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NIXON, District Judge. The facts in the ease are not numerous, and there is little controversy respecting them. The defendant McNabb is frank in avowing his intentions in making the conveyance. He'says: “Mrs. McNabb paid no consideration; the transfer was simply to put the property in her name, that a house could be built on it, and make a home.” The purpose was laudable under some circumstances, but the complainants allege that he attempted to accomplish the object at their expense. His motive may not have been fraudulent, but on the eve of contracting new debts, and incurring large liabilities, he withdrew from his creditors all his real estate, and most of his personal property, and paced it under the
*1075 control of his wife, or left them to take the hazard of losses in the business in which he was about to engage. The transaction is attended with the badge of fraud discussed by Chief Justice Marshall in the leading case of Sexton v. Wheaton, 8 Wheat. [1 U. S.] 250, and the transfer is clearly fraudulent and void upon the principles on which the case was decided. The property conveyed constituted the bulk of the grantor’s estate. He was largely indebted at the time according to his schedules subsequently filed in bankruptcy. The transfer took place just as he was starting in a new business enterprise, into which he was embarking without capital, and which, he says, he proposed to conduct on credit. His failure occurred as soon as his creditors became tired of extending and renewing his notes, which the partnership gave for their purposes. The supreme court in Parish v. Murphree, 13 How. [54 U. S.] 93, and in Seitz v. Mitchell, 94 U. S. 580, refused to sustain conveyances made under circumstances quite as favorable to the defendants as the one under consideration. In the first recited case the court said that “when a voluntary conveyance is made by an individual free from debt, with a purpose of committing a fraud on future creditors, it is void under the statute of frauds. And if a settlement be made without any fraudulent intent, yet If the amount thus conveyed impaired the means of the grantor, so as to hinder and delay his creditors it is as to them void.” And in Seitz v. Mitchell, Mr. Justice Strong remarked that, “purchases of either real estate or personal property made by the wife of an insolvent debtor during coverture are justly regarded with suspicion, unless it clearly appears that the consideration was paid out of her separate estate, such is the community of interest between husband and wife: such purchases are often a cover for a debtor’s property, are so frequently resorted to for the purpose of withdrawing the property from the reach of the creditors, ana preserving it for his own use, and they hold forth such temptations for fraud that they require close scrutiny. In a contest between the creditors of the husband and the wife, there is, there should be, a presumption against her which she must overcome by affirmative proof.” There was no such proof in this case. Let a decree be entered in favor of the complainants.
Document Info
Citation Numbers: 4 F. Cas. 1074, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1637
Judges: Nixon
Filed Date: 5/22/1878
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024