Sherman v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co.

30 A.2d 498, 68 R.I. 525, 1943 R.I. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 3, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 30 A.2d 498 (Sherman v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherman v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co., 30 A.2d 498, 68 R.I. 525, 1943 R.I. LEXIS 8 (R.I. 1943).

Opinion

Flynn, C. J.

This is a bill in equity to remove a cloud upon the complainant’s record title to certain real estate, allegedly arising by virtue of an attachment and a levy of execution thereon, and also to enjoin the respondents from selling upon such execution any interest in said realty. The *526 answer of the respondent bank, in the nature of a cross bill, alleged that it was a judgment creditor of the complainant’s husband; that'his conveyance to complainant of the realty in question, being made with intent to hinder, delay and defraud a creditor, was fraudulent and void; and that he was the owner of an undivided one half of the realty upon which the attachment had been made and execution had been levied. It also prayed that the complainant’s own one-half interest in the realty be subjected to an equitable lien to the extent that improvements, to buildings, as well as the payment of a certain note and mortgage upon the realty, were made with moneys wrongfully obtained by complainant’s husband from his mother.

The cause was heard in the superior court upon bill, answer, replication and evidence, whereupon a decision was rendered denying and dismissing the bill of complaint and granting in part and denying in part the prayer of the respondent bank for an equitable lien. A decree accordingly was entered and the cause is here upon appeals by both parties from that decree.

The complainant is the wife of Arthur A. Sherman who, ■unless otherwise described, will be referred to as Arthur. The Rhode.Island Hospital Trust Company is the administrator c.t.a. of the estate of Ella F. Sherman, deceased, mother of Arthur, and it will hereinafter be called the respondent. The other respondents are certain sheriffs who were named only because of their connection with the service of process or the proposed execution sale.

. The following are some of the material facts in evidence. The complainant and her husband in 1917 had taken title as tenants in common to an improved farm in the town of Scituate and thereafter had been in continuous possession thereof. On January 26, 1924 Adin R. Sherman, father of complainant’s husband, died leaving a will whereby he devised and bequeathed to Ella F. Sherman, his widow, all the residue of his real and personal property, which included substantially the homestead farm and woodlots in the town *527 of Glocester and certain moneys .amounting to more than $17,000, deposited in savings banks in Rhode Island and Connecticut. The widow was named and appointed executrix of that will and shortly thereafter went to live with her son Arthur and his wife on their farm in Scituate.

Between April and October 1924 Arthur obtained from his mother certain bankbooks and orders upon which he received, from the deposits bequeathed to her by her husband, moneys totaling $17,431.55. This money was placed by Arthur in or transferred to bank accounts or safe deposit boxes in the name of himself, or of himself and complainant, and in part was mingled with his own money and kept in various places in his house. Certain expenditures were made by him therefrom to pay a $1600 note made by Arthur and complainant, thereby discharging a corresponding mortgage that covered all their Scituate farm, and to make certain repairs or improvements to the house, restaurant and gas .station on these premises. These expenditures are the bases for the respondent’s claim of an equitable lien upon complainant’s own interest in this realty.

In August 1925 a conservator was appointed for Arthur’s mother and in October of that year he demanded from Arthur the return of all the moneys, books and papers, etc., which were obtained from and belonged to her. Arthur refused to comply with this demand and told the conservator to “go and find them”. In May 1926 the mother was removed as executrix of her husband’s will and the respondent was appointed administrator d.b.n.c.t.a. Shortly thereafter. Arthur was summoned before the probate court by the conservator for examination concerning his possession of the bankbooks, money and other property which he had obtained from his mother. Upon the latter’s death in February 1927, the respondent was appointed administrator c.t.a. of her estate; but an appeal from the probate of her will was filed by Arthur’s sister and other interested parties and was pending when the conveyance in question was made on March 22, 1929. Meanwhile the respondent, as administra *528 tor, had been demanding payment by Arthur of the claim for the moneys that he had wrongfully obtained from his mother. Negotiations for settlement of this claim had been going on with Arthur, through his attorney, and respondent just prior to March 1929 had threatened suit unless the claim was settled.

With notice of respondent’s demands, Arthur shortly thereafter withdrew the last two known bank deposits standing in his name, totaling over $3000, and four days later, on March 22, 1929, he conveyed to the complainant, without consideration, his undivided one-half interest in the Scituate realty in question. Arthur then refused to go through with the settlement of respondent’s claim and demand, as recommended by his own attorney, and in 1930 the respondent commenced two actions at law to recover the moneys bequeathed to the mother by her husband’s will and wrongfully obtained by Arthur from her.

The action brought on behalf of the estate of his father was decided in favor of Arthur. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. v. Sherman, 52 R. I. 207 ; Same v. Same, 53 R. I. 215. The action on behalf of his mother’s estate resulted in a verdict against Arthur in the sum of $26,296.73, that being the original amount obtained, $17,431.55, plus interest. This verdict also included a special finding by the jury that Arthur did . . with intent to defraud her, demand and receive from her orders for the payment of sums of money deposited in banks . . . .”

While that case was pending on Arthur’s exceptions, the respondent had attached by mesne process all his interest in the realty in question; and in June 1936 the above-mentioned verdict against him was affirmed by this court. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. v. Sherman, 56 R. I. 355. Accordingly a judgment was entered in favor of the respondent, execution was levied upon Arthur’s interest in the realty in question and a sale thereof upon such execution was being advertised. The complainant, who was not a party to the other litigation against her husband, then brought this bill, *529 alleging that she had obtained title to Arthur’s undivided one half of the realty by his deed dated March 22, 1929 for good and valuable consideration. The uncontradicted evidence, however, showed that the conveyance was voluntary and without any consideration.

The questions presented to the trial court were: (1) Whether that conveyance by Arthur A. Sherman came within the meaning of a fraudulent conveyance under G. L. 1938, chap. 482, § 1, which at the time of the conveyance appeared as G. L. 1923, chap.

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Bluebook (online)
30 A.2d 498, 68 R.I. 525, 1943 R.I. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherman-v-rhode-island-hospital-trust-co-ri-1943.