WARWICK MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES CREDIT U. v. Higham
This text of 259 A.2d 852 (WARWICK MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES CREDIT U. v. Higham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
WARWICK MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES CREDIT UNION
v.
Everett HIGHAM, Sr., et al.
Supreme Court of Rhode Island.
Earl F. Pasbach, for plaintiff.
Robert G. Pariseault, for defendants.
*853 OPINION
PAOLINO, Justice.
The plaintiff brought this complaint as a judgment creditor of the defendants Everett Higham, Sr., and his wife Mabel Higham. It prays that the latter's son, defendant Everett Higham, Jr., be enjoined from selling or otherwise disposing of certain real estate presently standing in his name, that he be ordered to convey it to his parents so that a judgment obtained by the plaintiff against them could be satisfied by a sale of the property, and that a constructive trust be imposed thereon. After a hearing on the complaint, answer and oral proof, an order based on the trial justice's decision was entered in the Superior Court granting the requested relief. The case is here on the defendants' appeal from that order.
Sometime in April 1963, Richard Higham applied to plaintiff credit union for a loan of $1,500. His parents, defendants Everett Higham, Sr. and Mabel Higham, signed as comakers. The parents stated in the application that they owned real estate in Warwick in which they lived which had a net value of $7,800, and that Everett Higham, Sr. was earning a weekly salary of $170. Two of plaintiff's employees testified that, when Richard applied for the loan, he was told that the loan would require two comakers, and that he brought his mother and father; that they were asked if they owned any property to be used as collateral for the loan; that they said they did; and that, in making the loan, plaintiff relied on the comakers' statement that they owned real estate with a net value of $7,800 and very little on the statement about the father's wages.
On January 2, 1964, the father and mother conveyed their real estate to their son Everett, Jr., who was then single and living with them. The deed contained a statement that the consideration for the conveyance was such that no revenue stamps were required and that the conveyance was subject to all encumbrances of record. The complaint alleges that the conveyance was made without the knowledge and consent of plaintiff, with inadequate consideration, and to impair the security of the loan.
On January 24, 1964, Richard filed a bankruptcy petition in the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island and was adjudged a bankrupt.
Thereafter, the note remaining in default, plaintiff instituted an action at law against the comakers. On April 13, 1966, a judgment on the note was entered in favor of plaintiff in the amount of $1,312.42 against the comakers. Execution was issued thereon and returned unsatisfied.
On June 22, 1967, plaintiff brought the present complaint against the comakers and their son Everett, Jr. It appears from the evidence that, at the time he signed the note, Everett, Sr. was not working; he was recovering from a heart attack which had occurred on February 3, 1963. He testified that his doctor had told him he would return to work within two months. He denied any knowledge of Richard's default or of his impending bankruptcy at the time he transferred the property to his son Everett.
With regard to the question of consideration, Everett, Sr. testified that six months after his illness the doctor told him that he could not work any more; that he and his wife went to their lawyer's office and told him that their son Everett had been giving them $25 per week while he was home, that he had promised to support them in the future, and that they wished to convey their property to their son Everett, Jr. in exchange for his promise to support them, and that he had continued this support at the rate of $25 weekly and had paid the taxes and the cost of repairs. Everett, Sr. testified that this continued for a year or better after his son got married and that thereafter he gave them money when they needed it for anything around the house and he, *854 Everett, Jr., took care of the house. The parents continued to live in the premises.
In a very brief decision the trial justice stated that he found as a fact that there was no consideration for the transfer of the property from the mother and father to the son, and that, consequently, he found that the transfer was made with fraud and intent to deprive plaintiff of the security of the property owned by the mother and father within the meaning of G.L. 1956, § 6-16-1, the statute dealing with fraudulent conveyances. Accordingly, he granted plaintiff the relief it sought, and an order to that effect was entered impressing an equitable lien on the property and ordering that the real estate be amenable for the satisfaction of the judgment held by plaintiff.
The main question involved in this case is whether the transfer was in violation of the statute against fraudulent conveyances.[1] The defendants claim that it was not.
The defendants' first contention is that plaintiff has not shown that fraud and deceit were practiced on it by defendants at the time the note was signed. They point out that the complaint contains no allegation that plaintiff relied on Everett, Sr.'s statement about his weekly wages, and that plaintiff's testimony was that the statement about the weekly wages had not been considered by the credit committee. The complaint alleges only that plaintiff relied upon the statement of Everett, Sr. and his wife that they owned the real estate in question.
We agree that the statement regarding the wages of Everett, Sr. has no significance in this case. Neither, however, was it incumbent on plaintiff to establish fraud and deceit by defendant comakers at the time the note was signed. The important date was the date of conveyance. See 37 C.J.S. Fraudulent Conveyances § 112.
The defendants next argue that plaintiff was not a creditor of the comakers within the meaning of § 6-16-1; that no notice of Richard's default on the note was given to them; that plaintiff did not show that the comakers knew of the default when they deeded the property to their son; that plaintiff never introduced any evidence of the date upon which the note became in default and it was therefore impossible to tell from the record whether the conveyance occurred before or after the default, and, finally, that the transfer was made for an adequate consideration, that is the son's promise to support his parents.
The plaintiff became a creditor of the comakers when they signed the note; in fact, the comakers became equally liable for its payment. There is nothing in this record showing that plaintiff was under any duty to notify the comakers of the maker's default. The trial justice obviously did not believe Everett, Sr.'s testimony that he had no knowledge of the default and that he and his wife made the conveyance in consideration of their son's promise to support them. In this posture we are confronted with a record showing the loan of $1,500, a default in the payments of the note, a finding of fact based on credibility that there was no consideration for the transfer of the property to son Everett, Jr., son Richard's *855 subsequent bankruptcy, plaintiff's law action against the comakers, the award of a judgment in that case, and, finally, the present action.
The law governing the narrow issue presented by this appeal is not too involved. The statute does not require proof of fraud in fact. Savoie v. Pion, 52 R.I. 422, 161 A. 219.
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259 A.2d 852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warwick-municipal-employees-credit-u-v-higham-ri-1969.