This case is before the court on plaintiff’s appeal'from the judgment of the St. Louis court of appeals, afiirming the action of the circuit court in sustaining a demurrer to plaintiff ’ s petition, and rendering judgment thereon, and the only question involved is the sufficiency of the petition.
The petition in substance alleges that John Doyle, • in December, 1866, in his last will, made a number of specific charitable bequests, and provided that in case he should pay off such bequests during his lifetime, such payments should be treated by his executors as full
It was said in the case of McLaughlin v. McLaughlin,
This case was followed in the cases of Tucker v. Fucker,
In the cases above cited the property given away or conveyed by the husband was pursued in the hands of the donees. This is not attempted to be done in this case, and we may say of it as was said by Judge Thompson in the opinion of the court of appeals, that: “The only relief which courts of equity have ever granted in such cases, has been to set aside the fraudulent conveyance in so far as it affects the rights of the widow; to charge fraudulent grantee or donee with a trust in her favor, and to require him to make good to her that which she would have received out of the property which the husband had thus conveyed or given away, if no such gift or conveyance had been made. There is no principle of equity which will allow the money or property, of which' the widow has been thus deprived through the fraud of the husband in his lifetime, to be charged against his general estate after his death. The widow cannot pass by the fraudulent donees or grantees of her husband, and allow them to keep the money of which his fraud, in which they have participated and of which they are the beneficiaries, has deprived her, and at the same time claim that a court of equity should enable her to put her hands in the pocket of some one else, and take therefrom what she has thus lost.”
For the reasons herein given, the judgment of the court of appeals is affirmed,
