1. The statute of 13 Eliz., ch. 5, which is in force in the
District of Columbia, does not affect, in favor of subsequent
creditors, a voluntary settlement made by a man, not indebted at
the time, for his wife and children, unless fraud was intended when
the settlement was made.
Sexton v.
Wheaton, 8 Wheat. 229;
S.C., 1 American
Leading Cases 1, approved and affirmed.
2. A judgment for money due at a certain time against the party
making the settlement is conclusive in respect to the parties to
it. It cannot be impeached collaterally and it cannot be questioned
upon a creditor's bill.
Nye, a man not very provident, bought a city lot of no great
value in Washington with some money that he had, and on the 25th
June, 1857, had it conveyed in trust for his wife and children to
one Harkness as trustee. The purchase and conveyance in trust was
made, as it seems by Harkness' own account of it, by Nye at the
suggestion of Harkness,
"who, living in the neighborhood of Nye and having frequent
opportunities of seeing the destitution and need of the family and
the infirm and broken health of the wife, interested himself in
securing a home for herself and children, proposed a conveyance by
which the property should be secured against the contingencies of
any future recklessness or want of care in the said Nye."
On the 21st July, 1860 -- that is to say a little more than
three years after this transaction -- Nye obtained money of one
Mattingly, a person with whom he had had frequent money dealings,
and sometimes as it seemed at exorbitant rates (including some
dealings before the purchase), making, for the money now got, an
assignment of a certain claim, but whether in satisfaction
Page 75 U. S. 371
or as security the assignment did not clearly show. The money
not being repaid, Mattingly sued and obtained judgment against him
on the 10th June, 1863, and execution having issued without result,
he now filed a creditor's bill against him, his wife and children,
making the trustee also a party, to set the trust aside, and have
satisfaction from the property conveyed. The bill alleged that
at the date of the purchase and settlement, Nye owed him
money, but this was denied by the answer, and, as this Court
considered on an examination of the evidence, not true!
It was also asserted in Nye's answer that the judgment given was
given by default, and that nothing was due by him to Mattingly even
then.
The question was therefore the validity, as against a party
becoming a creditor three years afterwards, of a settlement in
favor of his family made by a man not indebted at the time, and
made apparently without fraudulent intent in fact, the case being
complicated only by the point set up in the answer of Nye, to-wit,
that the judgment on which the creditor's bill was filed was for an
unfounded claim, and got through his own default.
The court below thought the settlement good; and dismissing the
bill, Mattingly appealed.
MR. JUSTICE SWAYNE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal in chancery from the decree of the Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia. The case as disclosed in the
record is as follows:
On the 10th of June,
Page 75 U. S. 372
1863, the complainant recovered a judgment at law against the
defendant, J. W. Nye, for $2,450, with interest from the 21st of
July, 1860, until paid, and costs; a
fi. fa. was issued
and returned
nulla bona. The defendant has no property
liable to execution. On the 25th of June, 1857, Nye bought and paid
for the property described in the bill. It was conveyed by deed of
that date to the defendant, Harkness, in trust for Mary Nye, the
wife of J. W. Nye, and her children. The legal title is still in
Harkness upon that trust. The bill is a creditor's bill filed to
reach this property. It alleges, in addition to the facts already
stated -- which are not controverted -- that a large part of the
indebtedness for which the recovery at law was had, subsisted at
the time the property was bought and conveyed, and that hence it is
liable in equity to be applied, in satisfaction of the
judgment.
Nye and Harkness only answered. Harkness denies that there was
any indebtedness by Nye to the complainant at the time of the
purchase and conveyance of the trust property. Nye alleges usury in
the transactions between him and the complainant to a very large
extent; that they had settled everything before the trust property
was conveyed to Harkness, and that he then owed the complainant
nothing; that the judgment was rendered by default; that he
intended to defend, and could have done so successfully, but that
he was prevented by extreme illness.
Testimony was taken upon both sides. The court below dismissed
the bill.
The case involves several legal propositions which it is proper
here to state.
1. The statute of 13 Eliz., ch. 5, is in force in the County of
Washington, but it does not affect a conveyance like this as to
subsequent creditors unless fraud was intended when it was made.
Sexton v.
Wheaton, 8 Wheat. 239;
S.C., 1 American
Leading Cases 1. The whole learning of the law upon this subject is
so fully developed in the note to this case in the work last
mentioned that it would be a waste of time to do more than refer to
it.
Page 75 U. S. 373
2. Such settlements, though voluntary, are founded upon a
meritorious consideration and will be upheld and enforced in equity
against the husband. [
Footnote
1]
3. The judgment is conclusive in respect to the parties to it.
It cannot be impeached collaterally, and it cannot be questioned
upon a creditor's bill.
If in this case there is any ground of equitable relief, it
should have been presented by a cross-bill or other proper
proceeding had directly, to affect the judgment. [
Footnote 2]
Here the question is not as to the conclusiveness of the
judgment, but as to the indebtedness of Nye to the complainant when
the property was conveyed to Harkness. The trust deed bears date on
the 23d of June, 1857. The judgment was recovered on the 10th of
June, 1863, nearly six years later. The judgment was founded upon
an assignment by Nye to the complainant of $2,450 of a claim in
favor of Bargy and Stewart against the United States. Nye was the
assignee of those parties, and his assignment to the complainant is
dated July 21, 1860. This was about three years before the date of
the judgment.
But it is alleged by the complainant that the consideration of
this assignment included two debts due to him from Nye, evidenced
by instruments bearing date on the 2d of November, 1853, and
amounting together to $1,650. One is an order by Nye on General
McCalla to pay the complainant the sum of $1,450 out of the claim
of Bargy and Stewart before mentioned. The other is a like order
for the payment of $200 out of the same claim, or out of another
claim which is mentioned, payment to be made out of the first money
which should be received on either, after reserving $500 to meet a
previous order which Nye had given. The complainant insists that
these two orders represented debts which subsisted more than two
years before the execution of the trust deed, and which still
subsist. Nye insists that
Page 75 U. S. 374
they were given and received in discharge of all his liabilities
to the complainant down to their date, and that the complainant
took them at his own risk. Here lies the stress of the controversy
between the parties.
Nye and the complainant were both examined as witnesses. A
considerable mass of other testimony is found in the record. It is
to some extent conflicting, but we have had no difficulty in coming
to a satisfactory conclusion as to the facts. We think they are as
follows:
The complainant made advances of money to Nye from time to time
and charged him high rates of usury. Nye evinced a strange fatuity
in submitting to whatever terms the complainant thought proper to
impose. The order for $1,450 was given to the complainant for a
much larger sum than he claimed to be due; Nye testifies that it
was for double the amount. It was not doubted then that the claim
to which the order refers would be speedily sanctioned by Congress,
and paid by the government. A committee of the House of
Representatives had unanimously reported a bill to pay it. This has
occurred more than once since. There has been at no time any
adverse action; but the claim has not yet been finally acted upon
and is still pending before Congress. According to the testimony of
Nye, at the same time that he gave this order to the complainant he
gave a like order to William G. White for double the amount of a
debt due to him. The condition upon which both orders were given
was the same. It was that the creditors should take them in
discharge of their debts, and that Nye was to be under no further
personal liability touching either the debts or the orders. He
avers that they were received by the complainant and White
respectively with this agreement.
White was examined as a witness. Speaking of these orders, he
says:
"That order in my favor was taken by me in full satisfaction of
my claim on Mr. Nye;
I understood from Mr. Mattingly that he
received the order from Mr. Nye in satisfaction of his
claim."
The complainant in his testimony admits that he advanced but
$100 for the order for $200, but
Page 75 U. S. 375
says, the balance was
"in consideration of advantages,
benefits, and favors I had done him." This order was taken
like the other, with the understanding that there was to be no
personal liability on the part of the drawer. The creditor was to
look alone to the fund upon which it was drawn for payment.
These conclusions receive strong support from the fact that on
the 5th of January, 1857, the complainant addressed a letter to S.
W. McKnew, in which he stated that he had settled with Nye, and, in
effect, that Nye owed him nothing. He complains that this letter
was obtained from him by unfair means. The testimony of McKnew
shows that in this he is mistaken.
In regard to the assignment of $2,450 of the Bargy and Stewart
claim, upon which the judgment was recovered, Nye testifies that
the only consideration for it, in addition to the preexisting
orders of $1,450 and $200, was a further advance by the complainant
of $200 -- $100 in money and the same amount in groceries.
The complainant says:
"We had in 1860 such a settlement as we always had. He obtained
further advances -- one of $400, one of $200, and some smaller
amounts at different times which I do not recollect."
Even this would leave a large margin of difference between the
amount assigned and the amount of the consideration. There are
several features in the complainant's testimony which impress us
unfavorably, but it is not necessary to dwell upon them. Nor is it
material to consider the facts relating to the last assignment. We
are entirely satisfied that the orders of November 2, 1853, were
taken by the complainant upon the terms stated by Nye and White.
There was therefore no indebtedness by Nye to the complainant when
the trust deed was executed to Harkness, nor subsequently, until
the assignment of July 21st, 1860, was given, if there were before
the rendition of the judgment. This is decisive of the case before
us. Harkness and Mrs. Nye were neither parties nor privies to the
judgment. Their rights, legal and equitable, were vested and fixed
by the deed. Neither Nye nor the
Page 75 U. S. 376
complainant could do anything subsequently to impair them. The
settlement of 1860 between those parties, and the judgment
recovered upon the instrument then given, could have no retroactive
effect, so far as the rights of trustee and
cestui que
trust were concerned.
The court below, we think, properly dismissed the bill, and the
decree is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Ellison v. Ellison, 1 Leading Cases in Equity, 199.
[
Footnote 2]
Bank of Wooster v. Stevens, 1 Ohio St. 233;
Marine Insurance Co. v.
Hodgson, 7 Cranch. 336;
Peck v.
Woodbridge, 3 Day 30;
Davol v. Davol, 13 Mass. 265;
Story's Equity Pleadings § 782.