79 N.Y.S. 1028 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
This action is by a judgment creditor to set aside a conveyance from husband to wife as fraudulent. On March 2, 1896, the husband conveyed his undivided one-third interest (worth $3,000) in a farm to Jennie P. Marsh, who immediately conveyed to the wife. In 1897 the plaintiff, a son of the said husband by a former marriage, began an action against his father in the circuit court of the United States for the district of New Jersey for an accounting of his mother’s estate. In 1899 the said deeds were recorded. In 1900 a decree in the -circuit court action was entered against the defendant, and an action was brought in this court to enforce the decree, which resulted in the judgment that is the basis of this action. These facts, supplemented by the testimony of the husband that he had no other property when he made the conveyance, constitute the plaintiff's case. The question
“Whenever a husband acquires possession of the separate property of his wife, whether with or without her consent, he must be deemed to hold it in trust for her benefit, in the absence of any direct evidence that she intended to make a gift of it to him.”
This language is cited and approved in Garner v. Bank, 151 U. S. 420, 430, 14 Sup. Ct. 390, 38 L. Ed. 218, in which case the court also cited from Steadman v. Wilbur, 7 R. I. 481, 486, which is pertinent to this case:
“She cannot, indeed, when her husband becomes insolvent, convert into debts, as against creditors, former deliveries to him of her money or other property, or permitted receipts by him of the income or proceeds of sale of her separate estate, which at the time of such delivery or receipt were intended by her as gifts, to assist him in his business; or to pay their common expenses of living; and, considering the relation between them, the law would not, merely from such delivery or receipt, imply a promise on his part to replace or repay, as in case of persons not thus related, but would require more, either in express promise or circumstances, to prove that in these matters they had dealt with each other as debtor and creditor. It is not, however, as supposed, a rule of law that at the time of each delivery or receipt of the separate property of the wife by the husband the latter must expressly promise to repay the former, or to secure her out of his estate, to constitute the relation of debtor and creditor between them in regard to it. Such a promise, made before such transactions, and looking forward to and covering them, would, at law, as in common sense,, avail as well to prove the •character of them precisely as it would between other parties who were dealing with each other on credit and in confidence. Nor is it true that an express promise to secure or repay out of the estate of the husband is requisite in such a case to prove that her husband received her separate property as a loan, and was, therefore, entitled, as against his creditors, thus to secure and repay her. Neither at law nor in equity is inferential proof to be rejected upon such a subject, more than upon any other, although, as suggested, what are proper inferences may be modified or altered by the relation between the parties.”
See, too, Plow Co. v. Wing, 85 N. Y. 421, 426. It is urged that Vogedes v. Beakes, 38 App. Div. 380, 56 N. Y. Supp. 662, should have controlled this case. In that case the court held that the county judge erred in withdrawing from the jury the question whether the transfer
No fraud is found on the part of the wife. She testifies that when the deed was made she did not know that her husband owed money to other persons. Certainly, the character of her husband’s debt to the plaintiff, namely, a debt due as guardian of his son by his first wife, was not such as to make it probable that the second wife had cognizance thereof, and there is no testimony whatever that establishes or tends to establish her knowledge of that liability. She cannot be charged with constructive notice. Stearns v. Gage, 79 N. Y. 102; Parker v. Conner, 93 N. Y. 118, 45 Am. Rep. 178. I think that the transaction even bears the test of the case cited by the learned counsel for the appellant as stating the rule (Bank v. Sherwood, 162 N. Y. 310, 318, 56 N. E. 834), which, it is tobe noted, cited, inter alla, the authorities criticised in the appellant’s points, namely, Dudley v. Danforth, 61 N. Y. 626, and Knower v. Bank, 124 N. Y. 552, 27 N. E. 247, 21 Am. St. Rep. 700, that the sale of property to a creditor in payment of his debt, and solely so taken, cannot be defeated by another creditor by reason of the vendor’s fraudulent intent, although that intent was known to the vendee.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.