230 N.W. 28 | S.D. | 1930
This appeal is from a judgment and order denying a new trial in an action wherein the superintendent of banks seeks to set aside, as a fraudulent conveyance, a deed by L. M. Gable to Myrtle Gable, his wife, one of the respondents herein.
The trial court found- as follows: Wagner State Bank suspended business on September 26, 1925. An assessment of 100 per cent against the stockholders of the bank according h> section 8937, R. C. 1919, was ordered. L. M. Gable owned shares of the par value of $2,000. On April 29, 1926, L. M. Gable executed the deed in question. It conveyed 240 acres valued at $18,000 and subject to a mortgage of $10,500. The consideration named was “one dollar and other valuable consideration.” The grantor had acquired this land in parcels of 40 acres each, the first purchase in 1904, the last in 1916. The grantee had! “contributed the sum of $6,033.33 for the purchase and improvement of the lands”; and the money so contributed, with interest, amounted to the full value of the equity in the real estate. On April 29, 1926, the total liabilities of L. M. Gable amounted to $4,029.98, and he owned other real estate and personal property of the fair, reasonable, salable value of $5,208.48. L. M. Gable was not insolvent at the time of the execution of the deed in question, and, in conveying this land to Myrtle Gable, he acted in good faith and without intent to hinder, delay, or defraud his creditors. On October 14, 1926, L. M. Gable died, leaving a will giving to his wife, Myrtle Gable, respondent herein, all his property and naming her as executrix. In November, 1926, iS. L. Gable, brother of L. M. Gable, was appointed administrator with the will annexed and as such is a party defendant and respondent. On these findings the trial court entered judgment dismissing appellant’s complaint.
But it is not necessary to determine whether the proof offered would have been admissible in direct examination. It was offered in cross-examination of a witness who was a brother of the deceased grantor, the brother-in-law of the grantee, a witness who
Appellant also assigns as error the refusal of the trial court to permit him to call the administrator as an adverse witness under section 2714, R. C. 1919, and examine him as if under cross-examination. Whether when, at the 'beginning of the trial, • appellant sought to so examine the administrator, it was error to deny appellant’s claim of right, we d'o not decide. No useful purpose would now be served in supplementing what has already been said by this court in Langford v. Issenhuth, 28 S. D. 451, 134 N. W. 889; Hauff & Stormo v. S. D. Cen. Ry. Co., 34 S. D. 183, 147 N. W. 986, and more recently in Larson v. Nelson, 54 S. D. 184, 223 N. W. 41; Jerke v. Delmont State Bank, 54 S.D. 446, 223 N.W. 585; and Walworth County Bank v. Taylor, 55 S. D. 24, 224 N.W. 929. His testimony, some of which has been heretofore referred to, and the testimony of his codefendant clearly showed before the conclusion of the trial that he was not merely a nominal party and1 disinterested administrator in this litigation. It is apparent that he was actively interested in protecting the interests of his sister-in-law, the grantee in the deed sought to be set aside. She herself testi-
As heretofore stated!, the trial court found that Myrtle Gable, the grantee in the deed, had “contributed the sum of $6,-033.33 for the purchase and improvement of the land,” and that the money so contributed', with interest, amounted to the full value of the equity in that 240-acre tract. In Churchill & Alden Co. v. Ramsey, 50 S. D. 73, 208 N. W. 406, 407, this court said: “In view of the relation 'between husband and wife, the law does not imply, merely from the receipt by the husband of the proceeds of sale of property standing in the wife’s name, a promise on his part to repay or replace the same as it might between strangers. There must be either an express promise to- repay, or such attendant circumstances as affirmatively establish the fact that the husband and wife in the particular transaction dealt with each other as debtor and creditor.”
In the case at bar the mere fact — if it be a fact — that the wife contributed $6,033.33, for the purchase and improvement of the land is not enough to show that husband and wife dealt with each other as debtor and creditor. But respondent calls attention to the more recent decision of this court in Meloy v. Kell, 220 N. W. 863. There is nothing in the latter decision inconsistent with the decision in Churchill & Alden Co. v. Ramsey, supra, cited and followed therein. In the case of Meloy v. Kell, the trial court found, on facts in many respects different from those in the case at bar and on evidence that was competent, that the grantee therein paid to her husband full consideration for the premises. A careful review of the entire record did not permit this court to say that the finding was without adequate support in the evidence. In the case at bar, the finding that the grantee merely “contributed” for the purchase and improvement of the land an amount which, with in
For another reason also the judgment must be reversed. Practically all the testimony as to the transactions whereby respondent Myrtle Gable “contributed” this sum of $6,033.33 to her husband was that of Myrtle Gable herself. This was incompetent under subdivision 2 of section 2717, R. C. 1919, which states the grounds of exclusion as follows: “In civil actions or proceedings by or against executors, administrators, heirs at law or next of kin in which judgment may be rendered or order entered for or against them, neither party nor his assignor nor any person who has ever had any interest in the subject of the action adverse to the other party, or to his testator or intestate, shall be allowed to testify against such other party as to any transaction whatever with or statement by the testator or intestate, unless called to testify thereto by the opposite party.”
The defendant S. D. Gable was the administrator with the will annexed and was sued as such. The defendant Myrtle Gable, in addition to being the executrix named in the will and sole beneficiary thereunder, was the -grantee in the deed sought to be set aside as being in violation of chapter 209, Laws of 1919, the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act. If the court finds that such conveyance should be set aside, the effect of a decree will be to place in the hands of the administrator respondent property with which to pay the claim of appellant. To a considerable extent this will come from respondent Myrtle Gable. Under section 3309., R. C. 1919, it is made the duty of an administrator to sue to recover real estate conveyed by his intestate with intent to defraud his creditors. The claim of Myrtle Gable is no less adverse to the estate of L. M. Gable, deceased, because the administrator appears herein as a codefendant.
“The words ‘adverse party’ are not limited to the adverse positions of plaintiff and defendant. These words have been held to affect any party, whether plaintiff or defendant, whose interests are*610 actually adverse to those of another party to the action who appears in the capacity of * * * administrator. * * * In other words, the position of the names on either side of the record is not the determining factor as to the adverseness of the interest claimed or defended to that of the representative of the decedent or incompetent.” Jones Ev. (2d Ed.) § 2233, p. 4276; Horwitz, Jones Ev. § 773, P- <%i-
For a case in many points identical, see Adler v. Hellman, 55 Neb. 286, 75 N. W. 877, citing Grier v. Cable Adm’r et al, 87 N. C. 377, wherein the court said: “It is plain if a suit be brought under the authority of the act, by the personal representative against the * * * fraudulent alienee of the land, for its conversion into assets, the defendant could not be heard to testify to a communication or transactiqn between himself and the deceased in support of his own title and to defeat the plaintiff’s action, and we see no reason why the statutory disability would not apply with equal force to such testimony proceeding from the defendant asserting title in himself, when the creditors sue both him and the personal representative, to enforce upon the latter a neglected legal duty. Though necessarily associated as defendants, their relations are adversary, inter sese, as to the subject matter of the action, as truly and for all practical purposes, as if they were arrayed in opposition upon the record; and certainly no*prejudice ought to accrue to creditors because they coerce him to do- what the obligations of his assumed trust required him to do without coercion.”
Without unduly prolonging this opinion, we cannot discuss— and because there must be a new trial, it is not necessary to discuss —the several other assignments of error involving, as they do, the sufficiency of the evidence to support findings as to- value of assets.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed.