Sanders v. Miller

42 Am. Rep. 237, 79 Ky. 517, 1881 Ky. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 42 Am. Rep. 237 (Sanders v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanders v. Miller, 42 Am. Rep. 237, 79 Ky. 517, 1881 Ky. LEXIS 69 (Ky. Ct. App. 1881).

Opinion

JUDGE HARGIS

delivered tiie opinion op the court.

This case involves the validity of a settlement made in-pursuance of a written antenuptial contract executed by the-appellants on the 8th of February, 1878, in this language:

“An article of agreement entered into between J. B. Sanders of the first part, and Orra A. Davis of the second part. The said James B. Sanders agrees to give Orra A. Davis (provided she marries him) as good a house, to have and to hold forever, as her sister, Helen M. Stout had, or a. sum of money equivalent to the same, five thousand dollars."

Not long after this writing was made they intermarried..

At that time he owned a farm, and one horse and buggy,, and was indebted in the sum of about $750 as principal, and near five thousand dollars as surety; and she owned 42 acres of land, worth $1,000, a horse, and. had “ $600. loaned out.”

He sold his land on the 15th of July, 1878, for the sum of $8,556.55; but before doing so, he'obtained his wife’s, relinquishment of her contingent right of dower by executing and delivering to her a paper reciting the substance. andi [519]*519purpose of the antenuptial contract, and' agreeing to pay to her five thousand dollars so soon as he should collect “the money” for which he sold his farm.

This paper would be of little weight in the absence of the antenuptial contract, because of the ease and security with which it might have been fabricated; but in view of all the facts of this case it is freed from suspicion, and based upon a valuable consideration.

She was not bound or compellable to relinquish her dower right, and would doubtless have refused to do so had her husband declined to give her a written assurance of his good faith and purpose to execute the marriage settlement which he had agreed to make upon her as a part of the marriage contract, but had not done.

Her relinquishment was a valuable consideration (Hall v. Plummer, 6 Indiana, 121), and that fact should be given its full weight in view of the antenuptial agreement.

While contracts made between husband and wife, as a general rule, are void, still if a "husband voluntarily enter into a contract to make, or he does make, a settlement upon his wife in discharge of an obligation arising out of the reception of her property under an agreement made before its'receipt or reduction to possession, such as the chancellor would, on her application, make upon her, neither the contract nor the settlement would be regarded as fraudulent against creditors. And with much greater reason it can be said that such a contract is possessed of vital force when preceded by a bona fide antenuptial contract and supported by a valuable consideration (relinquishment of dower), moving from her to him at the instant of its execution. (Latimer v. Glenn, 2 Bush; Campbell v. Campbell’s trustee, MS. Op., 1881; Miller v. Edwards, 7 [520]*520Bush, 397; Lyne, &c., v. Bank of Kentucky, 5 J. J. Mar., 550.)

But passing from the meritorious character of the second writing, and adverting to the antenuptial contract, we find upon both law and fact ample authority in its support.

The case of Magniac and others v. Thompson, 7 Peters, 393, cited by appellants’ counsel, contains the doctrine of the text-books and decided cases in this country and England upon the issue.involved in this case. We cite the following extract from it with hearty approval, as stating with perspicuity the rule and its reasons:

“Nothing can be clearer, both upon principle and authority, than the doctrine that to make an antenuptial settlement void 'as a fraud upon creditors, it is necessary that both parties should concur in, or have cognizance of, the intended fraud.

‘ ‘ If the settler alone intended a fraud, and the other party have no notice of it, but is innocent of it, she is not and cannot be affected by it.

• “Marriage in contemplation of law is not only a valuable consideration to support such a settlement, but is a consideration of the highest value; and, from motives of the soundest policy, is upheld with a steady resolution. The husband and wife, parties to such a contract, are therefore deemed, in the highest sense, purchasers for a valuable consideration.”

As that case grew out of a marriage settlement actually made before marriage, and in the case before us the settlement was not consummated until after marriage, it is not in that particular a complete authority here. But in the case of Browning’s administrators v. Coppage, 3 Bibb, this court held that a contract between husband and wife, made before [521]*521marriage, but not to be operative until after coverture ■ceased, was not extinguished by the intermarriage, under the rule that, in general, the contracts made between husband and wife when single became void by their marriage.

And this exception to the general rule is based upon the valuable consideration 'furnished by her to uphold the contract. And in that case the consideration was her agree■ment that he should enjoy all of her estate during his life, although she might die without issue. On this point see 2 Bibb, 408.

And in a more recent case, Kinnaird, &c., v. Daniel, See., 13 B. Mon., 500, valuable and meritorious considerations moving from the wife were given their full force in support of settlements made after marriage in pursuance of an ante-nuptial agreement.

Roper on Property, volume 1, page 303, cited in the case above, says that—

' ‘ Settlements made after, but in pursuance of, written articles entered into or letters written before the marriage,” are ‘ ‘ unimpeachable by any persons, whether they be creditors or subsequent purchasers, for the contract of marriage is a valuable consideration, and establishes the settlement against every one.”

Having mentioned the law upon antenuptial contracts to ■ make settlements executed both before and after the mar-triage, for the purpose of giving each of the writings exe- ■ cuted by Sanders to his wife its due force, and to point with ■ certainty to the issue of fact in this case, we find that an . action was brought by each of the appellees, after procuring . a return of no property, upon executions which emanated from judgments at law rendered in their behalf against the -appellant husband for debts that he had created as surety, [522]*522in which they substantially allege that he had fraudulently caused a deed to be 'made to his wife to a tract of land he had purchased subsequent to the sale of the land owned by him at the time of the marriage, for the purpose of cheating arid delaying his creditors, and that she participated in his fraudulent intent.

The answer of the appellants denies the material allegations of fraud, and they rely on a settlement upon the wife-made in execution of the antenuptial contract.

Was the settlement fraudulent in fact?

It appears that out of the sum for which he sold his land he paid to her, in part performance of the marriage contract, $3,955 and disposed of the residue of the $8,556.55 by paying $3,000 of it to his creditors, and retaining or consuming thé balance in support of himself and wife.

On the 31st of December, 1878, he, as her agent; bought the land sought to be subjected by appellees to their debts, and had it deeded to her.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Am. Rep. 237, 79 Ky. 517, 1881 Ky. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-miller-kyctapp-1881.