Trapnell v. Conklyn

16 S.E. 570, 37 W. Va. 242, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 23
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 16 S.E. 570 (Trapnell v. Conklyn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trapnell v. Conklyn, 16 S.E. 570, 37 W. Va. 242, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 23 (W. Va. 1892).

Opinion

BRANNON, Judge :

Personal property was levied upon as property of James' H. Conklyn, under executions against him and his wife, and Susan C. Conklyn, claiming it; and atrial was had by a jury in the Circuit Court of Jefferson county, under Code, c. 107, ss. 1, 5, 6, to settle the right thereto between Mrs. [244]*244Conldyn and Trapueli and Croft, use, etc., the execution creditors, resulting in a verdict findiusi part of said property to be the property of said .lames A. Conldyn. From the judgment carrying said verdict into execution Mrs. Conk-lyn obtained this writ of error.

The real merits of the case are involved in the motion of Mrs. Conldyn to set aside the verdict, because contrary to the evidence, which was overruled.

James 13. Conklyn, becoming involved, on March 28, 1885, surrendered all his land and personalty, except seventy five dollars household goods, the estate conveyed being very considerable in amount, to his creditors by a deed of trust, under which, on April 20, 1885, the trustee sold the .personal property, and in August, 1885, sold the farm, on which Conklyn resided, eighty one acres. Daniel Ileffle-bower, who is the brother of Mrs. Conklyn, purchased said farm for his wife, and it was paid for out of her separate estate. Daniel Ileffiebower bought at the trustee’s sale the wheat growing upon said eighty one acres for his sister, Mrs. Conklyn, also a roan mare, at the price of three hundred and fifty one dollars and sixty four cents, for the purpose of furnishing his sister with means to farm; and, acting for his wife, Ilefflebower leased the farm to his sister Mrs.'Conklyn, after he purchased it. Hefflebower sold the wheat and mare and colt to Mrs. Conklyn on credit at the same price he paid, and afterwards she cut the said wheat, and out of it partly paid for it and the mare and colt.

Mrs. Haney Conklyn, mother of James H. Conldyn, in December, 1884, leased for no definite time another tract of laud, which he on becoming insolvent turned over to his wife to be farmed, and which was farmed by her in connection with and in the same manner as the eighty one-acre farm.

Mrs. Susan C. Conklyn, while living with her husband, to some extent with his assistance and the assistance of her son, about eighteen years of age, and of a hired man, in 1885 put out a corn crop on both said tracts of land, using with the trustee’s consent, until 29th April, the horses and farming implements of JamesH. Conklyn conveyed in said deed of trust.

[245]*245While Mrs. Conklyn was farming she had the help of fanning implements and horses lent to her by her brother, Daniel Ilefilebower, and other assistance from him. He gave her five hogs to stock the farm. Thus equipped, she began farming both farms, the son, with the father’s consent, working the farms with hands hired from time to time, and paid for out of the proceeds of the farm, the son' having no contract, but receiving from time to time such amounts of money as could he spared, amounting to one hundred and fifty dollars, including clothing.

The husband was absent much of the time, selling machinery on commission for a firm, and for many months physically and mentally incapacitated by disease for work or business to any extent, and for a time in a hospital. "When at home and not incapacitated, he gave some help on the farm, and to some extent assisted the wife and son in superintending and managing it. He acted generally as his wife’s agent in selling and buying, but the son and Mrs. Conklyn’s brother frequently took part.

From the proceeds of the farm so operated, and on credit given to her by it, the operating expenses, household expenses, and such articles as stock and other things as were needed were provided from time to time. Ata sale of J ohn Denner in March, 1886, a black mare was bought by Ilefile-bower for his sister, for one hundred and thirty seven dollars, on which was credited forty one dollars, the price of a colt of hers which had been sold at said sale, and its price taken up in the bill; and for ninety six dollars, the balance James H. Conklyn gave his note as his wife’s .agent, indorsed by Ilefilebower, and paid by him when due. In March, 1887, at a sale of Col. Gibson’s, Hefilebower purchased for his sister a bay horse, for which her husband as her agent gave his note, indorsed by Ilefilebower, which was paid when due by young Conklyn, the son above mentioned, with Heffiebower’s check for one hundred dollars to young Conklyn, lent by Ilefilebower to his sister on the sou’s request, by his mother’s direction; and the balance was paid by the son with money furnished by the mother.

On loans and the sale of said property by Hefilebower to his sister payments were made from time to time out of [246]*246tlie proceeds of the farm, aiuPout of them and other transactions grew an account on which a balance remained unpaid, estimated to be some seventy five dollars.

The property levied on’was derived as follows : Tliebor-rcl colt was the foal of the mare bought at Benner’s side. .Two colts were descendants of the roan mare sold at the trustee’s sale and the bay horse bought at Gibson’s sale. A wagon was bought by James II. Conklyn, as agent for his wife, on credit, and paid for out of money supplied by the wife out of a payment by Daniel Ilefilebower, as executor of his father, upon a legacy of three hundred dollars to Mrs. Conklyn under the will of her father, probated in 1867, which money was paid her in 1890. The hogAwere the increase of those given to Mrs. Conklyn by her brother in 1885. A horserake was bought on the credit of the farm and paid' for out of its proceeds. Crops levied on were raised on the farms in 1890, in the manner aforesaid. The verdict relieved the hogs and wagon from the executions.

At the date of the sale by the trustee, Mrs. Conklyn had no separate estate save the three hundred dollars legacy under her father’s will.

The theory, upon which it is claimed that all the property found by the jury to be property of JamesjII. Conklyn andli-ableTor his debts was his, is that at the start, the date of the sale of his property under the deed of trust, Mrs. Conklyn had no separate estate whatever; that she purchased the personal property purchased at the sale by her brother' of him wholly on credit; that the property and its increase can not be regarded as the wife’s, because it started with no separate basis; was not acquired with a separate estate; that something can not come from nothing, so to speak, and a separate estate can not arise from mere credit’to the wife not based on separate estate; that the personal property was'paid for out of the issues of the farms, which were pro-•dueed by farming operations by the labor of the husband and his infant son, which of right belong to the creditors ; and so far as that labor may be said not to have produced sucli proceeds, or even if they had not contributed thereto, as the farm was operated by the wife, its proceeds are to be regarded as the wife’s earnings, belonging by law to the [247]*247husband ; and thus neither the property nor crops would be hers.

We can say on the facts certified as facts, that, when Daniel Hefflebower purchased property sold at the trustee’s sale paying to the creditor’s use, he became bona fide owner of it and sold it to his sister, Mrs. Conklyn. But it was sold on credit, and it is said separate estate can not arise from the wife’s credit, but, if a purchase, it must be made with her separate estate.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.E. 570, 37 W. Va. 242, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trapnell-v-conklyn-wva-1892.