Hitz v. National Metropolitan Bank

111 U.S. 722, 4 S. Ct. 613, 28 L. Ed. 577, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1828
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 5, 1884
Docket254
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 111 U.S. 722 (Hitz v. National Metropolitan Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hitz v. National Metropolitan Bank, 111 U.S. 722, 4 S. Ct. 613, 28 L. Ed. 577, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1828 (1884).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a bill in chancery brought by the Bank against John Hitz, Jane C. Hitz, his wife, and Metzerott and Cross, trustees, to declare void a deed, so far as it affects rights of the bank, made by Hitz and wife to Metzerott and Cross, as trustees, for the benefit of the wife.

The deed was made December 9th, 1878, and filed for record in the proper office, May 13th, 1879. The property conveyed, which'was real estate in the city of Washington, came to Mrs. Hitz by inheritance from her father, and by the birth of children before the married woman’s act of Congress of April 10th, *724 1869,16 Stat. 45. Hitz had become entitled to a'life estate in it as tenant by the curtesy..

It is this right which is the subject of the present controversy.

The bank, as creditor of' Hitz, obtained a judgment against him on the 28th day of April, 1879, for the sum of $10,000, with interest and costs, and on the 5th day of June a writ of execution was issued on said judgment and returned nulla bona the same day.-

On the next day plaintiff caused' another execution to be issued on the. same judgment, and levied by the marshal on the interest of the said John Hitz in the property described in the trust deed of Hitz and Avife to Metzerott and Cross.

We will notice the grounds on Avhich the validity of the deed is assailed, in their order.

1. It is said that the deed was never delivered to the trustees.

But the testimony of Mr. Metzerott, complainant’s Avitness, shows clearly, that he did receive the deed and kept it for an indefinite length of time, and then placed it in a box which he bought for that purpose, and handed it to Mrs. Hitz, that she might deposit the box Avith this and other valuable papers in the Bank of the Metropolis. This was done.

It is also objected that it Avas deliArered to Metzerott as an escroAV, to be recorded, as he expresses it, only Avhen' Hitz should have made some adjustment of his indebtedness to the German-American Bank, Avhich has never been done. It is quite obvious, and perhaps natural, that Metzerott should confound his holding the deed as an escroAV and vrithholding it from record as meaning the same thing; and it is very clear from all his testimony and that of Mr. Cross, the other trustee, that only the latter Avas in question.

Both of these gentlemen had been consulted before the deed was made, and had consented to act as- trustees in it. As soon as the deed was executed and acknowledged, it Avas placed in the hands of Metzerott, who received and held it for some time, and then gave it to the party chiefly interested for safekeeping. Leaving out the testimony of Mrs. Hitz, of Hitz, and their sworn ansAvers, in which they both deny that they *725 had ever heard of the. deed being delivered as an escrow, it is plain that it was executed, delivered, and the trusteeship accepted, and the deed thus became a valid instrument as between the parties to it.

2. As regards the understanding that it was not to be recorded until Hitz’s debt to the bank was adjusted, it rests upon Mr, Metzerott’s testimony alone. Mrs. Hitz swears that though she was advised by Mi'- Cox, her' lawyer, who drew up the deed, that it was better not to record ‘it at once, and' that Mr. Metzerott expressed the same views to her, she did not adopt them, and made no promise to withhold it from record. Hitz, whose interest in the property was the thing conveyed, says that he had no such understanding, and Cross, the other trustee, knows nothing of it except what was told him by Metzerott.

There can be.no reason favorable to the purpose of the deed, the interests of Mrs. Hitz, .the cestui qué trust, why it should be withheld from record, or why she should have made such a promise.

3, This brings us to the third objection to the deed, namely, that it was voluntary, was without consideration, and designed to defraud creditors.

It appears that up to a very short time before this deed was made Mr. Hitz had the entire management of his wife’s affairs, and she had trusted him unreservedly. It was a complete surprise to her when she learned that Avith the failure of the bank, of which her husband was president and principal manager, her own fortune, inherited from her father, had also disappeared. The evidence leaves no doubt that she at once took the management of her affairs out of his hands, not even permitting him to receive or collect for her the rents of what remained, of which the property now in suit was the main part.

It appears that, to save himself from prosecution by the bank, or for other reasons, he desired to convey to the bank some real estate, the title of Avhich was in his OAvn name, though it had been purchased partly by her money. He wished her to join him in conveyance of this property to Keyser, the receiver, who had been appointed to close up the *726 affairs of the bank. He had also conveyed to Hatch and wife, for some purpose of his own,' a valuable Business house on Pennsylvania Avenue, which was part of her inheritance, and then had procured these persons to mortgage it to the bank of which he was president, to secure a large debt due by • him .to the bank. . Büt it had been discovered that Mrs. Hitz had never signed or otherwise executed any conveyance of this lot. Mr. Hitz was in an embarrassing condition with regard to this matter! It was after some resistance on her part to making these matters straight for Mr. Hitz, that it Avas agreed if he would make the deed of trust by Avhich all the estate in the lots mentioned in it, including his interest, whatever it might be, and hers also, should be secured to Mrs. Hitz and her children by the intervention of trustees, she Avould make good the title of the lot on Pennsylvania Avenue Avhich he had pledged to the bank, and Avould join him also in the deed to Keyser, the receiver, of Avhat Avas asserted to be his property.

The trust deed Ayas, therefore, made on a valuable consideration. The value of the avenue property alone conveyed by Mrs. Hjtz is SAVorn to be $18,000. What her interest in the other property Avas worth is not proved. and could not easily be ascertained. No estimate of the value of Hitz’s interest in the lots conveyed to the trustees is shoAvn. _ When sitting as a Court of Equity Ave see this man trying, to rectify the wrong done his Avife; Ave are not required to scan closely the Aralue of Avhat she gave -at the moment for his relinquishment of his marital rights in her remaining property.

The case is Avholly free from fraud. Mrs. Hitz had the same right to buy his curtesy in her real estate, to have it barred by a proper conveyance, as any one else had or could have had. Her equity was as good as that of any other creditor, and he could secure her as well as he could the bank. As the present complainant had no lien on the property, the joint right of husband and Avife to sell it for value Avas undoubted, and the right to sell -to her by the intervention of trustees is equally clear. The property she gave in .exchange for his interest in her lots did not go to him.

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Bluebook (online)
111 U.S. 722, 4 S. Ct. 613, 28 L. Ed. 577, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hitz-v-national-metropolitan-bank-scotus-1884.