Wantulok v. Wantulok

214 P.2d 477, 67 Wyo. 22, 21 A.L.R. 2d 572, 1950 Wyo. LEXIS 3
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1950
Docket2446
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 214 P.2d 477 (Wantulok v. Wantulok) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wantulok v. Wantulok, 214 P.2d 477, 67 Wyo. 22, 21 A.L.R. 2d 572, 1950 Wyo. LEXIS 3 (Wyo. 1950).

Opinions

[27]*27OPINION.

Blume, Justice.

The plaintiff herein is Susie Wantulok, Adminis-tratrix of the estate of John A. Wantulok, and sole heir-at-law of John A. Wantulok. The defendant is a brother of John A. Wantulok. This action was commenced on July 16, 1948. Plaintiff alleged her status as heir and administratrix; that John A. Wantulok [28]*28died intestate on May 21, 1945; that at that time, he was seized and possessed of two portions of Block 16 of Suburban Homes Company Addition to the City of Sheridan, Wyoming, the property in dispute herein. It is fully described in the petition and the decree herein and we need not do so here. The plaintiff further alleged that on April 26, 1937, she and her husband conveyed the above real estate to the defendant by warranty deed recorded April 27, 1937; that this deed was in fact without consideration; that the legal title to the real estate involved was placed in the defendant in trust for the grantor to be thereafter reconveyed by the defendant to John A. Wantulok, his heirs or assigns; that she and her husband, at all times, have resided and have controlled the premises in question. Plaintiff asked in substance that the defendant be restrained from disturbing her and her possession of the property and that it be declared that the defendant holds the premises in trust as above mentioned.

The defendant answered and filed a cross-petition. In that cross-petition and in the answer, he alleged that on September 1, 1936, John A. Wantulok and his wife gave him a mortgage on the premises involved herein for the sum of $1500 which he claimed he loaned to the husband of the plaintiff between 1912 and 1926; that the deed of April 26, 1937, was executed in satisfaction of the foregoing mortgage and upon further payment by the defendant to the husband of the plaintiff of the sum of $1000. Defendant accordingly asked that he be declared to be the absolute owner of the property in question here. The court entered judgment on February 23, 1949, and made the following finding of fact: Plaintiff is the administratrix of the estate of John A. Wantulok, deceased, and is sole heir; she and her husband on November 25, 1936, executed a mortgage to the defendant covering the property [29]*29herein involved for the sum of §1500; the deed here-inabove mentioned was executed on April 26, 1937; at the time the property was so mortgaged and conveyed, it was the home and homestead of the plaintiff and her deceased husband and was worth in excess of §2500; both mortgage and deed were given without consideration and were given for the purpose of delaying or hindering the creditors of John A. Wantulok and were accepted by the defendant for the same purpose and with the oral understanding that he, the defendant, would reconvey the property when so requested by the plaintiff and her husband; the court should not enforce any of the claims or demands or agreements of the parties against each other arising out of the mortgage, deed, or oral understanding, but should leave them as it find them. It was accordingly ordered, adjudged, and decreed that neither party take anything and that the plaintiff’s petition and the defendant’s cross-petition be and are dismissed.

From that judgment, the plaintiff has appealed. The defendant did not appeal. His counsel, however, appeared in this court insisting that the judgment of the district court should be affirmed, at the same time joining counsel for the plaintiff in asking that, if possible, the title to the property be extricated from the deplorable condition in which it is now found.

We accept the finding of the trial court that the mortgage and deed above mentioned were without consideration. We have read over the evidence and believe that the court reached the correct conclusion. So we shall not set out any of the evidence bearing on that point or bearing on the cross-petition of the defendant, except as it might be necessary incidentally, and we shall confine ourselves in briefly outlining the evidence which seems to have a bearing on the finding of the court that the property in controversy was [30]*30conveyed to hinder and delay the creditors of the husband of the deceased. That evidence is based in the main on the testimony of the plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s husband was a coal miner and, seemingly, uneducated. He died in 1945. Plaintiff, herself, is uneducated, understands little of the laws of this country and her testimony had to be taken through an interpreter. Plaintiff’s husband owned the property in controversy, consisting of some eight acres of land near the City of Sheridan, Wyoming, part of it being swamp land. A house of seven rooms was erected thereon which was occupied by the plaintiff and her husband. In addition thereto, they had a house of three rooms which was rented and on which plaintiff and her husband at all times collected the rent without any objection on the part of the defendant. Plaintiff and her husband had a daughter who was born in 1911. That daughter became sick in the early part of 1936 when she was 24 or 25 years of age. She lay sick for some six weeks and died in March, 1936. By reason thereof the plaintiff and her husband — as plaintiff testified — owed about §1400.00, due to the physician and the hospital and for funeral expenses. They owed no other debts. They had only §500 and paid that on these bills. Plaintiff’s husband was out of employment so the plaintiff, herself, hired out as a cook and for a number of years acted as such to earn the money to pay the indebtedness due as above mentioned, and that indebtedness was, prior to the commencement of this action, all paid. After paying the $500 in cash — all the cash that they had — there was still due approximately the sum of §900. Plaintiff testified that they —she and her husband — wanted to pay the remaining indebtedness, and merely wanted time to do so. But plaintiff’s husband, fearing that such time might not be given, but that their property might be taken from [31]*31him, he and the plaintiff gave to the defendant, brother of plaintiff’s husband, a mortgage for $1500, in November, 1936, ^nd the deed above mentioned in the spring of 1937. No consideration was given by the defendant for these conveyances, and the defendant agreed orally at the time when the deed was given that he would reconvey the property to the husband of the deceased at any time upon request. Defendant, so plaintiff testified, never had the deed or mortgage in his possession though recorded, but they remained in the possession of herself and of her deceased husband at all times after the execution thereof. Nor did the defendant ever receive an abstract of title to the property. Plaintiff and her husband continued to reside on the premises herein involved and controlled it at all times. Nor did the defendant ever demand possession thereof until just a short time prior to the commencement of the action herein. Plaintiff and her husband, at all times, paid the taxes on the property and claimed the usual exemption of $500 on her home and homestead. During 1947, plaintiff made permanent improvement on the property of the value of approximately $1500. This was done with the knowledge and acquiesence of and without any objection on the part of the defendant.

As a general rule, courts will not aid a fraudulent grantor to recover from his transferee, property transferred in fraud of creditors. 37 C. J. S. 1098.

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Wantulok v. Wantulok
214 P.2d 477 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
214 P.2d 477, 67 Wyo. 22, 21 A.L.R. 2d 572, 1950 Wyo. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wantulok-v-wantulok-wyo-1950.