DocketNumber: Appeal, 94
Judges: Frazer, Walling, Simpson, Kephart, Schaffer
Filed Date: 1/27/1931
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
In May, 1926, the defendant, Edward B. Scott, conveyed a house and lot in Scranton to his wife, Mary G. Scott, also a defendant, the title passing through the name of a third party. At the time, Scott's liabilities, partly contingent, amounted to approximately $11,000, four thousand of which was as endorser on notes held by the plaintiff bank. Both under the general law (12 R. C. L. 498) and under the statute (see Act of May 21, 1921, P. L. 1045, 1046, concerning Fraudulent Conveyances, etc.) a contingent liability has the same status as one that is fixed. Some seven months later, his indebtedness to the bank was increased $9,000 by other endorsements. His liability on these endorsements, amounting in all to $13,000, became absolute and he proving insolvent, plaintiff filed this bill in equity to have its indebtedness charged upon the house and lot, which, subject to an encumbrance, was valued at $18,000. The case was heard upon bill, answer and testimony. Plaintiff's contention, sustained by the trial court was, that, owing to Scott's financial condition, the conveyance to the wife, reciting a consideration of one dollar, was a legal fraud upon his creditors. From the final decree granting plaintiff the relief prayed for, defendants have appealed.
The case turned largely on questions of fact, as to which we are not satisfied the trial court erred. It exonerated the defendants from any actual fraud but held they had not met the burden of establishing the validity of the transfer as against his creditors. Scott being indebted when he made the transfer, the burden was upon *Page 297
the wife to establish the validity of her title by clear and satisfactory evidence, beyond that required of other creditors: Butterworth v. Wells et al.,
If Scott was solvent when he made the transfer to his wife, aside from the property transferred, it was valid regardless of consideration: Buckwalter Stove Co. v. Edmonds,
After the decree nisi was filed, the defendants amended their answer so as to aver that Mrs. Scott paid full value for the property, the evidence having embraced that feature of the case. She had an estate of her own consisting, inter alia, of stocks, real estate, etc., from which *Page 298
she derived an income. About 1901 and 1902 Mr. Scott was in ill health and she checked out in her own name large sums in defraying living and household expenses. It was not clearly shown, however, that it was her own money, and there was no proof that it was on the basis of a loan to the husband. Money expended by a wife for the benefit of the home, of which she is a member, cannot be recovered from the husband in the absence of some understanding as to repayment: Hauer's Est.,
Section 9, clause (a), of the act above cited (P. L. 1047), also provides that in such case the creditor may "Have the conveyance set aside or obligation annulled to the extent necessary to satisfy his claim." And that was the order made by the trial court.
The general rule is that where a conveyance is set aside as void to existing creditors, it inures to the benefit of all creditors, present and future. See Kehr v. Smith,
The decree is affirmed and the appeal is dismissed at the cost of appellants.
Butterworth v. Wells Et Ux. ( 1931 )
Billington v. Sweeting ( 1896 )
Johnston v. Johnston's Administrator ( 1858 )
American Trust Co. v. Kaufman ( 1926 )
Dalley's Assigned Estate ( 1901 )
Westmoreland Guarantee Building & Loan Ass'n v. Thomas ( 1904 )
Fidelity Trust Co. v. Union National Bank ( 1933 )
Raub Supply Co. v. Brandt ( 1936 )
Farmers T. Co. of Lanc. v. Bevis ( 1938 )
Butterworth v. Wells Et Ux. ( 1931 )
United States v. Green ( 2000 )
Amadon v. Amadon Et Ux. ( 1948 )
Morrison v. Marks Et Ux. ( 1936 )
Braley v. the First Nat'l Bk. ( 1932 )
Fleet v. Rhode (In Re Fleet) ( 1988 )
United States v. Gleneagles Inv. Co., Inc. ( 1984 )
Queen-Favorite B. & L. Ass'n v. Burstein ( 1932 )
Powell v. Third National Bank & Trust Co. ( 1941 )
Meehan v. Shreveport-Eldorado Pipe Line Co. ( 1932 )
Hart, Schaffner & Marx v. Koch ( 1932 )