Wickes v. Clarke

8 Paige Ch. 161, 1840 N.Y. LEXIS 431, 1840 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 46
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 3, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 8 Paige Ch. 161 (Wickes v. Clarke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wickes v. Clarke, 8 Paige Ch. 161, 1840 N.Y. LEXIS 431, 1840 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 46 (N.Y. 1840).

Opinions

The following opinion was delivered by the vice chancellor on the hearing of the case before him:

McCoun, V. C.

The complainants are creditors of Peter Clarke, by judgment recovered on the 21st October, 1831, upon a joint and several bond given by him and James B.. Clarke as his surety, on the 1st May, 1803, conditioned for the payment of $4000. Two thousand dollars of'the debt remains due, and after fi. fa. issued and returned unsatisfied, the hill in this cause is filed, principally for the purpose of setting aside a postnuptial settlement made upon the wife of Peter Clarke, by deed executed by him and her to the defendant Bogardus as trustee, on the 16th December, 1829. The deed purports to convey a large real and personal property which had descended to the wife as one of the heirs at law and next of kin of her uncle John Fisher, who died in 1827. The husband’s estate and interest in the property is now sought to be reached upon the ground that the conveyance is a voluntary one, not founded upon any valuable consideration, and therefore fraudulent and void as against antecedent creditors whose debts remain unsatisfied.

It cannot be denied that a wife, by means of property which she acquires in her own right, may become a purchaser from, her husband ; and a post nuptial settlement of a husband’s property upon his wife and children, based upon an actual purchase made in good faith and for a valuable consideration, will be goo-d against prior as well as subsequent creditors. (10 Vesey, 140. Atherly, 155, 161.)

The deed in question is attempted to be supported upon, the ground of a purchase by the wife for a valuable consid[163]*163eration ; and for this purpose Mr. Bogardus, the trustee, has been examined as a witness for his co-defendants, subject to all legal exceptions. His competency is objected to, by reason of a supposed interest to support the trust, as it is said he will be entitled to a compensation for executing it. Be this as it may, and supposing the testimony to be admissible, it is still contended that the testimony does not prove a consideration paid or given for the conveyance. The consideration expressed in the deed is one dollar—no other is mentioned or recited in the instrument. It may be inferred, therefore, that nothing more than a mere nominal consideration entered into the minds of the parties at the time, and that the conveyance was intended to be what its silence in that respect would indicate, a mere voluntary act to secure to the wife the use of the whole property real and personal which had then lately descended to her upon the decease of her uncle, discharged of any right or interest her husband by law might have in it. The difficulty with respect to the testimony of Mr. Bogardus is, that although it proves that as far back as the year 1804 the wife applied a considerable part of her then patrimonial estate to the payment of her husband’s debts, and again in 1811 appropriated another large landed estate to the purpose of securing and paying other debts of her husband, and among them the bond debt of the complainants, and again in 1829 mortgaged a part of the property which came from her uncle, and which is included in the trust deed in question, to raise the sum of $2000 for the use of her husband, and for which the property is still liable ; yet it does not show that these previous transactions entered into the arrangement and formed the consideration or inducement for the making of the deed. In order to render these advances of the wife’s property a consideration for the subsequent settlement of the husband’s property upon the wife, it should appear that there was either an agreement between the husband and wife at the time the advances were made to secure her by settlement, and such an agreement as would be obligatory upon him to perform, or that her parting with [164]*164her own property or encumbering it for the husband’s benefit, was intended to serve as a consideration for a settlement to be afterwards made by him, and that the deed of settlement, when executed, had reference thereto—in short, that there was some connection between these previous advances and the subsequent deed. This appears to be the principle laid down by Chancellor Kent, in Reade v. Livingston, (3 John. Ch. Rep. 481,) when considering the point how far a parol promise, or agreement to make a settlement, will support a subsequent deed as against prior creditors. Nor are the circumstances here of such a nature as necessarily in the absence of proof to raise the presumption that the deed was founded upon the previous devotion and relinquishment of the wife’s property to the husband’s use. Atherly observes, (p. 164,) that if the settlement on the face of it appears to be purely voluntary, no notice being taken of the wife having released her jointure, &c. yet if the fact of her having done so can be shown to have taken place about the same time that the settlement was made, in that case the court will presume the relinquishment of the jointure to have been the consideration for the settlement. This observation is founded upon the circumstances of the case of Scott v. Bell, (2 Lev. 70,) where an old settlement by way of jointure upon a wife was relinquished by her and sold, and on the same day a new settlement was made upon her, and Chief Justice Hale and the rest of the court held that they would presume the wife would not have parted with her estate by the old settlement, unless the husband would make the same provision for her by the new, and that the one was intended as a consideration for the other. (And see an anonymous case, Free, in Ch. 101.) But in Lavender v. Blackstone, (2 Lev. 146,) where the husband upon his marriage, being then under age, promised to make a settlement when he came of age, and the settlement not being made till three or four years after that event, and then not directly according to the promise, the same court held it should not be presumed to be made in performance of that, promise, an.d required [165]*165direct proof to that effect in order to sustain the deed against creditors. Then considering the present as a voluntary deed, not founded on a valuable consideration, (and I am of opinion it must be so regarded,) the next question would be if there were no other circumstances to support it, whether it is void as to prior creditors ?

The doctrine that a voluntary settlement after marriage by a person indebted at the time, is in law presumed to be fraudulent and void against all such antecedent creditors, without regard to the amount of existing debts or the extent of the property settled, or the circumstances of the party, and that no circumstances will permit such debts to be affected by the settlement or repel the legal presumption of fraud, as stated by Chancellor Kent in Reade v. Livingston, as being the result of the English cases, and reiterated by him in Bayard v. Hoffman, (4 John. Ch. Rep. 450,) has undergone some modification since, by the decision of the court of errors in Seward v. Jackson, (8 Cowen, 406.)

To authorize the court to interfere with and declare a voluntary settlement void, even as to creditors whose debts existed when the deed was made, intentional fraud must appear ; and prior indebtedness is but a badge or argument of fraud which may be explained away or repelled by circumstances. A recent decision of the chancellor in Van Wyck v. Seward, which went up by appeal from a decision made, (see 1 Edw. Ch.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Paige Ch. 161, 1840 N.Y. LEXIS 431, 1840 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wickes-v-clarke-nychanct-1840.