Elliott v. Waring

21 Ky. 338, 5 T.B. Mon. 338, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 160
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 2, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ky. 338 (Elliott v. Waring) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elliott v. Waring, 21 Ky. 338, 5 T.B. Mon. 338, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 160 (Ky. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinion

Judge Mills,

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Waring, the appellee, filed these two bills, setting up two judgments at law obtained against Elliott, in favor of other persons, and assigned by the plaintiffs therein to Waring, after the judgments were rendered; and alleging that executions had been issued thereon, with returns of no estate, Elliott being insolvent. He also states that Elliott’s wife’s father had departed this life,,intestate, leaving a large estate, a great portion of which, both real, personal and slaves, had thus descended to Elliott, in right, of his wife; and that Elliott and his wife, knowing that it would be subject to these and other judgments, had, a few days after the death of his father-in-law, united in a sale and conveyance thereof to her brother, the administrator of the father in law, and that the brother had executed his notes for three thousand dollars, the feigned price thereof, not to Elliott, but to Benjamin Taylor as trustee for Mrs. Elliott and her children. He charges that this conveyance is fraudulent, prays that it may be set aside and the estate subjected to his demands, which he held as assignee, or if the conveyance was not fraudulent, his demands might be satisfied out of the price due from the purchaser to the aforesaid trustee.

Elliott’s answer. Answer of Taylor, the trustee for the. wife and children. Decree of the circuit court. Objections to the manner of the decree. In a bill by assignee of a judgment, the assignor in ■whose name the judgment w.as recovered must bo parly.

- Elliott answered that it was the intention of his father-in-law to give him ño more of his estate, knowing his hopeless insolvency, and to settle whatever portion he designed for her, in the hands of trustees, for the use of herself and children; but he died intestate suddenly, without having made such disposition, and he, Elliott, knowing the intention, of her father, executed the deed immediately after his death, in conformity thereto, believing it an act of justice thus to place it beyond his own control, for the purpose of supporting his wife and children, who must otherwise come to want.

The trustee answered that he accepted the trust at the request of the parties, to hole! the estate for Mrs. Elliott, and was not apprized of any fraud therein, and knew but little about any demands against Elliott. The purchaser did not answer.

The court below set asi’de the deed as fraudulent, and directed the judgments of the appellee to be satisfied out of the estate.

If there was no other objection to this proceeding, than the mode in which the decree is rendered, we should he compelled to reverse it. After setting aside the deed, without taking any account of the estate descended to Mrs, Elliott, or there being any part of the pleadings or exhibits shewing what kind of estate it is, or in what it consisted, the court appointed commissioners and licensed them by the decree to go and take of the estate descended to EE liott, in right of his wife, by that discription only, and to sell so much thereof as would satisfy the demands of the appellee.

Without, however, dwelling on this point, there is a defect of parties to the bill. The original holders-of these judgments, still hold the legal title thereto, and judgments not being rendered assignable by law, the assignments only passed an equity to the appellee, and therefore, according to former decisions, they were necessary parties to the suit, and ought to have been brought before the court, previous to rendering any decree in favor of the appellee.

Omitted partios. Where a judgment creditor brings a bill to set aside the husband’s assignment of the wife’s distributive share in the estate of her father, who <liocl during the coverture, executed to raise a fund in the hands of trustees, for the wife and childer-n, and to subject such share, or the price, to the satisfaction of the debt: the wife and children must be parties. Jíquity tvill not aid the insolvent or improvident husband to obtain the possession of •(.ho wife’s estate, without

But there is a more important party which ought to be made before anj’ decree, and that is Mrs. Elliott and ber children.

It is urged that she can have no interest therein, as the estate descended to her vested in her husband, and became liable to his debts. ,It will be found, however, that she has an equitable interest, which the chancellor will not fail to notice. It is certainly true, that whatever chattels and slaves the wife may possess at her marriage, become the property of the husband on the marriage, and whatever comes or accrues to her during coverture, vests in the husband according to the course of the common law. Bat it is equally true that the chancellor will not lend his aid to enable the husband to get at the estate of the wife where he is not possessed, until he shall make for her separate use a suitable provision out of it. Though husband and wife are counted inlaw, one person, yet equity frequently treats them differently, and there the husband may sue the wife, or the wife the husband, and they may be permitted, in certain cases, to sue and defend separately. While it is necessary for family government, and also to the relation to the rest of society, in which the husband and wife may stand, that there should be hut one will to govern, and one owner of property, yet there are great abuses as well as hardships growing out of that rule, which coiuts of law cannot correct, or relieve, and equity therefore will interpose, and give redress. One of these hardships is the suffering of the wife and children, from the imprudence of the husband, and equity will often relieve it, by providing for the .maintenance of the wife, especially out of an estate originally belonging to ber in her own right.

It is evident in this case that there had been no distribution made of this estate t.o Elliott previous to conveyance to the trustee for the use of the wife, and that is not pretended. The legal title therefore, of the chattels and slaves was not in Elliott, and to get at them himself, and recover them from the hands of tho administrator, he would have had to have brought a suit in the name of himself and. [341]*341•wife, and in such suit, though it had not been expressly asked by the wife, the chancellor might, and would have directed a suitable provision for wife and children by a settlement, before any decree would have been rendered in the husband’s favor, and would by the aid of a master have fixed on the extent of this provision. Oxenden vs. Oxenden, 2 Vern. 494; Bosvill vs. Brander, 1 Pr. Wms. 459; Jacobson vs. Williams, 2 Pr. Wms. 382; Brown vs. Elton, 3 Pr. Wms. 202; Jewson vs. Moulson, 2 Atk. 417; Grey vs. Kentish, 1 Atk. 280; 1 Ves. 539; Howard vs. Moffatt, 2 John. Chy. Rep. 206.

mating an adequateprovision for the dren.1" ° 1" In such case those claim-h^band^wili bo subjected to the same terms' Creditors of the husband shall not subject the property which falls to the wife by descent or devise, during the coverture in opposition to the claims of the wife and children in danger of distress:— But the chancellor will make for them an ade?”nate Pr0V1” Wife and raay bare in.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Ky. 338, 5 T.B. Mon. 338, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-waring-kyctapp-1827.