27 W. Va. 550 | W. Va. | 1886
In 1881 Samuel Silverman brought bis suit in equity in the circuit court of Mason county setting up a number of judgments against Daniel Greaser, and charged, that with the intent to hinder, delay and detraud his creditors on August 31, 1872, the said Greaser and wife conveyed two lots in the town of Mason in said county to one John Young; that no consideration whatever was paid for said property by Young; that without consideration and in fraud of the creditors of said Greaser the said property was by said Young and wife on August 6,1874, conveyed to Elizabeth Greaser, the wife of said Daniel. The bill prays, that the said deeds may be declared fraudulent as
Elizabeth Greaser answered the bill, and in her answer, she denies the fraud charged; she says knew nothing about the indebtedness of her husband, that the conveyance Avas made, for a consideration but does not state Avliat it Avas; that at the time the conveyance Avas made to Young, it Avas not intended or understood that Young should convey it to her, but that after about two years her husband Avanted it conveyed to her, that she and lier children might, be provided with a home; and that at that time her husband was not indebted to any one; that in 1876 her husband left her and went to the State of Ohio to live and now lives in Miamisburg in said state and is employed in selling groceries, and is doing a lucrative and profitable business; that he now has a stock of goods worth at least $2,000.00, which is unincumbered; that the plaintiff, Silverman, and the defendant, Peter Greaser, who also has a judgment in Mason county, both live in the State of Ohio and have lived there for several years past. The defendant further says, that “all of the parties owning the judgments against Daniel Greaser, as set forth in the plaintiff’s bill, have never tried to collect the same from said Daniel Greaser, but have at the instance and request of said Greaser brought this suit to sell the defendant’s property in order to relieve him from the burden of said indebtedness, and deprive her and her children of their home and support.”
On May 13,1882, the cause was heard upon the pleadings, exhibits and depositions; and the said two deeds were set aside as to the judgment-liens, and the cause was referred to a commissioner to ascertain the amount of the liens-«and their priorities. On September 19,1882, the case was again heard on the former orders and the report of the commissioner auditing the amounts and fixing the priorities of the liens, and the court confirmed the report and ordered that the property by a commissioner therein appointed be sold, &c.
From the said several decrees the defendant, Elizabeth Greaser, appealed.
The first error assigned is, that the court permitted one of the attorneys for the plaintiff to appear and waive notice to Daniel Greaser of the takiug of certain depositions, thereby permitting an attorney to appear for both plaintiff and defendant in a suit, where their interests were opposite. Whatever may be said as to this action on the part of the court, it was not to the prejudice of the defendant, Elizabeth Greaser. She had notice, and tfie depositions were properly read as to her. Daniel Greaser filed no answer and could not take an appeal, if he had been so disposed, without first moving in the court below to set aside the decree.
It is also assigned as error, that the court refused to allow the attorney for the defendant, Elizabeth Greaser, to appear for Daniel Greaser at the request of Elizabeth Greaser and object to the reading of certain depositions, because Daniel Greaser had not been served with notice of the taking thereof. The court did not err in this. Elizabeth Greaser had no right to request counsel to appear for her husband. She could not object to reading the depositions as to herself, because Daniel Greaser had not been served with notice. She having been served with notice the depositions were properly read as to her. (Bowyer v. Knapp Martin, 15 W. Va. 292.)
Jt is also insisted that the court erred in setting aside the
Where it is shown, that there is fraud in tact in the making of the deed, whether the actual fraudulent intent relates to existing creditors, or is directed exclusively against subsequent creditors, the effect is plainly the same, and subsequent creditors as wqll $s existing creditors may successfully inp
It is insisted by counsel for appellant, that there appears from the record to have been a conspiracy between the defendant, Daniel Greaser, and his creditors to rob the petitioner of her property to pay his debts, in order to relieve the personal property of said Greaser from the payment of his debts. To sustain this assertion referenceis had to the affidavit of one of the counsel for the plaintiff. We need not enquire into the effect of such a conspiracy, as the question is not raised by the record, the affidavit referred to being no part of the record. Neither is the question raised by the pleadings; and if it had been, it is not sustained by the proofs.
The decrees of the circuit court are affirmed.
Affirmed.