Walker's Adm'x v. Peck

19 S.E. 411, 39 W. Va. 325, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 54
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 19 S.E. 411 (Walker's Adm'x v. Peck) 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
Walker's Adm'x v. Peck, 19 S.E. 411, 39 W. Va. 325, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 54 (W. Va. 1894).

Opinion

Brannon, President :

Samuel 0. Walker executed a deed of trust on certain personal property to secure anote made by Samuel C. Walker to his brother, Henry S. Walker, and Emma D. Walker, the wife of Samuel O. Walker, made claim to some of said property; and to overthrow this claim as a cloud over the property, and enjoin Mrs. Walker from disposing of it and subjecting the property to sale under the deed of trust, Henry S. Walker brought a chancery suit, and the bill hav[326]*326ing been dismissed by the Circuit Court of Barbour county, the administratrix of Henry S. Walker appealed.

A considerable part of the property conveyed by said deed of trust was disclaimed by Mrs. Walker and sold by the trustee — a circumstance arguing in favor of her honesty in this transaction. The sole question involved in the case is : Was that portion of the property covered by said deed of trust claimed by Mrs. Walker in fact hers and exempt from the deed of trust, which she did not sign, or was it the property of her husband and liable under the deed of trust? This is simply a question of fact, and no question of law comes into the controversy to call for any discussion, and a detail of the evidence would answer no purpose useful to the courts or bar in future cases. The evidence as to whose property it was is confined substantially to the deposition of the husband and wife, the husband having been put on the stand by the plaintiff.

To sustain the plaintiff’s cause appeal is.made to the case of McMasters v. Edgar, 22 W. Va. 673, and other cases holding the principle, that, where property is asserted to have been purchased by a wife during marriage, the burden is ou her to prove by clear and full proof that she paid for it with means not derived from the husband. This rule was made to defeat fraud. We stand by it. The courts will under it in proper cases brush away purchases made by and conveyances made to wives of husbands indebted, who seek to cover up their means from the pursuit of creditors under the names of their wives. But it is not every purchase or acquisition by a wife that is fraudulent. If she reasonably and fairly show, that the property came from her meaus or not from her husband’s — satisfy a court’s or jury’s conscience about it — it is inequitable and unjust to rob her of her property to pay her husband’s debts.

The statement-of the rule in McMasters v. Edgar states also the converse — that, if the wife do prove that the property was honestly acquired with her means, it ought to be protected in her favor. The evidence in the case before us shows this fully aud above suspicion. James Pickens, father of Emma D. Walker, was a wealthy man. She married in 1877. Her father gave her a farm of three hundred [327]*327and thirty seven and one half acres, valued at thirteen thousand and four hundred dollars, and in 1879 she and her husband moved upon it. Her father died in January,-1887, and from his estate she received over one thousand and one hundred dollars in money. Her husband is not shown ever to have had any considerable amount of means. When they went upon the farm he had. one thousand and five hundred dollars, and he says he put valuable improvements upon the' house and farm with the joint labor of himself and wife to the amount of one thousand dollars or one thousand and two hundred dollars, he paying all the money used therein; but when asked, how much money he so applied, his answer was: “I am not able to say.” The wife says that he used of his one thousand and five hundred dollars a few hundred dollars iu remodeling, papering, and paintiug the house on her farm, and the balance went to living expenses. Thus he had disposed of his means otherwise than in the acquisition of the property in controversy. Suppose he put it all in improvements on her land. That can not help the plaintiff. By devoting it to such improvements it was a gift to her, giving him no demand against her except as to creditors. But there were then no creditors to be wronged thereby. It is not involved in this suit. The note given to his brother by Samuel 0. Walker was not given until about ten years later — July 29, 1889.

The husband though seeming from some passages in his deposition to claim ownership of the property in controversy, and justify his act in giviug the trust, does not squarely and unequivocally do so. His idea of. his ownership seems nothing more than that, as he was her husband, and some of it is his, and the property was on the farm, he owned it. He owed his brother and perhaps thought his wife would ratify the act. His strongest statements in direct examination are hesitating and qualified, tie was asked, who had right to possession of the property at the time he made the trust-deed, and answered : — “I supposed I had.” Why suppose merely ? He was asked then : “You say you suppose you had. Don’t you in fact know that it was your property?” Answer: “Why of course it was [328]*328my property, or I supposed it was my property; and I would not have executed that trust, if I had not been of that impression.” Why use the word “impression” ? He is an intelligent man, and if he had bought the property his knowledge would rise above au impression. He could not say how long he had been owner of the property involved. He not only does not tell us where he got his property; but on cross examination being asked specifically as to particular horses and cattle he admits that they were gifts from her father or the progeny of those so given. This applies to all the property 1ns wife in her deposition claimed. He on cross-examination proves her title.

The husband and wife borrowed money of her father on their .joint note, and invested it in nine colts. She and he both say that she paid all this note. She and he both swear that she sold four of the best of these colts and three of her own and applied the money on a debt of his to Mrs. Ann M. Pickens, who was given a preference as to the colts in the trust-deed. Henry S. Walker, by accepting the trust containing this preference, assented to such application of the colts. She paid a small balance of twenty five dollars on this debt out of her own pocket. He had in a sense a half interest in those colts, which should have gone to help her pay their purchase-money, but it went to pay his own debt. Out of a sense of pride and liberality which wives feel for their husbands she paid to her loss as in other instances developed by the evidence.

In February, 1888, Samuel 0. Walker himself left the farm and engaged in mercantile business for about two years in Charleston, leaving his wife on the farm in Barbour county. Before leaving, in December, 1887, he made a bill of sale to his wife of eight horses. This is complained of as a secret bill of sale. There is not a syllable of evidence, that she made it a secret. The bill states that it wms made to enable her to sell the property to reimburse her for payment of a note of one thousand three hundred and fifty dollars given by him to Dever Pickens, on which she had paid six huudred and thirty five dollars and thirty five cents and he had paid seven hundred and fourteen dollars and sixty five cents ; she having paid said balance at the demand of [329]*329said Dever Pickens, executor of his father, out of her share of the personalty of her father’s estate in his hands. For pride in her husbend, and because demanded of her, she had already paid this debt of her husband and held his note, as the bill of sale says, and they both solemnly swear. Only one of the horses included in this written bill of sale was included in the trust-deed.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mylius v. Koontz
73 S.E. 319 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1911)
Dudley v. Buckley
70 S.E. 376 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1911)
Logan v. Ballard
57 S.E. 142 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1907)
Pickens v. Wood
50 S.E. 818 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1905)
Miller v. Gillispie
46 S.E. 451 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 S.E. 411, 39 W. Va. 325, 1894 W. Va. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walkers-admx-v-peck-wva-1894.