New Amsterdam Casualty Company, and Cross-Appellant v. Gladys N. Waller, and Cross-Appellee

301 F.2d 839, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 5451
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 6, 1962
Docket8480
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 301 F.2d 839 (New Amsterdam Casualty Company, and Cross-Appellant v. Gladys N. Waller, and Cross-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Amsterdam Casualty Company, and Cross-Appellant v. Gladys N. Waller, and Cross-Appellee, 301 F.2d 839, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 5451 (4th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

HAYNSWORTH, Circuit Judge.

In this action by a creditor to reach real estate improved by expenditures of the debtor’s money but held in the name of the debtor’s wife, the District Court held, in the absence of an affirmative intention to defraud the creditor, the action was not controlled by the North Carolina 3-year statute of limitations applicable to actions founded upon fraud. 1 Since expenditure of the debtor’s funds to improve the wife’s property was fraudulent in law, whether the parties consciously realized the fraudulent nature of their acts, we think the 3-year statute should have been applied.

C. P. Waller, of Durham, North Carolina, had been engaged in the construction business for many years. In the more recent years, he had been employed by Nello L. Teer Company, of Durham, North Carolina. Earlier, however, he had been an officer and stockholder of the Parkersburg Construction Company, in connection with which, as one of the principals, he personally signed a performance bond. The New Amsterdam Casualty Company, the plaintiff here, was the surety upon that bond. Because of this bond, New Amsterdam was required to complete the construction work which Parkersburg Construction Company had agreed to do for the State of West Virginia. Subsequently, New Amsterdam brought an action against Waller for the amount of its loss and obtained a judgment against him in the Wake County, North Carolina, Superior Court for the principal sum of $26,368.33. This judgment was entered on June 28, 1951. 2

In July 1950, while New Amsterdam’s action against Waller was pending in the state court, Gladys N. Waller, his wife, acquired title to a vacant lot in a residential section of Durham, North Carolina. There is testimony, and the District Court found, that she paid for the lot with funds given her by a daughter. In 1953, a house was constructed upon this lot at a cost of approximately $34,-000. A fund of $12,000, accumulated out of the debtor’s salary checks, was expended to pay for the construction work. The balance of the construction cost was obtained through a mortgage loan granted upon the application of the debtor. The note representing the mortgage debt and the deed of trust, which secured it, were signed jointly by the debtor and by his wife, the defendant here. The wife alone signed the settlement statement.

Subsequent monthly payments to the building and loan association, with exceptions to be noted later, were made by checks drawn by the wife upon a bank account into which the debtor’s salary checks were regularly deposited.

The details of the Wallers’ finances and the handling of their funds were carefully considered by the District Judge and discussed at length in his findings of fact and in his opinion. 3 **We need refer to them only summarily here.

Apparently, because the debtor’s construction work required him to be frequently away from home, his wife for many years had charge of family finances. At his request, his employer mailed each salary check earned by him to the wife in *841 Durham. These checks she deposited in a bank account in her own name against which she drew checks to meet the living expenses of the family. During most of 1951 and 1952, however, the debtor was engaged in construction work in North Africa, and Mrs. Waller was with him there. During this period, the husband’s salary checks were mailed by his employer to an attorney, W. P. Farthing, in Durham, who had represented the husband in the action brought against him by New Amsterdam in the state court. Proceeds of these checks were accumulated, at least in part, by Mr. Farthing, and the accumulations in his hands exceeded $12,000 when the Wallers returned from North Africa. This was the source of the $12,000, which, with the proceeds of the mortgage loan, the Wallers used to pay for the construction of the house.

At that time, Mrs. Waller knew of the judgment in favor of New Amsterdam against her husband. Indeed, she knew of the claim and the pendency of New Amsterdam’s action when she acquired title to the lot in 1950. It is agreed that the husband was insolvent at all critical times, and husband and wife, of course,, knew that they were financing improvements on the wife’s lot with funds of the husband. 4

This action against the wife to reach her property, or so much of its value as represented an investment of the husband’s funds, was not commenced until December 28, 1959. More than three years earlier, on August 27, 1956, there had been an adverse examination of the judgment debtor by attorneys for New Amsterdam, during which information was obtained which the District Court assumed 5 would constitute notice to New Amsterdam of the use of the husband’s funds to improve the wife’s real estate.

Actions founded upon fraud or mistake must be commenced in North Carolina within three years of the accrual of the cause of action. The cause of action does not accrue until the aggrieved party has notice of the facts constituting the fraud or mistake. 6

The creditor seeks to avoid the 3-year statute of limitations by a disavowal of any claim of actual fraud. It claims no dependence upon North Carolina’s stat *842 utes relating to fraudulent conveyances. 7 It contends that North Carolina recognizes a cause of action to reach the property in the hands of the wife, without reference to the statutes on fraudulent conveyances and though the transaction was not fraudulent in fact. It says it seeks to impress the property with a constructive trust in its favor, and that the limitations period for the institution of such an action is ten years.

The launching pad of these contentions is the decision of the Supreme Court of North Carolina in Michael v. Moore. 8 There it' appeared that an insolvent debtor borrowed $2,000 secured by a mortgage on land he owned. With the proceeds of the loan, he built a house on his wife’s land. In an action brought by the creditor to reach the improvements on the wife’s land, a jury found that the debtor had not acted for the purpose of defeating or delaying his creditor. The North Carolina Supreme Court upheld the' right of the creditor to follow the funds belonging to the debtor into the wife’s property. Because of the finding of the jury, the Court held it was unnecessary to show that the debtor acted with any actual intention to defraud the creditor; the transaction was void per se by virtue of what is now § 39-17 of the General Statutes of North Carolina. That section provides that the transfer itself is evidence of an intention to defraud the creditor. The North Carolina Court also declared that, whether the debtor’s intention was fraudulent or not, the transfer was fraudulent in law and was void as to the creditor.

There was no question of limitations in Michael v. Moore. The holding is only that the transfer was void and fraudulent on its face and the creditor was not required to show that the debtor was consciously motivated by an evil purpose. In so holding, the Court referred to the wife as.

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Bluebook (online)
301 F.2d 839, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 5451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-amsterdam-casualty-company-and-cross-appellant-v-gladys-n-waller-ca4-1962.