Teller v. Bishop

8 Minn. 226
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 8 Minn. 226 (Teller v. Bishop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Teller v. Bishop, 8 Minn. 226 (Mich. 1863).

Opinion

By the Court.

Atwater, J.

It appears from the complaint that the Plaintiff, Teller, is a resident of the State of Iowa; and that on the 1st of February, 1860, he recovered a judgment in the District Court in and for the Second Judicial District of this State, against the Defendant, Charles Bishop, for the sum of $614.14. founded upon an indebtedness contracted by the said Defendant, August 21, 1857. An execution was issued upon the judgment previous to the commencement of this action, which was returned wholly unsatisfied. It is also alleged that the Defendant is indebted to the Plaintiff in the further sum of over $7,500, upon an indebtedness contracted at the same time and on the same account (live stock sold and delivered to Defendant,) as the indebtedness upon which the judgment was obtained.

The copaplaint then goes on to charge that the Defendant, Charles Bishop, out of the proceeds of Plaintiff’s pi’operty, purchased of one Sargeant certain real estate in Dakota county, and with intent to cheat and defraud the Plaintiff, and to place the same beyond the reach of his creditors, the Defendant, Charles Bishop, caused the conveyance of the property to be made to his wife, Anna Bishop, but that the entire consideration for the same was paid by the Defendant [228]*228Charles, and of his own money. It is charged that said Defendant was insolvent at the time of .said conveyance from Sargeant to his wife. It is not stated when this .conveyance .was made, but it would appear to have been since the rendition of the judgment above mentioned. The complaint seeks to make the judgment a lien'or charge upon the property in the hands of the Defendant, Anna Bishop.

The answer admits the judgment and indebtedness set up in the complaint, but alleges that Defendant has been discharged from all liability upon the same, by virtue of an order of the Judge of the District Court of Ramsey county, made upon proceedings had in that Court under the Insolvent Act. It admits the conveyance of the property in question to Anna Bishop, denies all fraud, and alleges that the purchase price for the land was paid by the said Anna, with her own money, and that the same is her own separate and individual property, and that she now owns and holds the same as such, and not otherwise. There was a reply putting in issue the discharge of Defendant under the Insolvent Act.

The cause was referred to W. Wilkin, Esq., who reported in favor of Defendants,'and judgment was entered upon the report for costs of suit. What further proceedings were had by the Plaintiff does not appear, nor is there anything in the paper book points furnished by Plaintiff’s counsel, or even the endorsement of the same to indicate whether the cause came into this Court by writ of error or appeal. We must express our strong disapprobation of making up a paper book so defectively in facts which it is important should be presented to this Court, and for want of which, especially in a submitted case like this, we are put to great inconvenience and annoyance. After considerable inquiry, we learn that the case comes before this Court by writ of error.

The 'Referee has found, among other facts, that the Defendant, Anna Bishop, in-October, 1859, had in her possession, as her own separate property, the sum of five hundred dollars in money, being money saved by her from gifts of her father and H husband; that at the time said moneys were given her by-I her husband, he was solvent and able to pay all his debts; that B during the month of October, 1859, the Defendant, Charles B [229]*229Bishop, was the owner of certain promissory notes, which' were transferred to his wife as part consideration for the said sum of $500, which he received from her, and a portion of which was used by him in carrying on his business as a butcher, that in making said transfer, the notes were not valued at the'full amount of $500.

That afterward the said Charles Bishop, acting as the agent of the said Anna, his wife, purchased of one Sargeant the real estate in controversy, and paid therefor as the consideration, the notes received by Anna Bishop from her husband, together with the one half of the butcher shop carried on by the said Charles Bishop, and of the meat therein. That said conveyance was not made nor received by the said AnnaBishop, with the intent upon the part of said Defendants, or either of them, to cover up any property of said Charles Bishop, or to defraud the Plaintiff or any creditor of said Charles Bishop, but was so made and received by the said Anna Bishop, in consideration of the said notes, so belonging to her as aforesaid, and of the balance of said sum of $500, so furnished by her to said Charles Bishop, over and above the estimated value of said notes. And that the said Anna did not, and does not, hold said lands, or any part thereof, or any interest therein, upon any trust for the benefit of the said Charles Bishop. The Referee found that the Defendants were entitled to judgment for costs.

Upon the trial of the cause, the Defendants moved to strike out all the part of the Plaintiff’s reply, which alleges a fraudulent concealment of property upon the proceedings in insolvency referred to in the pleadings, which motion'was granted by the Referee,'and exception taken by the Plaintiff. This is the only exception on the trial of the action which the record discloses; aud it becomes unnecessary to examine as to the correctness of the Referee’s ruling upon this point, since he has found the issue as to the discharge of Defendant upon the insolvent proceedings in favor of the Plaintiff, holding that the claims of Plaintiff are still valid and subsisting against Defendant, Charles Bishop. And as the evidence is not brought up, nor any question made upon the same, the only [230]*230inattei* before this Court to determine is, whether the facts found by the Referee justify his conclusions of law.

It is claimed by the Plaintiff in Error that the transfer of the notes by Bishop to his wife was a nullity, and vested no title in her. That the wife might have purchased these notes or any other property with her own money, of any other party than her husband, will scarcely be questioned; but whether, even under the changes made by our statute in the common law, in the relations of husband and wife as to holding and dealing in property, the wife can make such purchase of the husband, may be seriously questioned. But in view of the facts disclosed by this case, it is unnecessary to decide this question, inasmuch as, if the Defendant, Anna Bishop, did not obtain the legal title to the notes, she was equitably entitled to the same, and the proceeds thereof. This is an action on the equity side of the Court, and it having been found by the Referee, that the money of Anna Bishop has been invested in this land, in good faith, and without any intention to defraud, it would be highly inequitable for this Court to decree that the property should be held to satisfy the debts of the husband. If the transfer of the notes to Anna Bishop be held to vest no title in her, and that in consequence thereof, the title to the real estate failed in her, the least that equity could require would be the restoration of the money to her that formed the consideration of the notes. But this relief the Plaintiff does not seek.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Minn. 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teller-v-bishop-minn-1863.