Stramann v. Scheeren

7 Colo. App. 1
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Colo. App. 1 (Stramann v. Scheeren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stramann v. Scheeren, 7 Colo. App. 1 (Colo. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Reed, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[8]*8The suit was brought to cancel and set aside a deed of conveyance made .by appellant W. J. Stramann to his wife, the other appellant, on March 15, 1893, alleging that no consideration passed from Elizabeth H., that she was insolvent and without means, and that the husband conveyed the property to the wife “ with intent to hinder, delay and defraud his creditors and especially the plaintiffs.”

The pleadings of plaintiffs in alleging the supposed frauds were not only very broad, but detailed and specific. The issues were framed and the trial had upon the allegations of fraud.

There were no issues in regard to the respective equities of plaintiffs and defendant Elizabeth H. The judgment and decree legitimately should have been either sustaining the deed or declaring it void and fraudulent. The finding and decree are hard to be reconciled. After finding that there was no fraud, that the transactions between husband and wife were bona fide and legitimate and the deed valid, proceeds to adjudicate the priority of the respective claims, then concludes by setting the deed aside and subjecting the property to the payment of the debt of plaintiffs on account of defendant’s priority or precedence, or on some undefined ground hard to comprehend and not embraced in the issues; the result being substantially the same as if the issues of fact had been found for the plaintiffs.

The findings of fact by the court numbered consecutively from 1 to 10 were all in favor of defendants and were fully warranted by the evidence. Plaintiffs signally failed to establish fraud or controvert or discredit the allegations of the answer or to throw any doubt over the regularity and integrity of the transactions between the husband and wife.

It is true that the allegations of the answer were supported mainly, if not wholly, by the testimony of the husband and wife. Transactions of this kind are so often undertaken to cover the property and defraud creditors, and the opportunities are so great, that where the validity of the transaction is only shown by the testimony of the husband and wife, [9]*9courts scan them very closely and regard them with great suspicion, and where the proof is conflicting and such as to cast doubt upon the honesty of the dealings, such doubts are usually resolved in favor of the creditor; in other words, clear and unequivocal proof of the alleged facts is required; but where, as in this case, there is no conflict of evidence nor proof of circumstances casting doubt upon it, a court is from necessity compelled to accept the transactions as honest and legitimate.

In this case the history and character of the wife as shown by the evidence was such as to support her contention. Her industry was such that she continued employed at whatever wages were obtainable, and was employed as clerk by her husband before their marriage, and insisted on receiving wages from him at f25.00 per month while engaged in his hotel after marriage. She is shown very prudent and economical and desirous of personal gain.

The facts having been established beyond dispute, the trouble in the findings and decree arises in the application of the law by the learned court, and the attempt to apply the common law to the facts. Any attempt to harmonize our statutes with the common law and apply both must result in confusion and error.

The effect and intention of our statute, as well as that of other states where the statutes are in the same line, is to abrogate and destroy the old principles of the common law, releasing the wife from the humiliating and servient position formerly occupied at common law in regard to her property, investing her with an individuality and personal identity, releasing her property from the control of the husband and allowing her to control, handle and dispose of her individual property and deal with her husband in all that pertains to it, as well as with others, as if she were feme sole; and this being so much in derogation of the common law, and at variance with it, any attempt to apply both must end in failure. Under our statutes, courts can only carefully scrutinize transactions between husband and wife, to see [10]*10that they are not collusive and in fraud of the rights of others, and then apply to them the same rules and legal principles that control in dealing with others. There is no other logical ground.

In dealings between husband and wife, as between others, particularly in equity, the intention of the parties, where the same can be reduced from the facts and circumstances of any particular case, must control in the construction of them, and the same inferences and implications arise.

A troublesome element in most cases in court where questions in regard to dealings between husband and wife are involved arises from the fact that so much proper, mutual confidence exists, that the dealings and transactions are not witnessed and conducted with the same formalities that characterize dealings with outsiders; hence too much is left to be implied and inferred from the existing facts, compelling courts to deduce the intention from the facts.

Before applying the law and decisions in regard to transactions between husband and wife under the modern statutes to the facts of the case, it may be well to dispose of, as preliminary, the construction of the contract of the lease of the hotel between the parties.

The court holds the property in controversy liable for the debt, finding: “ That at the time the lease was made plaintiffs knew that the title to the property described in the complaint was in W. J. Stramann and that the business connected with the construction of the houses had been transacted by him in his own name and were ignorant of the agreement between the defendants, * * * and relied in part in malting said lease upon the apparent financial ability of W. J. Stramann. * * * The conveyance of March 15, 1893, ought not to be sustained to defeat the plaintiffs’ recovery of this claim for the debt of W. J. Stramann contracted upon the faith that he owned the property.”

The learned judge evidently misconceived the contract of leasing. From the fact that it was stated that the gross or aggregate rent for the full term of five years was to be [11]*11$11,850, the court construed it as a debt contracted at the time of the execution of the lease, to be paid absolutely, contracted on the part of the plaintiffs with regard to the property owned by W. J. Stramann and his financial responsibility. There are several obvious reasons why this construction is erroneous.

First: There was no consideration for any debt. The future use of the leased property for the full term of five years was to be the consideration and the entire term would have to elapse without payment of rent before the aggregate debt would be created.

Second: The lease might have been terminated at any time by the destruction of the property. The lease provides that in case the building shall be destroyed by fire or become untenantable .that the rents shall cease until rebuilt, but the rebuilding was to be at election of plaintiffs. Thus suspension of rent or an end of the lease is provided for.

Third:

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Bluebook (online)
7 Colo. App. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stramann-v-scheeren-coloctapp-1895.