Plummer v. Jarman

44 Md. 632, 1876 Md. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 44 Md. 632 (Plummer v. Jarman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plummer v. Jarman, 44 Md. 632, 1876 Md. LEXIS 69 (Md. 1876).

Opinion

Alvey, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

It appears that the real estate of John Thawley, deceased, was, by proceeding on the law side of the Circuit Court for Caroline County, in 1856, sold by Commissioners under the descent laws of the State, and that Edgar Plummer, who had married one of the daughters of the intestate, purchased that part of the real estate known as the “Home Farm,” being lot No. i, for the sum of $5,981.25. Plummer complied with the terms of sale, by making a small cash payment, and giving bond with sureties for the balance of the purchase money. This sale, with others [635]*635of other portions of the estate, was reported by the Commissioners, and finally ratified by the Court. The credit payments were made from time to time, covering the period from the expiration of the credit mentioned in the bond to April 25th, 1872. The receipts were all executed to Edgar Plummer as the party paying the money; and it appears that the last money paid on the purchase, being $949 paid on the 25th of April, 1872, was borrowed by Edgar Plummer from Robert Schuyler. There were several heirs of the deceased, and the portion of the aggregate amount of sales of the real estate to which Plummer, in right of his wife, was entitled was about $3,300, as he himself testifies. He has been in the possession and use of the farm ever since the purchase until recently, holding himself out as the owner, and in all respects treating and dealing with it as his own; never declaring or intimating that his wife had any exclusive right or claim to it, until he became embarrassed and insolvent, and then a claim of the wife was set up. No deed was obtained for the land until the 2nd of May, 1872, when it was made to the wife, under the circumstances presently to be mentioned.

Plummer was collector of State and County taxes in Caroline County, for the years 1868, and 1869, and the complainants were his sureties on his bonds; and in September, 1871, he executed a power of attorney authorizing a judgment to be confessed in favor of the complainants for $4,500, to indemnify them against loss. The judgment was entered on the 27th of September, 1871. The complainants were subsequently sued on the bonds, and judgments recovered against them, which they have been required to pay.

On the 11th of April, 1872, and before all the purchase money had been in fact paid, Mrs. Plummer, in her own name, and without the joinder of her husband, filed a petition in the Circuit Court for Caroline County, setting [636]*636forth, that the deed had not been made for the land purchased by her husband; that the purchase money had been fully paid, and that such payment was made with money due her from her father’s estate, being her sole and separate property; and “that it was understood and agreed .between herself and her husband, that the said land should he conveyed to her by the said Commissioners.” Whereupon she prayed that the Court would direct Massey the surviving Commissioner, to convey to her the land purchased by her husband, by good and sufficient 'deed.' This petition was sworn to by the husband, although all the purchase money had not in fact been paid, as shown by the receipts produced in evidence. The Court, upon the same day of filing the petition, ordered that the deed should he made to the petitioner, upon the Commissioner being satisfied that the whole purchase money had been paid. The deed was made on the 2nd of May, 1872. The last payment of purchase money was intermediate the date of the order and the date of the deed.

The complainants filed their bill to have the order, and deed made thereunder, set aside as against them and other subsisting creditors of the husband. The husband and wife, in their answer, simply reiterate and rely upon the statement in the petition, and deny that the deed was in fraud of creditors.

The petition and order procured thereon being entirely ex parte, of course, they do not in any manner conclude or hind the complainants. Whatever rights they may have had at the time as creditors of Edgar Plummer, remain unaffected by the order, or the deed made in pursuance thereof. Brooks vs. Brooks, et al., 12 Gill & John., 306; Amer. Ex. Bank vs. Inloes, 7 Md., 380; McClellan vs. Kennedy, 8 Md., 231; Keighler vs. Ward, 8 Md., 254 ; 2 Taylor’s Ev., 1440, sec. 1495. The question is, could the complainants have successfully resisted the application of the wife, it they had been made parties to her petition. And as to that question we think there can be no doubt.

[637]*637The money arising from the sale of the wife’s inheritance was not her separate estate, as it would be now under the provisions of the Code, bat, on the contrary, it was subject to the control of the husband, by virtue of his marital rights; and the husband’s rights having attached, the money, as it was received by him, was at his disposal absolutely, and any mere promise that he may have made to his wife, as to its application, was purely voluntary, and without consideration. The statement or suggestion in the wife’s petition, that the money derived from the sale of the real estate descended to her became her sole and separate property, was, therefore, without foundation; as prior to the adoption of the Code, in 1860, there was no legislation in existence which affected the husband’s marital rights in, or deprived him of control over, the property of the wife, acquired as the money in this case was. State vs. Krebs, 6 H. &J., 31; Peacock vs. Pembroke & Clarke, 4 Md., 280. The Act of 1853, ch. 245, exempted the property of the wife, acquired in the particular modes designated, from the debts of the husband; but that Act did not operate to divest or affect the marital rights of the husband in the property of the wife. Schindel vs. Schindel, 12 Md., 294; Weems vs. Weems, 19 Md., 334.

Such being the right of the husband in the money derived from the sale of the real estate descended to the wife, and the farm having been purchased by the husband in his own name, and on his own credit, and the sale having been confirmed to him by the Court, the question is, upon what reason or principle can the claim of the wife now made be maintained as against the creditors of the husband ?

It may be conceded that a valid gift by husband to his wife, after marriage, may be made, and that Courts of equity will uphold such gifts as against the husband and those claiming under him ; but as against subsisting creditors of the husband, if it be to their prejudice, such gift [638]*638is utterly void. ^This is so upon general principles of equity and justice, and it is so by the statute law of the State. Act of 1853, ch. 245 ; Code, Art. 45, sec. 1.

But here there is an attempt to uphold the transfer of the estate from the husband to the wife, through the agency of the Court, by proving a consideration ini the form of a secret parol trust, existing between the husband and wife from the time of the purchase by the husband. This attempt must fail. It would he, as said by Chancellor Johnson, in Brooks vs. Dent, 1 Md. Ch. Dec., 527, establishing a precedent of the most pernicious and perilous character, to allow these secret trusts between husband and wife to be set up to defeat the rights of creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Md. 632, 1876 Md. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plummer-v-jarman-md-1876.