Miller v. Peck

18 W. Va. 75, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 24
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 18 W. Va. 75 (Miller v. Peck) 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
Miller v. Peck, 18 W. Va. 75, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 24 (W. Va. 1881).

Opinion

Moore, President,

announced the opinion of the Court:

It is insisted by the plaintiff in error, Hannah Miller, that the court erred in giving judgment against her for the white oak barrel heading wood, and deciding that the same was liable to the payment of the judgment against her husband and J. W. Kyserin favor of Andrew Peck..

The consideration of the case as presented to us by the record and argument necessarily involves the questions of husband’s agency in the business affairs of his wife relative to her separate property, and to what extent he can devote his labor and time to her business affairs, and perhaps also to what extent he may use his own property in her separate business as against creditors. These questions have been considered by many courts, and there is a diversity of opinions and conclusions thereon, as is well pointed out by Mr. Wells in his valuable treatise on “Separate Property of parried Women.” It is not my purpose or duty to trace the history of the law from its beginning to the present, touching the rights of married women as to their separate property, and to whatextent creditors of the husband may be affected thereby; but to grasp the question presented by this case, it will be necessary to consider some of the many cases in reference thereto and bearing thereon, and to enable me to be as brief as possible, I will first quote in extenso the epitome in review of the leading authorities made by Judge Buskirk, in the case of Cooper et. al. v. Ham et. al., 49 Ind. 393. He begins by saying:

[80]*80“We make an extended quotation from the recent work of Bump on Fraudulent Conveyances, p. 269. He says:
“ ‘Creditors have no power to compel a debtor to labor, and earn the means to pay their demands. He may resign himself to hopeless and endless want, or he may limit his exertions to just such an extent as may be adequate to furnish him the means of a scanty subsistence, and in all this he violates no legal right of his creditors. The law allows even more than this. His first and most imperative duty is to support and maintain himself and family from the proceeds of his labor. He is under no legal or moral obligation to appropriate these to the benefit of his creditors, and leave himself and his family to suffer hunger and want. Consequently he has the right to enter into a contract to labor for another in consideration of the support and maintenance of himself and family. If an attachment is laid in the hands of his employer, after a contract has been partially performed, he may refuse to complete it, and a new arrangement may be made for the purpose of protecting his subsequent earnings from the effect of such attachment. He is not permitted, however, to make an assignment of his future earnings with the intent to delay, hinder or defraud his creditors.
“ ‘Not Apply Labor to Accumulation of Property. — Although the law will not compel a debtor to labor and earn money to pay his debts, yet there is a strong moral obligation resting upon him to use the strength, skill and talents with which he is endowed for that purpose, and this obligation is one which the law to a certain extent recognizes and enforces. He has an election to labor or not as he may please, with which the law will not interfere. He is also countenanced by the law in the proper discharge of his duty to provide a maintenance and support for himself and family. But beyond the necessary wants of himself and family, there is a limit which the law does not allow him to transcend. He is not permitted to treasure up a fund accruing from his labor or vocation, whatever it may be, and claim that it shall be protected for the benefit of himself and family, against the demands of creditors. Every agreement or contrivance entered into with a view to deprive his creditors of his future earnings, and enable him to retain and use them for his own benefit and ad[81]*81vantage, or to make a permanent provision for bis family, is fraudulent and void. Although his creditors cannot compel him to labor for the purpose of satisfying their demands, yet they have a just claim in law upon the fruits of his labor.
‘Business in Wife’s Name. — The law does not permit him to carry on a business in the name of his wife, so as to invest the proceeds of his skill and labor in her name. If she has a separate estate she may employ him and compensate him for his services. Such employment, however, must be in good faith, and not merely colorable. If the character of an agent is assumed in an improper case, the law disregards it. An arrangement, by which the husband acts as his wife’s agent without any compensation Sr for a compensation that is insufficient, is, in effect, an attempt to make a voluntary conveyance of the products of his skill and labor in her favor, aud is void as against his creditors. She is entitled to her money with interest, and the balance will be appropriated to the payment of his debts.”’

Judge Buskirk then proceeds as follows :

“The foregoing propositions of law are not entirely accurate, and the text is not fully supported by the cases cited. In support of the first paragraph of the above quotation, the following authorities are cited: Leslie v. Joyner 2 Head, 514; Griffin v. Cranston, 1 Bosw. 281; Holdship v. Patterson, 7 Watts, 547; Teeter v. Williams, 3 B. Mon, 562; Abbey v. Deyo, 44 Barb. 374; Tripp v. Childs, 14 Barb. 85; Gragg v. Martin 12 Allen, 498.
“The ruling in Leslie v. Joyner, supra, was based upon the ruling in Hamilton v. Zimmerman, 5 Sneed 39, where the court said :
“ ‘The debtor is certainly under a moral obligation to use all reasonable exertions to satisfy the just claims of creditors; but he is under a positive obligation, in law as well as morals, to support and maintain his wife and infant children. This is the first and most imperative duty. But- while this is so, and while he will be countenanced by the law in its proper discharge, he cannot make it the pretext for covering up and protecting from the just claims of creditor’s any surplus fund accruing from his labor or vocation, whatever it may be.’
“In Griffin v. Cranston, supra, one partner sold and trans-[82]*82ferréd to the other his interest in the business, on the condition that the latter should pay all the firm debts and the individual debts of the assigning partner created in the name of the firm, and the interest was worth less than the debts assumed; and it was also agreed, that the retiring partner and his wife were to work for the other for their board, unless future profits were earned ; and it was held that the assignment was not fraudulent, and the agreement for labor was valid.
“In Holdship v. Patterson, supra, it was held, that a benefactor may provide for a friend the means of subsistence for himself and family without exposing his bounty to the debts or improvidence of the beneficiary. He has an individual right of property in the execution of the trust, of which he cannot be deprived by an execution against the trustee.

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Bluebook (online)
18 W. Va. 75, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-peck-wva-1881.