Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Studds

136 F. Supp. 756, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3963
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedJanuary 13, 1956
DocketCiv. A. No. 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 136 F. Supp. 756 (Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Studds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Studds, 136 F. Supp. 756, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3963 (E.D. Va. 1956).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland obtained a judgment against Colin A. Studds in the sum of $22,102.47, plus interest and costs, which judgment was rendered in this Court on the 16th day of September, 1953. Colin A. Studds and the defendant, Mary Lindsay Studds, were living in Wisconsin prior to 1950, where Mr. Studds was engaged in a contracting business. He failed in this business and, when he left Wisconsin for Virginia, the debt due the plaintiff was one of many remaining unpaid. Prior to entering business in Wisconsin, Studds solely maintained his home and family. While in Wisconsin, Studds provided approximately one-half of the cost of maintaining his family. Since moving to Virginia in the summer of 1950, Studds has provided nothing for the family and, according to the contention of the defendant and Studds, he has admittedly per[758]*758formed gratuitous services for his wife, the defendant herein, since 1950 while engaged in building numerous houses in the Virginia Beach area as agent for the wife.

Plaintiff contends that defendant, having full knowledge of the insolvency of her husband, entered into a business arrangement with him with the intent to defraud the creditors of Studds and hence the transactions were colorable. Defendant urges that no action may be maintained to reach the value of services rendered by the husband for the wife, and that such services are gratuitous and not subject to attack by the creditors of Studds.

By agreement of counsel, an advisory jury was called pursuant to Rule 39(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. The issue submitted to the jury was as follows:

“Was the business arrangement between Mary Lindsay Studds and Colin A. Studds, wherein Mrs. Studds conducted a business through the agency of Mr. Studds, a bona fide arrangement or one devised to cheat the creditors of Mr. Studds and therefore color-able?”

On this issue the jury concluded that the arrangement was devised to cheat the creditors of Mr. Studds and was colorable. The matter is now before the Court on defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict of the jury.

As the fraudulent scheme between Studds and wife has been clearly proven from the evidence submitted, there are only two pertinent questions now before the Court:

(1) Is an action of this type maintainable in Virginia ?

(2) Does the burden rest upon the defendant to show that the business arrangement was bona fide?

The alleged fraudulent gift of services took place in Virginia and the determination of these two issues are therefore dependent upon the law of this State. The case of Penn v. Whiteheads, 12 Grat., Va., 74, was decided by' the Court of Appeals of Virginia in 1855, and again was presented to the same court in 1867 and is cited in 17 Grat., Va., 503. In those cases the husband carried on a profitable mercantile business as agent for his wife, aided by his minor sons. The factual situation is not unlike the matter now before the court. The Court, speaking through Justice Moncure, said, 17 Grat. 528:

“A man who is without the means of paying his debts is morally bound to do all he honestly can to acquire such means, and honestly to devote all the profits of his future labor to the payment of his debts. To be sure the law cannot, or does not, compel a man, in advance, to labor for his creditors. And if he chooses to be so dishonest as to idle or give away his time, rather than labor for the means of paying his debts, the law cannot, or does not, attempt to prevent it. But if he does labor and make any profit for himself, or his wife and family, which is the same thing, his creditors may subject it to liability for the payment of their claims. Husband and wife are one in law, and he is bound, morally if not legally, to support her and the rest of his family. In laboring for them he labors, in effect, for himself. Every benefit secured to them is a benefit, incidentally, secured to himself. And as the law will not allow him directly to secure the profits of his future labor to himself, in exclusion of the claims of his creditor, it will not allow him, indirectly, to do the same thing, by securing such profits to his wife or family; at least quoad his existing creditors. A man is not apt to give away his labor, or even idle away his time. If he is not honest enough to wish to pay his debts, self-interest prompts him to do something, and to try to secure to himself and his family the profits of his skill and labor. This motive of self-interest is generally sufficient, without being assisted by legal means, to stimulate [759]*759a man into action and prevent him from throwing or giving away his time, instead of trying to make a profitable use of it. And the law, instead of attempting to apply such a stimulus, contents itself with subjecting any profit he may make for himself or family to liability to the payment of his debts as aforesaid.”

In 1901 the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia had before it the case of Catlett v. Alsop, Mosby & Co., 99 Va. 680, 40 S.E. 34, 36, previously before the Court in Alsop v. Catlett, 97 Va. 364, 34 S.E. 48. The later action was on the part of creditors proceeding against the husbands and their wives to subject property acquired and profits made by the wives through the services of their husband. No reference is made in the opinion to Penn v. Whiteheads, supra, and the Court, after discussing the separate rights of married women under the laws of Virginia, had this to say:

“There was clearly nothing illegal or improper in the action of Mrs. Catlett and Mrs. Jenkins in purchasing the stock of goods and in conducting the business, wholly or in part, through their husbands as their agents, unless it was done with a fraudulent intent. * * *
“Having the right to employ her husband as her agent in the management of such trade or business, it must follow as a necessary consequence that, where the legal title to the capital upon which she is carrying on the trade or business of a merchant is in the wife, as against the husband, it cannot be subjected to the claims of the husband’s creditors, without proof that her title is merely colorable and fraudulent as against them.”

The Court held that there was insufficient proof of fraud to subject the legal title to the stocks of goods and real estate to the payment of debts due the creditors of the husbands. On the question of compensation for the husbands, it is said, 99 Va. 687, 40 S.E. 34, 36:

“There does not seem to have been an express agreement between the husbands and wives as to the compensation the former should receive for their services. In the absence of such an agreement, the law would imply, as in case of a stranger, that they were to receive a reasonable compensation for the services rendered. This the creditors would have the right to subject to the payment of their claims, less the amount necessary for the reasonable support of the husbands and their families.
* * *
“We are further of opinion that, if the services rendered by the husbands for their wives in the management of their business was more than sufficient to support and maintain their families, including themselves, that excess is a debt due from their wives, and liable to their husbands’ creditors; * *

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Bluebook (online)
136 F. Supp. 756, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-deposit-co-v-studds-vaed-1956.