Clow v. Brown

72 N.E. 534, 37 Ind. App. 172, 1904 Ind. App. LEXIS 272
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 29, 1904
DocketNo. 5,206
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 72 N.E. 534 (Clow v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clow v. Brown, 72 N.E. 534, 37 Ind. App. 172, 1904 Ind. App. LEXIS 272 (Ind. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Black, C. J.

The appellants brought suit against the appellees, John S. Brown, Mary V. Brown and Eannie B. Coddington, upon a judgment rendered by the circuit court of Clinton county, January 9, 1900, in favor of the appellants against the appellee John S. Brown, and to set aside, as fraudulent, as against his creditors, certain conveyances of real estate, situated in Montgomery county, to the other appellees, and a mortgage of real estate in that county to the appellee Mary V. Brown, such conveyances and mortgage having been executed by appellee John S. Brown September 9, 1899. Issues having been formed, the cause was tried by the court and special findings were rendered. The court’s conclusions of law are questioned here.

The coupt stated the facts substantially as follows: In 1854 John S. Brown was a married man, his wife being the daughter of John T. Blair, who in that year conveyed to John S. Brown certain real estate in the town of Crawfordsville, for the consideration of $1,200, of which the sum of $200 was paid by the grantee to the grantor, and [174]*174the remainder of the amount of the consideration was treated by the grantor as an advancement to his daughter, wife of the grantee. Afterward this property was by the grantee exchanged for certain real estate in Orawfordsville, which, for convenience, we will designate as tract A, for which Brown, in addition to the property so received from his father-in-law, gave the sum of $500, taking the title to tract A in his own name. He occupied it, as he did the real estate which he so exchanged for it, as his own property, and he never expressly agreed to pay said sum of $1,000 either to his wife or to his father-in-law. Afterward Mrs. Blair, the mother of Brown’s wife, died intestate- at Montgomery county, and he became the administrator of her estate; and as such he, in 1879, made his final settlement of the estate, in which it was shown that there was due to his wife, daughter of the decedent, as an heir of the intestate, and distributee of the estate, $1,275, for which sum she executed to her husband her receipt, and he at the time executed to her his promissory note for that sum, with interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum. Afterward, in September, 1882, she was stricken with fatal illness, at which time he and she had two children, one being the appellee Fannie B. Ooddington, the other being a son, J ames Brown. In view of her probable death, and for the purpose of dividing her property between these children, she requested her husband to execute to the children his notes for the sum so due her from him, and pursuant to this request he executed his note to the appellee Fannie B. Ooddington for $750, and his note to the son for the same amount, the sum of the two notes being the amount then due as principal and interest upon the note which theretofore he had so executed to his wife, in satisfaction of which the two notes were given. Afterward, the mother of these two children, wife of appellee John S. Brown, died intestate, and no administration was had of her estate. Thereafter the appellees John S. Brown and Mary Y. [175]*175Brown (then Mary Vance), in contemplation of their marriage, entered into a written contract, signed and sealed by them respectively, in duplicate, December 17, 1886, the body of which contract was as follows:

“This article of agreement by and between John S. Brown and Mary D. Vance, both of the city of Orawfordsville, State of Indiana, witnesseth, that said parties now having in contemplation a marriage with each other, do hereby agree as follows: Said parties do hereby mutually agree to renounce and waive, and they do hereby renounce and waive, any and all rights of inheritance each may have under the law of the State of Indiana, by reason of said proposed marriage, to the property of the other; and it is further agreed that in case said Mary D. Vance shall survive said John S. Brown, that upon his death she shall be paid the sum of $10,000 in cash out of the estate of said Brown, this sum to be paid in consideration of her waiver in the estate of said Brown as above set forth.”

At the time of the making of this contract Mary D. Vance was in good health and in the fortieth year of her age, and John S. Brown was in good health and was sixty-three years old. He was then in prosperous circumstances, and worth from $40,000 to $60,000. He was the owner of real estate of the probable value of $30,000, and the court found that the contract was a just and reasonable provision for his wife, in his circumstances at that time. Pursuant to the contract, the parties thereto were duly married December 21, 1886. Subsequently to this marriage, and long prior to September 9, 1899, John S. Brown had -incurred a liability to the appellants for a statutory penalty growing out of his relations with the Orawfordsville Water-Works Company, as a director thereof, and he and others had been sued by the appellants on account of such liability, and the action had been pending in the courts of- Montgomery and Clinton counties since [176]*176August, 1889, and the proceedings finally culminated in a judgment duly rendered by the Clinton Circuit Court against John S. Brown and the estate of Robert B. F. Pierce for $6,203.82, January 9, 1900. At that time the estate of Pierce was insolvent, and at no time has it had assets out of which any part of the judgment could be collected, which judgment is still in full force and wholly unpaid.

James Brown died intestate, leaving as his sole heirs at law his father, John S. Brown, and his sister, Fannie B. Coddington, and John S. Brown settled up the decedent’s estate without an administrator. After payment of the liabilities of the estate, there remained in his hands, belonging to the estate, $560, one-half of which was due to John S. Brown and the other half to Fannie B. Codding-ton. The amount thus due to the latter was never paid to her, but remained in the hands of John S. Brown, without any demand being made for it by her prior to the execution of the deed, hereinafter mentioned, from John S. Brown to Fannie B. Coddington. September 9, 1899, he was the owner in fee simple of certain real estate in Montgomery county, described in the finding, being lots numbered seventeen and twenty in a certain addition to Crawfordsville, which were of the value of $3,200, and subject to a mortgage lien amounting to $1,953.57; also a tract, which we will, for brevity, designate as tract B, worth $2,800, and subject to a mortgage lien of $151, also tract A, above mentioned, worth $10,000, and a portion thereof described, which may be designated as the west part of tract A, was subject to a mortgage of -$3,800 in favor of a bank named, which bank also held as security for such debt a mortgage on another tract of land in that city which John S. Brown then owned, known as the “cooper-shop property,” of the value of $3,200, and subject to no other encumbrance. The bank also held as collateral security for the same debt an insurance policy on [177]*177the life of John S. Brown for $4,000, which was also pledged to the hank to secure the payment of all sums advanced or that might be advanced by it in payment of premiums on the policy and any other debt that Brown might then owe the bank, which had then paid premiums amounting to $1,343; and it was necessary, in order to keep the policy alive, to pay as premiums annually $286, Brown being then seventy-six years of age. Said real estate was also encumbered by a mortgage executed by Brown to Crane & Anderson, to secure a debt of $618.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 N.E. 534, 37 Ind. App. 172, 1904 Ind. App. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clow-v-brown-indctapp-1904.