SUSIE WANTULOK, Administrаtrix of the Estate of John A. Wantulok, Deceased, and Susie Wantulok, sole Heir-at-Law of the said John A. Wantulok, Deceased, Plaintiff and Appellant, vs. JOE WANTULOK, Defendant and Respondent.
No. 2446
Supreme Court of Wyoming
February 7th, 1950
214 Pac. (2d) 477
BLUME, Justice.
For the defendant and respondent the cause was submitted upon the brief of Raper and Raper of Sheridan, Wyoming, and oral argument by Mr. John F. Raper.
OPINION.
BLUME, Justice.
The plaintiff herein is Susie Wantulok, Administratrix of the estate of John A. Wantulok, and sole heir-at-law of John A. Wantulok. The defendant is a brother of John A. Wantulok. This action was commenced on July 16, 1948. Plaintiff alleged her status as heir and administratrix; that John A. Wantulok
The defendant answered and filed a cross-petition. In that cross-petition and in the answer, he alleged that on September 1, 1936, John A. Wantulok and his wife gave him a mortgage on the premises involved herein for the sum of $1500 which he claimed he loaned to the husband of the plaintiff between 1912 and 1926; that the deed of April 26, 1937, was executed in satisfaction of the foregoing mortgage and upon further payment by the defendant to the husband of the plaintiff of the sum of $1000. Defendant accordingly asked that he be declared to be the absolute owner of the property in question here. The court entered judgment on February 23, 1949, and made the following finding of fact: Plaintiff is the administratrix of the estate of John A. Wantulok, deceased, and is sole heir; she and her husband on November 25, 1936, executed a mortgage to the defendant covering the property
From that judgment, the plaintiff has appealed. The defendant did not appeal. His counsel, however, appeared in this court insisting that the judgment of the district court should be affirmed, at the same time joining counsel for the plaintiff in asking that, if possible, the title to the property be extricated from the deplorable condition in which it is now found.
We accept the finding of the trial court that the mortgage and deed above mentioned were without consideration. We have read over the evidence and believe that the court reached the correct conclusion. So we shall not set out any of the evidence bearing on that point or bearing on the cross-petition of the defendant, except as it might be necessary incidentally, and we shall confine ourselves in briefly outlining the evidence which seems to have a bearing on the finding of the court that the property in controversy was
Plaintiff‘s husband was a coal miner and, seemingly, uneducated. He died in 1945. Plaintiff, herself, is uneducated, understands little of the laws of this country and her testimony had to be taken through an interpreter. Plaintiff‘s husband owned the property in controversy, consisting of some eight acres of land near the City of Sheridan, Wyoming, part of it being swamp land. A house of seven rooms was erected thereon which was occupied by the plaintiff and her husband. In addition thereto, they had a house of three rooms which was rented and on which plaintiff and her husband at all times collected the rent without any objection on the part of the defendant. Plaintiff and her husband had a daughter who was born in 1911. That daughter became sick in the early part of 1936 when she was 24 or 25 yeаrs of age. She lay sick for some six weeks and died in March, 1936. By reason thereof the plaintiff and her husband—as plaintiff testified—owed about $1400.00, due to the physician and the hospital and for funeral expenses. They owed no other debts. They had only $500 and paid that on these bills. Plaintiff‘s husband was out of employment so the plaintiff, herself, hired out as a cook and for a number of years acted as such to earn the money to pay the indebtedness due as above mentioned, and that indebtedness was, prior to the commencement of this action, all paid. After paying the $500 in cash—all the cash that they had—there was still due approximately the sum of $900. Plaintiff testified that they—she and her husband—wanted to pay the remaining indebtedness, and merely wanted time to do so. But plaintiff‘s husband, fearing that such time might not be given, but that their property might be taken from
As a general rule, courts will not aid a fraudulent grantor to recover from his transferee, property transferred in fraud of creditors.
Counsel for plaintiff contend that in view of the fact, as shown by the evidence, that the debts in question herein were all paid at the time of the commencement of this action, the fraud, if any, was purged and should not have been considered herein by the court. Counsel cite the case of Carman v. Athearn, 77 Cal. App. 2d 585, 175 P. 2d 926, 933. That case involved an agreement between husband and wife as to the partition of property, which the wife claimed to have been transferred to her in fraud of creditors. The court stated: “This so-called ‘clean hands’ doctrine is not here applicable for several reasons. In the first place, the evidence here shows that plaintiff has purged himself of his prior fraudulent conduct. His uncontradicted evidence was to the effect that the claims of his first wife have been fully paid. While there was evidence by defendant that plaintiff owed other creditors, plaintiff testified the claims of these creditors had also been settled. The trial court chose to believe plaintiff and to disbelieve defendant. No creditor testified that plaintiff owed him one cent. Under such circumstances the law is well settled that the ‘clean hands’ doctrine has no application.” But the contrary has been held in other cases, holding that a fraudulent
Some of the cases hold that when a conveyance is made with a fraudulent intent, it cannot be recovered by the grantor even though there was no injurious consequences and no creditors in fact existed. Other cases, however, more numerous, take a more charitable view and hold that when no creditors in fact exist, then inasmuch as no one has been harmed, the transaction is not to be deemed to have been a fraudulent conveyance and hence that the transferrer should be permitted to recover the property so conveyed. 24 Am. Juris. 269, Sec. 120,
The rule has arisen in connection with a transfer of a homestead. It was said in Alexander v. Bobier, 65 Okla. 301, 166 P. 716, 718, as follows: “The law has made the homestead free and independent of its own-er‘s debts and creditors, and in extending credit to
Were there any creditors in the legal sense of that term? Counsel for plaintiff strenuously insist that there were none; that the indebtedness mentioned in the testimony was not that of the plaintiff or her hus-
It is true that courts of equity are chary of reaching out a helping hand to litigants who voluntarily convey land in order to delay, hinder, or defraud creditors. Cook v. Mason, 353 Mo. 993, 185 S. W. 2d 793, 157 A. L. R. 942. At the same time, the doctrine of clean hands is not rigid. Rasmussen v. Nielsen, 142 N. J. Eq. 657, 61 Atl. 2d 441. It has its limitations. It does not operate so as to repel all sinners from a court of equity nor does it apply to every unconscien-
We shall not base our final conclusion herein, except as to the homestead, definitely upon any one of the rules or matters herein discussed, but shall base that
We think, accordingly, that the judgment of the trial court herein should be modified and that the cause be remanded to the trial court with direction to order defendant to convey the property to the plaintiff, and that even in case of failure to do so the conveyance herein involved, dated April 26, 1937, be cancelled and held to be null and void and that the defendant be held to have no interest whatever in and to the property herein involved by reason thereof. It is so ordered.
RINER, C. J., and KIMBALL, concur.
ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
(No. 2446; November 14th, 1950; 223 Pac. (2d) 1030)
OPINION
BLUME, Justice.
A petition for rehearing has been filed in the foregoing case by the defendant. The original opinion herein is found in 214 P. 2d 477.
In this case the plaintiff and her deceased husband conveyed property of the value of approximately $11,000 to the defendant, brother of plaintiff‘s deceased husband, without consideration and under an oral agreement to reconvey the property upon demand. Plaintiff sought to have the brother declared trustee and asked to have the property reconveyed and the title quieted in her. The court refused the plaintiff relief on account of the fact that it appeared that the conveyance was made in fraud of creditors. The court also dismissed defendant‘s answers and cross-petitions—one of the latter being in the nature of ejectment. He did not appeal. In view of that fact the only question before us was whether or not, upon plaintiff‘s appeal, she should be denied relief upon the ground stated by the trial court. We believed that the facts and circumstances in the case justified us in taking a step additional to that taken by the trial court and order reconveyance of the property in question and to quiet title thereto in the plaintiff.
The petition for rehearing is based on the ground of newly discovered evidence, and, secondly, on the ground that our decision is contrary to law and the evidence. We shall consider these grounds in their order. There
Appellate courts will at times, at the original hearing of a case, in order that a proper order may be entered, take into consideration an incontestible fact not appearing in the record on appeal. Generally, however, additional proofs cannot be supplied in the appellate courts. 5 C. J. S. 243-245, Hess vs. Conway, 93 Kan. 246, 144 P. 205. Few courts will grant a rehearing on the ground of newly discovered evidence. The general rule is to the contrary. 4 C. J. S. 2034, 3 Am. Juris. 347, 350. In United States vs. Maxwell Land-Grant Co., 122 U. S. 365, 30 L. Ed. 1211, 7 Sup. Ct. 1271, the court says: “If this court should grant a rehearing it could only be had, according to the uniform course of the court during its whole existence, upon the record now before the court
We shall then proceed to consider the second alleged ground for rehearing. And we shall first consider the homestead right. We think that our holding in that connection was sound.
That leaves for consideration the property as to the value over and above the homestead right of $2500—allegedly about the sum of $8500. The case is one of first impression in this court. We did not rest our decision on any one particular rule. To determine whether the conclusion at which we arrived was right or wrong, we must bear in mind that the general rule, the prevailing view, mentioned in the original opinion (not wholly adopted by the trial court, see 37 C. J. S. 1097, Sec. 264), which gives no assistance to a fraudulent grantor as between the parties, is in direct conflict with the principle of equity which abhors unjust enrichment. And the question in any case like that before us always is as to whether the one or the other of these clashing and irreconcilable rules should predominate. The answer is not always easy. The general rule had its origin in a period when defaulting debtors were regarded almost as criminals and when thousands of them languished in jail without mercy for non-payment of debts. See Curtis vs. Perry, 6 Ves. Jun. 740, 747, 31 Engl. Rep. 1285, 1288, (1802), Baldwin vs. Cawthorne, 19 Ves. Jun. 166, 34 Engl. Rep. 480 (1812), Doe vs. Roberts, 2 B. & Ald. 367, 106 Engl. Rep. 401, 47 Mich. Law Rev. 877-906 “Coming Into Equity With Clean Hands,” 3 Aubrey, Rise and Growth of the English Nation 136. It is not surprising that in view of such social atmosphere the principle in relation to unjust enrichment in cases like that before us was ignored. But with changes in ideology, the time was bound to come when the latter would be more and more pressing for equal or superior recognition, depending on the circumstances. We pointed out in the original opinion that the Massachusetts court holds that a defendant “cannot rely upon any attempt of the plaintiff to de-
If what has been said means anything and has any merit, as we think it has, then it follows that the general rule above mentioned cannot be applied rigidly, and must give way, at times at least, to the equitable principle which abhors unjust enrichment, and that is as far as we thought it advisable to go in the original opinion. This position is fully supported by the Restatement of the Law of Restitution, which—doubtless in view of what has heretofore been stated—seems to represent what we may call an intermediate view on the subject before us, and which, if we may judge by the past, will not unlikely gain support. It is stated in Sec. 140, page 562 that: “A person may be prevented from obtaining restitution for a benefit because of his criminal or other wrongful conduct in connection with the transaction on which his claim is based.” It may be noted that the statement contains no imperative. In the comment on that section on page 563 of the same work it is stated: “No definite rule can be stated which will determine in all cases whether restitution will or will not be granted since the courts consider all the circumstances involved in the particular case.” Five different factors which may be taken into consideration are enumerated without stating which shall predominate in a particular case, thus leaving that to the discretion of the court. One of the factors mentioned is: “how great a forfeiture would ensue from a failure to give
The evidence herein shows that the plaintiff‘s role in the transaction herein involved was comparatively passive, the active role seemingly being played by plaintiff‘s deceased husband and the defendant. After reconsidering the premises and the conclusion in the original opinion in the light of what has been here said, we think it unlikely that we were far from right or that an unjust result was reached. Rehearing will accordingly be denied.
RINER, C. J. and KIMBALL, J. concur.
