Watson v. Ryan

3 Tenn. Ch. R. 40
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 40 (Watson v. Ryan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watson v. Ryan, 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 40 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1875).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

On September 24, 1862, P. M, Ryan, reciting a consideration of natural love and affection, executed a deed pm-porting to convey to one W. H. Dobson certain realty described, in trust for his wife and children, which deed was duly registered on the 26th of the same month. On the same day, Ryan executed another conveyance of personalty to Dobson, in trust for creditors therein named, which deed was also duly registered. Nothing, so far as appears, seems ever to have been done under these conveyances, or ostensible conveyances. On January 25, 1867, [41]*41Ryan conveyed to one Chamberlin the principal piece of realty mentioned in the previous deed, in trust to secure M; Kean and others as his sureties on an injunction bond executed by him - to procure an injunction from this court against the collection of certain debts. This deed was also registered. On May 14,1868, Ryan conveyed the same land, and certain personal property’thereon, to M. M. Brien, to secure him against liability on a replevin bond executed by Ryan as principal and Brien as surety, in order to replevy the property from an attachment sued out in this court. This deed was also registered.

On February 13, 1872, S. Watson recovered a judgment in the Circuit Court of Davidson County against P. M. Ryan for $1,520.07, on a note made by Ryan in 1861, on which execution issued and was returned nulla bona. Thereupon, on August 2, 1872, Watson filed his bill in this court aouinst By an, Ryan’s wife and children, Dobson, Brien, and others, and attached the land and personalty on the 2d and 21st of the same month, charging that the conveyance to Dobson was voluntary, fraudulent in law as to complainant, by reason of the debt being then in existence, and fraudulent in fact:-and charging, also, that the conveyance to Brien is void and fraudulent. Ryan answers this bill, but says not a word about the conveyance to Dobson ; nor is his answer excepted to, nor is it marked as filed. I am not certain, therefore, whether the complainants have recognized the paper as an answer or taken the bill for confessed. Brien answers, denying that the conveyance to him is fraudulent, and adds that, having ascertained the existence of the conveyance to Dobson, in trust for Ryan’s wife and children, he bought the property at tax sale, and has a deed for it. No proof has been taken or evidence filed, except a transcript of the complainant’s judgment.

In the year 1873 Ryan died intestate, and A. F. Whitman qualified as administrator of his estate. On March 31, 1874, M. Kean filed his bill against Whitman as administra[42]*42tor, and tlie widow and children of Ryan, and Chamberlin, ■stating that, as surety of Ryan on the replevin bond as .aforesaid, he had been I’ecently compelled to pay $555.31, and seeking a foreclosure of the mortgage made for his indemnity. Process seems to have been executed on the •defendants, and a guardian ad litem appointed for the infants, and nothing further done.

On September 15, 1874, A. F. Whitman, as administrator of P. M. Ryan, filed his bill against all the parties to the foregoing suits hereinbefore mentioned, recognizing the ■debts of Watson and Kean, and alleging that the personal assets of the estate, all of which are subject to the attachment in the Watson suit, are wholly insufficient to pay the •debts, and he has suggested its insolvency accordingly, and asking that the administration of the estate be transferred to this court. The bill sets out the various conveyances of R}ran, and the suits brought as above detailed, and attacks the deed to Dobson in 1862 as fraudulent and void, and the subsequent conveyances made to secure Kean and Brien as equally void as to him. He asks that these conveyances be set aside, the property sold for the payment of debts, th¡e liens of the creditors declared, and for general relief.

To this bill Watson, Kean, and Brien have filed answers-, setting up their respective claims. The infants have answered by guardian ad litem, and the bill has been taken for confessed against the other parties. Brien has filed the deed from the tax-collector, under which he claims to hold the land in suit by virtue of his purchase at tax sale. Watson has filed a complete transcript of the proceedings in the Circuit Court in the suit in which he recovered his judgment against Ryan, showing that the debt on which the judgment is based was created in the year 1861. Certified copies of the deeds to Dobson, in 1862, are also filed. And Dobson’s deposition has been taken, but only to prove that no consideration was paid by him, or by any one for him, to Ryan for said conveyances.

[43]*43The parties seem to have taken it for granted that all the matters of litigation between them may be disposed of under the bill of Whitman, administrator, to which they are all made defendants. The bill is filed upon suggestion of the insolvencj’’ of Ryan’s estate, for the administration of that estate in this court, for the sale of realty to pay debts, .and, to this end, to set aside the several conveyances alleged to be fraudulent under the Code, sec. 2395. Previous to the passage of the statute upon which that section is based, the personal representative of a decedent, like the decedent himself in his lifetime, could not dispute the validity of .■such conveyance. That section provides thus: “The ■executor or administrator may, as the representative of the ■creditors of an insolvent estate, file a bill to set aside a fraudulent-conveyance of property ; and when such convey•ance is set aside, the assets recovered shall be distributed j■pro rata among the creditors.” Under this section the personal representative acts for the creditors, not for the estate, and must show that the estate is insolvent, that there .are debts, and that the proceeding is on behalf of the creditors. Boxy v. McKay, 4 Sneed, 286.

The bill could not be maintained at all except by showing ■debts, but it does concede the validity of the debts of Watson and Kean, and is, therefore, within the statute. It .also makes out a state of facts giving the court jurisdiction under the insolvent laws. I agree with the parties in thinking that, under these circumstances, the whole litigation is before the court under Whitman’s bill, and may be ■disposed of, giving the litigants the benefits of any priorities acquired by virtue of the separate suits.

The first question which naturally presents itself is in relation to the conveyance of September 24, 1862, to W. K. Dobson, in trust for Ryan’s' wife and children. The charge of Whitman’s bill, in this regard, is that Ryan died seized and possessed in fee of the realty in controversy. ’This would no.t have been the fact if the deed to Dob-[44]*44son had been ■ executed and delivered to the trustee or beneficiaries, even if it had been fraudulent and void; for,so far as Ryan was concerned, the title would have passed, even if the deed was void as to creditors. The allegation could only be true upon the supposition that the instrument in controversy was not executed with the necessary formalities to make it operate as a deed. In other words, the deed was simply made and registered as a fraudulent device by Ryan, but never actually delivered, or acted under. Dobson, the trustee, and Ryan’s widow, the only adult beneficiary, concede such to have been the fact by allowing the bill to be taken for confessed against them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Tenn. Ch. R. 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-ryan-tennctapp-1875.