Williams v. Morgan

6 Del. 439
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Del. 439 (Williams v. Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Morgan, 6 Del. 439 (Del. Ct. App. 1881).

Opinion

The answer admitted in the main the material allegations contained in the bill, but denied that the said Mary E. Jones sold and bought the said lands by and with the consent of her husband, the said George R. Jones, alleged in it, or that she purchased with money derived from the sale of her own real estate, the said house and lot. On the contrary, it is alleged that George R. Jones sold the said lands and conveyed them by deed to William Graham, receiving the purchase-money therefor in his own name, and with his own money purchased the said house and lot of the said Jacob Knowles, and that the deed from him for them was made to his wife, with the intent to defraud the said Nathaniel Williams, his judgment creditor, out of nine *Page 441 hundred and seventy-five dollars. That he had no other levy-able property, and that the said Samuel J. Morgan, the devisor of the appellee, took said house and lot with knowledge of such fraud and the intention of Williams to proceed against the same to sell them oh his judgment.

The decree of the chancellor ad litem was that the injunction theretofore awarded in the cause be made perpetual, and that the defendants pay the costs in three months, or attachment, for the following reasons: That a court of chancery has the same power to prevent as to remove a cloud upon title; that the burden of proof of showing the fraud alleged against the complainant and her husband rested on the respondents, but they had utterly failed to cast the slightest suspicion upon the good faith of the transaction; that all the testimony in the case showed that Mrs. Jones had never given to her husband the proceeds of her lands which were sold, but had always considered them as belonging to herself, and that he was only a trustee of them for her, and the principle is well settled that though the funds received for the wife's lands passes into the hands of the husband, yet if it is accompanied by the agreement that he will compensate therefor, as, for instance, that he will purchase for her other lands in place of the lands sold, and if this agreement is sufficiently established in evidence, a court of equity will enforce the agreement; and as the lands of the wife were not liable for the debts of the husband, so the fund arising from the sale thereof is not subject to the claims of his creditors. 1 Bish. on Mar. Women, 606. That no knowledge was brought home to Mrs. Morgan of the fact, if it was a fact in the case, that the husband of Mrs. Jones had contributed any portion of the purchase-money paid for the house and lot in question, or that he had any secret interest whatever therein, she was therefore entitled to be protected in a court of equity against the demand of the respondents, upon the maximpotior est conditio posidentis. Davis for the appellants. The appellants contend that George R. Jones bought and paid for the premises in question, and had the same deeded to his wife with intent to defraud his creditors, *Page 442 and that the deed is consequently void as against them. They also contend that Samuel J. Morgan, who bought them and afterwards devised them to Julia F. Morgan, took them with notice of the fraud and of the intention of Nathaniel Williams, the principal appellant, to proceed against the same to collect his judgment against George R. Jones out of them.

The bill should have been dismissed in the court below because the complainant had adequate remedy in a court of law against the judgment and execution in this case from which she seeks relief, if, upon the showing here made, she was entitled to it. Freeman v. Elendorf, 3 N. J. Chy., 475, 655; Reeson's Admr. v. Elliott's Exrs., 1 Del. Chy., 368; Hall v. Greenley, 1 Ibid., 274; Hill on Injunc, §§ 135, 152, 256, 263. The testimony in the case furnishes evidence of the fraud charged in the answer, notwithstanding the court below found to the contrary, which was an error fatal to the decree. Bump on Fraudulent Conveyances, 63; Kibby v. Ingersoll, 1 Harr.; Mich. Chy., 172; Kibby v. Godwin, 2 Del. Chy., 61, 206, 320; Newalls v. Morgan, 2 Harr., 225; Williamson v. Brown,15 N. Y., 354; Baker v. Bliss, 39 N. Y., 70; McKibbin v. Martin,64 Pa., 352; Rogers v. Hall, 4 Watts, 359. A wife's personal property, when it comes into the possession of her husband by virtue of his marital rights, becomes his absolutely, and is liable for his debts. 2 Kent's Com., 141; Bryan v. Spurrill, 4 Jones N. C. Eq., 27; Craig v. Thatcher, 2 Del. Chy., 320; Babb's Exr. v. Elliott, 4 Harr., 466; Plummer v. Jarman, 44 Md., 632; Kilby v. Godwin, 2 Del. Chy., 61, 102. The court below also erred in holding that the evidence showed that Mrs. Jones's separate property was of sufficient value to purchase the premises in question, and in admitting the testimony of her husband and herself in her favor in the hearing of the case, and also in not holding and deciding that where the wife takes the deed, and there is an allegation of fraud against it, as there is in this case, the burden of proof is on the complainant to show that the transaction was fair and bona fide. Hawkins v. Alston, 4 Ire., 137; Loyd v. Williams, 21 Pa., 327; Dick v. Grissam, 1 Freem. Min. Chy., 428; Harton v. Davey, 21 Law Regr., 203. *Page 443 Moore for the respondent. If all of Mrs. Jones's real estate inherited from her father had been sold by her husband, George R. Jones, by her direction for a special purpose of hers, even before the passage of the married women act of 1865, and even if he had taken the deed in his own name for the land which he afterwards purchased and paid for with the proceeds of the sale of her lands so sold by her direction, the court of chancery would have held that it constituted a clear case of a resulting trust, and that he could only hold it as her trustee and for her benefit, and would have promptly enjoined any judgment-creditor who attempted to seize and sell it on any execution process for the payment of his debts. But with the exception of one tract, it appears from the evidence in the case that all her lands were so sold by him subsequent to the passage of that act, and under the provisions of which this estate of hers was exempted by positive law, as well as the principle of equity referred to, from liability for his debts, and which now only makes the case still stronger before this court. But a court of chancery will protect for her benefit the estate of a wife, both real and personal, whether acquired by deed, devise, inheritance or gift in her own right, against both her husband and his creditors, whenever and wherever it has been kept separate and distinct from the husband's estate. In this case the husband of Mrs. Jones never sold a particle of his wife's property, real or personal, without her consent and direction and as her agent and trustee, and not only the proceeds of the sale of her real estate and the seven or eight hundred dollars received by her husband from her guardian, and with which he paid for the house and lot in question, but the same, in consideration of that fact, by her order and direction, was sold and conveyed to her in her own name solely and for her sole use and benefit in fee simple.

There is no proof that more than one of the tracts of land inherited by Mrs.

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Related

Williamson v. . Brown
15 N.Y. 354 (New York Court of Appeals, 1857)
Baker v. . Bliss
39 N.Y. 70 (New York Court of Appeals, 1868)
Lloyd v. Williams
21 Pa. 327 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1853)
McKibbin v. Martin
64 Pa. 352 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1870)
Rogers v. Hall
4 Watts 359 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1835)
Plummer v. Jarman
44 Md. 632 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1876)
Vogler v. Montgomery
54 Mo. 577 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1874)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Del. 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-morgan-delsuperct-1881.