Hissem v. Johnson

27 W. Va. 644, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 46
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 27 W. Va. 644 (Hissem v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hissem v. Johnson, 27 W. Va. 644, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 46 (W. Va. 1886).

Opinion

Snyder, Judge:

Suit in equity brought in October, 1882, in the circuit court of Tyler county by Levi Hissem and others against D. D. Johnson and M. M. Johnson, his wife, and others. The plaintiffs are judgment-creditors of the defendant, D. D. Johnson, and the object of the suit is to subject a tract of about seventy one acres of land in said county to the payment of the plaintiff’s judgments. The said land was owned by Abraham Johnson at the time said judgments were recovered and the legal title thereof is still held by him. By written contract dated September 14, 1880, the said Abraham Johnson in consideration of $4,200.00, of which $3,500.00 was paid at said date and the residue to be paid in instalments at one, two and three years thereafter, sold the said land to the defendant, M. M. Johnson, and bound himself to convey the same to her by deed retaining therein a lieu for the deferred payments. The deferred payments except about $200.00 were afterwards paid.

The plaintiffs allege in their bill, that all the purchase-money for said land was paid out of moneys belonging to the [645]*645defendant, D. D. Johnson, and that the agreement for the conveyance of the land by the said Abraham to the said M. M. Johnson was arranged and procured by the said D. D. Johnson with intent to delay, hinder, and defraud his creditors especially the plaintiffs, and the same is therefore void.

The defendants, D. D. and M. M. Johnson, by their joint answer admit the existence of the plaintiffs’ judgments, but deny they operate as liens upon said land. In reference to to the purchase and payment of said land they aver, that the said D. D. Johnson by reason of wounds received while a soldier in the service oí the United States government during the late war was awarded a pension by said government; that in July, 1880, he received on account of said pension, including arrearages, the sum of $4,000.00, of which he gave to his wife the defendant, M. M. Johnson, $3,500.00 to be invested by her in a house for herself and children; that accordingly she with his consent did enter into the contract of September 14, 1880, with said Abraham Johnson for the purchase of said seventy one acres of land ; that at the time of said purchase she paid to said Abraham out of said pension-money $3,500.00 and executed to him her three notes for the deferred payments as provided for in said contract, which notes except about $200.00 she has since paid by pension-checks received by said I). D. Johnson from time to time, and which he gave to her for the purpose of paying said notes. They aver that “not one cent has been paid on said land except the identical money or checks, which respondent, I). X). Johnson, received as his said pension-money.” * * “And said respondent having given said money to his wife,and it having been invested by her, and the said pension-money paid over to her into said farm by her and for her use and not absorbed by or combined with any other money whatever, but the said farm being the representative now of said pension money, and no other money whatever, is free and exempt under the law and can not be held subject to said judgments or any other debts of the said I). I). Johnson.”

There is a general replication to said answer. The plaintiffs proved by the said Abraham Johnson, that the contract for the purchase of the land was made with himself and Dan [646]*646and his wife, Nan acting as the agent for his wife. In answer to the question, “How was the $4,000.00 paid?” the witness, says: “The first was paid in a cheek on a bank, and the balance was paid in government checks. I don’t recollect whose names were on the first check. The government checks were payable to Nan. N. Johnson, I think; the first check was for $3,000.00 or $3,500.00, I think.”

Question. — “ Was not the first check the individual check of Naniel N. Johnson ?
Auswer. — “ Well, I can’t tell exactly how that was, but iny impression is that that was a government check..
Question. — “ Whose money was it then which paid for the land?
Answer. — “ My understanding is, that it was the money which Nan. got for his pension, all of it that he paid, notwithstanding how it was paid. E think it was all paid in government checks.”
CROSS-EXAMINED BY D. D. JOHNSON.
Question. — “ Has any money been paid on the land except out of the pension money ?
Answer. — “No, I don’t think there has.
Question. — “Were all payments on the deferred notes-made by the delivery to you of government checks ?
Answer. — “ Yes sir, they were all government checks.”

The cause was heard August 28,1884, and the court being of opinion that the land “ was purchased by the defendant M. M. Johnson with the proceeds of pension checks received by the defendant N. N. Johnson from the United States” and transferred by him to the said M. M. Johnson, and that said pension and checks are, by the laws of the United States, exempt from legal process to subject the same to the payment of the debts of the said pensioner, entered a decree of said date dismissing the plaintiff’s bill, and from said decree the plaintiffs obtained this appeal.

The only question to be determined here is, whether or not the appellee, M. M. Johnson, is entitled to hold the said seventy one acres of land free from the judgments of the plaintiffs recovered against the said.N. N. Johnson. And the solution of this question depends upon the true construction of see. 4,747 of the U. S. Rev. Statutes as applied to the facts in this cause. The said statute is as follows :

[647]*647“ No sum of money due, or to become, to any pensioner, shall be liable to attachment, levy or seizure by or under any ■legal or equitable process whatever, whether the same remains with the pension office, or any officer, or agent thereof, or in course of transmission to the pensioner entitled thereto, but shall enure wholly to the benefit of such pensioner.”

The appellants contend, that the sole purpose and policy of this statute is to protect pension money from being taken or seized by any process whatever, either while in the custody of the pension office, its officers or agents, or while in transit from them to the pensioner; and that to entitle the money to this protection it must be pension money either “ due ” or to “become due ” from the United States. In support of this position the appellants rely upon the following decisions: Cranz v. White, 27 Kans. 319; Webb v. Holt, 57 Iowa 712; Kellogg v. Waite, 12 Allen 529; and Jardain v. Fairton, &c., 44 N. J. L. 376.

In Cranz v. White, supra, the question decided was, that “ where a pensioner receives pension drafts and sells the same to a bank in the usual course of business, which bank buys the drafts and credits the general account of the pensioner with the amount thereof, and from time to time thereafter a large portion of such account is checked out, held, that the balance due on such general aceount is subject to garnishment.”

In Webb v. Holt, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
27 W. Va. 644, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hissem-v-johnson-wva-1886.