, if sufficient to. justify such inference. Reynolds’ Adm'rs Gawthrop's Heirs, 37 W. Va. 3, (16 S. E. 364).
The facts and circumstances, as gathered from the pleadings and exhibits, are as follows: On the 25th day of August, 1882, Andrew J. Hill conveyed the land in controversy to his wife, Nancy Hill, for the nominal consideration of three hundred dollars; the real consideration being merely love and affection, and the conveyance purely a gift. -It was duly admitted to record on the 26th of August, 1882, from which time the plaintiff.' had notice thereof. And the parties have since been in possession of such property, as the property of the wife. At and prior to the time of the execution of this conveyance there was in existence between the plaintiff and defendant A. J. Hill and one Sylvester Chambers the following unsettled contract: “Article of agreement made and entered into this the tenth day of June, 1881, between ¡Samuel Hcraggs, of the first part, and Sylvester Chambers and A. J. Hill, of the second part, all of the county of Boone and State of "West Virginia, witnesseth : That the said second party agrees to stand responsible to the party of the. first part for the remaining part which is against the land for’nonpayment, which now under a certain contract between J. H. Cray and HcNeely, on the Hcraggs land, on Camp
On this contract plaintiff brought an action of covenant in Juno, 188(5, almost four years after the' alleged fraudulent transaction and his constructive notice' thereof, and after a legal controversy extending until 1 lie- l(5th day of April, 1894, obtained a judgment thereon for six hundred dollars. Mow, from tlu'se facts alone', which are' hardly sufficient to justify flu1 setting aside' e>f a voluntary conveyance in a suit brought in time, after the lapse' of eleven years the' court is asked to infer fraud. The only evidence of any existing' debt whatever is the uncertain writing above1 set forth. The1 writing, on its face, shows only a probleunatioal and conditional future1 indebtedness, contingent on the failure of another source of liquidation.
The1 fact that a judgment was obtainc'd on such writing almost thirteen years thc'reaftc'r for six hundred dollars can not be taken as proof of the existence of an indebtedness eleven years before, as against a grantee i-n no wise1 connected with or bound by the1 suit. For such judgmemt might be1 obtainc'd by connivance, by failure1 to defend, by loss or suppression of testimony, or by other adventitious circumstances arising during the1 intc'rve'ning period from the inception of the alleged indebtedne'ss to the date of the judgment. And it has been we'll settled that a grantee in a dee'll can not be1 a Hooted by the1 admission or conduct of the grantor afte>r the eonvc'yanee. See, also, Trapuell v. Conklyn, 37 W. Va. 242, (16 S. E. 570). Other than the judgment, what sudieiont proof is there1 that the grantor was indebted to any extent, or to any pewson, at the1 time1 of the convc'yancc'? Without such proof, even a voluntary conveyance would not be set aside1 within live1 years after the1 making thereof, in,the face1 of the denial of the1 existence of any indebtedness. McCue v. McCue,
Concurrence Opinion
(coucurrhu/).
It seems to me that the demand of plaintiff constitutes him a creditor, under the chapter on “Fraudulent Conveyances.” Section 9 chapter 74, Code 1891, says any one is a creditor under that chapter who, but for the instrument, could subject the land to a debt. A contingent liability is enough. Hutchison v. Kelly, 1 Rob. (Va.) 136; Wolf v. McGugin, 37 W. Va. 564 (16 S. E. 797); Bump, Fraud. Conv. 503. Demand on tort is enough. Greer v. Wright, (i (Jrat. 154. The judgment was conclusive on Mrs. Hill as to existence, validity, and amount of debt. Bensimer v. Fell, 35 W. Va. 15 (12 S. E. 1078), point 5. But I do not think the charge of fraud is established in full.
Perersed.