Robinson v. Moseley

93 Ala. 70
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 93 Ala. 70 (Robinson v. Moseley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Moseley, 93 Ala. 70 (Ala. 1890).

Opinion

MoOLELLAN, J.

— This is a bill exhibited by William Moseley, a creditor of John D. Robinson, to subject to the satisfaction of his debt certain lands conveyed by the latter to his wife, Mary E. Robinson, the other respondent and appellant.

The bill in its first, second, third and fourth paragraphs, alleges, in substance, that complainant’s debt against Robinson was contracted on March 7, 1887; that suit was commenced thereon September 16, 1887 ; that judgment was rendered in that suit on June 5,1888, and the issue of execution thereon which was duly returned “no property foundthat when said debt was contracted, Robinson was seized and possessed of a large amount of property, real and personal, including the land sought to be subjected; and that on July 16, 1887, after the debt had been contracted, he conveyed all this property to his wife aiid co-defendant, Mary E. Robinson, by a deed which is made an exhibit to the bill in paragraph four. The fifth paragraph alleges that this conveyance was voluntary, executed with intent, on the part of both grantor and grantee, to binder, delay and defraud the creditors of the husband, and was fraudulent and void as against the pre-existing debt of the complainant. The defendants answer jointly that “they admit the allegations contained” in paragraphs one, two, three and four of the bill. They thus admit that the indebtedness to the complainant averred in the bill, and reduced to judgment before bill filed, antedated in point of existence the conveyance by the debtor to his wife and co-respondent, of substantially all his property, real and personal. These averments, thus admitted, and these admissions, thus made, cast the burden on the grantee, Mrs. Robinson, to show by appropriate. averment, supported by slrong and convincing evidence, the more strong ond convincing in view of the marital relation existing between grantor and grantee, that she paid an adequate and valuable consideration for the [72]*72conveyance. To the lifting of such burden, affirmative averment of the facts relied on as constituting the consideration is as essential as convincing proof of their existence. The laboring oar was upon the defendant, not, simply to deny the negative averment, that there was no consideration, contained in the fifth paragraph, but to state the affirmative fact, that there was such consideration, in what it consisted, and how it was paid ; and to support.these averments by evidence. Otherwise the answer does not apprise the complainant of the line of defense which will be resorted to, nor afford him that opportunity for preparation to meet it which is a leading purpose of all pleading, and which the complainant is always entitled to with respect to a matter of defense affirmative in character, and relied on to defeat and overturn a prima facie case made by the bill and admissions of the answer.

It is said by Mr. Daniell to be “of great importance to the pleader, in preparing an answer, to bear in mind that, besides answering the plaintiff’s case as made by the bill, he should state to the court upon the answer all the circumstances of which the defendant intends to avail himself by way of defense; for a defendant ought to apprise the plaintiff by his answer of the nature of the case he intends to set up, and that too in a clear, unambiguous manner; and, in strictness, he can not avail himself of any matter of defense, which is not stated in his answer, even though it should appear in evidence.” — 1 Dan. Ch. Pl. and Pr. 711-713. “The answer must put in issue all the facts on which the defendant relies in bar of the relief sought by the bill, and evidence can not be adduced of facts outside of these issues.” — 1 Brick. Dig. p. 717, § 1115. To like effect are the following authorities.: — -Vogle v. Ripper, 86 Amer. Dec. 298; Price v. Tyson, 22 Amer. Dec. 283; Burkham v. Dalling, 18 N. J. Eq. 132; Cummings v. Coleman, 62 Am. Dec. 402.

Instead of meeting the prima facie case of complainant by independent averment of the facts which constitute the only defense open to the grantee, the pleader has contented himself with a bare denial of “the allegations contained in paragraph 5 of said bill,” and a requirement of “strict proof thereof.” The allegations of paragraph 5 are those which charge that the conveyance from Robinson to his wife was without consideration, and made to hinder, delay and defraud the grantor’s creditors. These were averments which, in view of the admissions of the answer, were to be taken as true without any proof whatever on the part of the complainant. The real issue tendered by them was consideration vel non, and upon this the affirmative was with the defendant, and the [73]*73negative with the complainant. Without any proof on this issue, the complainant was entitled to the relief he prayed, and the defendants were cast. The facts to be proved were not laid in the bill, and could not have been except by the complainant stating himself out of court, a felo de se in pleading. >They had to be injected into the case by the answer- — ■ the defendant being in legal contemplation the actor in respect to them — and to be sustained by defendant’s evidence. In the absence of such averments in the answer, the facts upon which alone any defense could be based are not in issue; but only a denial of a negative, and a requirement of “strict proof ” of that negative, standing, as it does, confessed for all practical purposes. And it is but the application of the familiar principle, that there can be no proof of facts not alleged, to hold, as we do, that under this answer it was not open to 'the defendants to show either that Robinson was indebted to his wife to the amount of the recited consideration, and executed the conveyance in satisfaction of that debt, or that he invested her funds in the lands involved here, and conveyed it to her in execution of a trust; and it is of no consequence that evidence, in point of fact, was adduced in support of both of said contentions.

The action of the Chancellor in granting relief to complainant might well be rested on the foregoing considerations, but must not be. Our opinion is, that had the answer set up the facts essential as a predicate for proof that there was a valuable and adequate consideration for the conveyance, the evidence does not sustain them. The onus of proving the existence and bona fides of such consideration rested, as we have said, upon Mrs. Robinson. — Pollak v. Searcy, 84 Ala. 259; Calhoun v. Hannon, 87 Ala. 277; Lehman v. Greenhut, 88 Ala. 478; Savings Bank v. McDonnell, 89 Ala. 434. And where the contract is between near relations, as husband and wife, father and son, and the like, it will be subjected to a closer scrutiny, and a greater measure of proof will be required to support it, than if the parties to it were strangers. — Cases supra; Wedgworth v. Wedgworth, 84 Ala. 274; Owens v. Hobbie, 82 Ala. 466; Moog v. Farley, 79 Ala. 246.

The effort of the grantee was to show that her husband owed her a sum of money greater than the consideration of the deed, and that the land was conveyed to her in satisfaction, pro tanto, of this indebtedness. This indebtedness, it was insisted, arose in large part, if not entirely, from advancements made by Mrs. Robinson’s father, Archie McDonnell, to her husband for her, or to her through her husband, and which [74]*74were retained and used by the husband.

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Bluebook (online)
93 Ala. 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-moseley-ala-1890.