Summary
In Thurber v. LaRoque, 105 N.C. 301, it is said: "The wife cannot subject her separate real estate or any interest therein to any (612) lien, except by deed in which the husband joins, with privy examination as prescribed by law, and she will not be allowed to do indirectly what the law prohibits her from doing directly."
Summary of this case from Williams v. WalkerOpinion
(February Term, 1890)
Equity — Trust — Consideration — Husband and Wife — Betterments — Estoppel — Lien — Deed — Fraud — Homestead.
1. The general principle that a consideration is necessary to raise a trust, and that equity will protect against one holding the legal title, the beneficial interest of him who pays the purchase-money for property, had its origin in the old doctrine governing uses.
2. The rule that a resulting trust is raised in favor of the person who pays the purchase-money for land, though the title may be made to another, is subject to the qualification that when the person who pays the price is under legal, or even, in some instances, moral obligation to maintain the person in whose name the purchase is made, there is a presumption in equity that the purchase is intended as an advancement or gift to the recipient.
3. The relationship between husband and wife is a sufficient consideration to raise this presumption, when the former furnishes the consideration and causes the conveyance to be made to the latter; but the presumption is repelled by proof that the deed was executed to defraud the husband's creditors, whose right to subject the interest resulting in favor of the husband is subject only to his right of homestead.
4. Where the husband contracted to pay three hundred and fifty dollars for a tract of land, paid forty dollars and executed three notes, signed also by his wife, in the aggregate for three hundred and ten dollars, and caused a deed to be made for the whole to the wife, who immediately joined him in a mortgage deed to the grantor, reconveying the land to secure the payment of the notes, and she paid out of her own separate funds $150, and he $160, in addition to the $40 previously paid: Held, that the wife had the absolute title to three undivided sevenths, and held four undivided sevenths in trust for the husband, because he was embarrassed with debt, and that the right of the creditors was postponed only in favor of his right to a homestead.
5. In cases where the purchase-money for land is furnished by different persons, each holds an equitable interest in proportion to the amount of purchase-money paid by him, and the relative interests are not changed by the fact that one subsequently advances a sum for betterments placed on the land, in excess of his proportional interest.
6. The land in this case will not be sold and the fund arising from the sale divided, because the husband expended over eight hundred, while the wife expended only two hundred in improvements placed on the land, after the purchase.
7. The wife is not estopped, because of her silence while the improvements were being made, from denying that the creditors had a lien to the extent of the husband's expenditures for betterments, nor does the law imply a contract on her part to pay any portion of the costs of said improvements.
8. The wife cannot subject her separate real estate, or any interest therein, to any lien, except by deed, in which the husband joins, with privy examination as prescribed by law, and she will not be allowed to do indirectly what the law prohibits her from doing directly.
9. The equitable interest of the husband, the resulting trust in four undivided sevenths, could not be sold to satisfy his creditors without allotting his homestead in it, if no homestead had been previously laid off to him, the debtor in such case being entitled to claim a homestead in the equity, as he may do where his deed conveying the legal, as well as equitable estate in the land, is set aside for fraud.
This was a CIVIL ACTION, brought by the plaintiffs, judgment (302) creditors of the defendant W. D. LaRoque, to subject the land described in the fifteenth paragraph of the complaint, or the money expended by the said W. D. LaRoque in purchasing said land, and in placing improvements thereon, to the satisfaction of their judgments, tried by Bynum, J., at the November Term, 1889, of the Superior Court of LENOIR County, upon the issues set out in the record proper.
Mr. G. V. Strong, for plaintiffs.
Mr. George Rountree, for defendants.
The facts admitted and found by the jury were that the said W. D. LaRoque had contracted, by parol, on or about the 1st day of January, 1886, to purchase said land (being a lot in the town of Kinston) from one Washington, and on the 12th day of May, 1886, paid said Washington $40 in cash in part payment of the purchase-money, and at the same time executed to him three notes jointly with his wife, the feme defendant, for the balance of the purchase-money, and at different dates, one for $110 and two others for $100 each, making a total (303) of $350 as the purchase-money. That, on the said 12th day of May, 1886, the said Washington, at the instance and request of the said W. D. LaRoque, conveyed the said lot of land to the feme defendant Annie P. LaRoque in fee, taking from the said defendants a mortgage on the land to secure the $310 unpaid purchase-money; that afterwards the said W. D. LaRoque paid $160 of the purchase-money, and expended $650 in placing a residence and other permanent improvements upon the said land, all being his own money, and without any consideration therefor on the part of his said wife; that the said conveyance by the said Washington to the said Annie P. LaRoque was without any consideration upon her part moving to the said W. D. LaRoque, other than her signing the said notes of $310 and the mortgage to said Washington to secure the unpaid purchase-money; that the said Annie P. LaRoque, after the said 12th of May, 1886, paid $150 of the said purchase-money, and expended $250 in placing the said residence and improvements on said lot, all being of her own separate property; that there was allotted to the defendant W. D. LaRoque, on or about the 3d day of February, 1887, his personal property exemption, under an execution issuing upon the judgment of the plaintiff G. M. Lamb Co., set forth in the complaint, to the amount of $316; that all the judgments in the amendment to the complaint are true and correct, as therein stated; that some of the debts on which the judgments of the plaintiffs mentioned in the complaint were rendered, were contracted before the 12th of May, 1886, and all of them during the year 1886; that the house and improvements were not completed, but were being made during 1887; that the said W. D. LaRoque was insolvent at the time of the commencement of this action; that defendant W. D. LaRoque claimed his homestead in the said lot and improvements, to the extent of his interest, as shown (304) above; that said Annie P. LaRoque claimed the property as her own, by virtue of the deed of conveyance from Washington to her.
Upon the admissions of defendants, and the verdict of the jury, as set out in the record proper, the plaintiffs moved, "upon the admission in the answer and the findings of the jury, that the land conveyed by Washington to Annie P. LaRoque be declared subject to a lien for the sum of six hundred and sixty-six dollars, the balance of the sum paid by W. D. LaRoque for the purchase of said land and in placing improvements thereon after said conveyance, to-wit, eight hundred and ten dollars, after deducting therefrom the deficiency in value of the personal property exemptions heretofore allowed him, to-wit, one hundred and eighty-four dollars; that said land be sold for the satisfaction of said sum of six hundred and twenty-six dollars, and that said sum, when realized, be applied in payment of the plaintiffs' judgments"; which motion was refused, and the plaintiffs excepted.
Plaintiffs then moved, "upon an admission and findings, that the said land be declared subject to a lien for the sum of four hundred and sixty-six dollars, the balance of the sum paid by W. D. LaRoque for the improvements on said land after said conveyance, to-wit, the sum of six hundred and fifty dollars, after deducting therefrom the deficiency in value of the personal property exemption heretofore allowed him, to-wit, one hundred and eighty-four dollars; that the land be sold for the satisfaction of said sum of four hundred and sixty-six dollars, and that said sum, when realized, be applied in payment of the plaintiffs' judgment"; which motion was refused, and the plaintiffs excepted.
The plaintiffs then moved, "upon an admission and findings, that the said land be declared subject to a lien for the sum of three hundred and ten dollars, the balance of the sum paid by W. D. LaRoque for the purchase of said land and the improvements thereon after said conveyance, to-wit, eight hundred and ten dollars, after deducting (305) therefrom his personal property exemption of five hundred dollars; that said land be sold for the satisfaction of said sum of three hundred and ten dollars, and that said sum, when realized, be applied in payment of the plaintiffs' judgments"; which motion was refused, and the plaintiffs excepted.
Plaintiffs then moved, "upon said admissions and findings, that the said land be declared subject to a lien for the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, the balance of the sum paid by W. D. LaRoque for the improvements thereon after said conveyance, to-wit, six hundred and fifty dollars, after deducting therefrom his personal property exemption of five hundred dollars; that said land be sold for the satisfaction of said sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, and that said sum, when realized, be applied in payment of the plaintiffs' judgments"; which motion was refused, and plaintiffs excepted.
The Court then, on motion of the defendants' counsel, rendered judgment —
1. That the defendant Annie P. LaRoque is the owner of 400/1250 of the said house and lot and improvements thereon.
2. That the defendant W. D. LaRoque was, and is, entitled to his homestead exemption, to be set apart and allotted to him and his family according to law, in the remaining interest, to-wit, 850/1250 of said lot, house and improvements, against the judgments of the plaintiffs, or executions issuing thereon.
3. That the defendants recover their costs of suit, to be taxed by the Clerk.
1. The plaintiffs excepted to so much of the judgment in this case as adjudges that the defendant Annie P. LaRoque is the owner of 450/1250 of the said house and lot and the improvements thereon.
2. To so much of said judgment as adjudges that the defendant (306) W. D. LaRoque was, and is, entitled to his homestead exemption in said lot, to be set apart and allotted to him and his family according to law, in the remaining interest, to-wit, 850/1250 of said lot, house and improvements, against the judgments of the plaintiffs, or executions issuing thereon.
3. To so much of said judgment as adjudges that the defendants recover of the plaintiffs their cost of the action.
4. To the judgment as a whole.
Plaintiffs appealed.
The position that no resulting trust was raised by the transaction between Washington and the defendants — husband and wife — LaRoque, for which plaintiffs' counsel contended, is untenable. The general principle that a consideration is necessary to raise a trust, and that equity will protect against one holding the legal title, the beneficial interest of him who pays the purchase-money for property, had its origin in the old doctrine governing uses. Patton v. Clendenin, 7 N.C. 68; Pegues v. Pegues, 40 N.C. 418.
"When a person has in his possession money or other personal estate belonging to another, or where a title in lands is made to him, based on a consideration, the ownership whereof is in another, he holds the personal estate or the legal title to the land as trustee for the true owner." 2 Bishop Mar. W., § 119; Mosley v. Mosley, 87 N.C. 69.
The rule that a resulting trust is raised in favor of the person who pays the purchase-money for land, though the title may be made to another, is subject to the qualification that where the person who pays the price is under a legal, or even, in some instances, a moral (307) obligation to maintain the person in whose name the purchase is made, there is a presumption in equity that the purchase is intended as an advance or gift to the recipient. 2 Pom. Eq. Juris., § 1039; 2 Story's Eq., §§ 1197, 1202 and 1203; 2 Bishop M. W., § 121. The relationship between husband and wife is a sufficient consideration to raise this presumption, when the former furnishes the consideration and causes the conveyance to be made to the latter, but the presumption is repelled by proof that the deed was executed to defraud the husband's creditors, and a resulting trust arises in their favor, subject, however, in this case, to the husband's claim of homestead, if sustained. The limitation is founded upon the general principle that one must be just before he can be generous, even to his wife, and the valuable consideration which raises the trust in his favor is held to prevail against the good consideration and to make it inoperative till creditors are satisfied and only the rights of the parties remain to be considered. Levy v. Griffis, 65 N.C. 236; Perry on Trusts, §§ 148 and 149; Guthrie v. Gardner, 19 Wend., 414; Fathern v. Fletcher, 31 Miss. 265; 2 Bishop on M. W., §§ 124, 127.
The doctrine is also based upon the old principle that the equitable interest in land is drawn as if by irresistible magnetic attraction to the person who pays the price, and where it is bought with a mixed fund, the beneficial interest is divided among those who furnish it in the proportion that the amount advanced by each bears to the whole sum. 2 Pom. Eq. Jur., § 1038; 2 Bishop M. W., § 125; Cunningham v. Bell, 83 N.C. 328; Lyon v. Akin, 78 N.C. 258.
Where a fund arising from the sale of the wife's separate real estate (before it is impressed by some act of his with the character of personality), or any other money constituting a part of her separate property, is used in the purchase of land, and the title is taken to the husband, a trust is created in favor of the wife, there being no presumption that she intended to provide for him. (308)
In the case of Lyon v. Akin, supra, where the husband married in 1846, bought a tract of land in July, 1848, for $218, and paid $150 of said sum out of the fund arising from the sale of his wife's separate land, and subsequently conveyed the land in the year 1861 to secure a debt, and the mortgagee bought the land at foreclosure sale, it was held that the mortgagee acquired by the purchase the life estate of the husband as tenant by courtesy only. BYNUM, Justice, for the Court, said: "There is a resulting trust at his (the husband's) death to the wife (or her husband, if she does not survive him) to the extent of the purchase money she furnished." In Cunningham v. Bell, supra, Justice DILLARD announces still more explicitly the principle that the owners of the beneficial estate in land hold interests therein in proportion to their respective advancements in making up a mixed fund for the purchase. The learned Justice says: "The Judge finds as a fact that the payments on the purchase-money secured by the mortgage, so far as made, were made by the plaintiff, as agreed on by means furnished by her (the wife) or derived from her separate property, and thereby an equity arose to the plaintiff pro tanto, her payments, and will arise in toto on full payment to have the trust enforced in her favor," c. See also Case v. Codding, 38 Cal. 191; Smith v. Patton, 12 W. Va. 541; Smith v. Smith, 85 Ill. 139; Miller v. Birdsong, 7 Baxter, 531.
The resulting trust is raised by the payment of a part, or the whole, of the purchase-money of land, and does not depend for its existence, or extent, upon the amount subsequently advanced to be expended in improvements placed upon it. An equity was raised in the present case on the ultimate payment of the whole of the price of the land in proportion to the sum paid respectively by each. The mortgage lien being discharged, the feme defendant held the absolute title to three undivided sevenths, by reason of having paid $150, while she held (309) four undivided sevenths of the land in trust for the creditors of the husband, who had paid $200, subject to his claim to a homestead. The law relating to trusts looks only to the payment for the land, and the amount furnished by each, after the original agreement with Washington, for betterments is not a factor in arriving at the equitable interests of the two contributors to the mixed fund. Francestown v. Duning, 41 N. H., 442; 2 Bish. M. W., § 126; Rogers v. Manning, 3 Paige, ch. 398; Sterne v. Sterne, 5 Johns., ch. 18.
It being settled, then, that the wife, on the discharge of the mortgage debt to Washington, had an absolute estate in three undivided sevenths of the land and held four undivided sevenths in trust, two questions are still to be determined:
1. Could the husband, though insolvent at the time, by expending six hundred and fifty dollars in making improvements on the land, subject the undivided interest of the wife, paid for with her own separate funds, to liability to sale at the instance of his creditors, who seek to follow the fund so expended?
2. Was the husband deprived of the right to have his homestead allotted in the other four undivided sevenths, because, when he paid for it, he did not retain property sufficient and available to satisfy the claims then due to his creditors, or because, at best, there is a resulting trust in four sevenths liable immediately for his debts, if not primarily subject to his right of homestead.
The three undivided sevenths of the land constituted a part of the separate estate of the feme defendant, and if it is charged with a lien for the amount expended on the premises by the husband, it must be because of an implied contract on the part of the wife to pay for them, or because she would be estopped from denying the claim of one who built the houses, or other permanent structures, without objection (310) from her, and is, in the same way, prevented from resisting that of the creditor, or, lastly, because she is deemed, in law, a party to the fraud perpetrated by the husband, and will not be allowed to derive benefit from it.
In Scott v. Battle, 85 N.C. 185-189, the rule is laid down in reference to the wife, that "in no case will the law imply a promise on her part, and every one who deals with her is held to do so with knowledge of her liability."
Hence, she is not held liable to restore to any person money expended in improvements on her land, when the person who makes them is presumed in law to know her liability, and not be misled by the idea that she had capacity to contract, in reference to her separate estate, by implication of law. In the recent case of Farthing v. Shields (decided at this term), Justice SHEPHERD, delivering the opinion, says: "Accordingly, it has been determined that The Code, § 1826, requiring the written consent of the husband, in order to affect her real or personal estate, did not confer upon her (even when such written consent was given, or where the liability was for her personal expenses, c.) the power to make a legal contract. Its object was to require the written consent of the husband, in order to charge in equity her statutory separate estate, on the same principle which requires the consent of the trustee, when the separate estate is created by deed of settlement. Pippen v. Wesson, 74 N.C. 437; Flaum v. Wallace, 103 N.C. 296. In the light of these and other decisions, the section should read as follows: `No woman, during her coverture, shall be capable of making any engagement in the nature of an executory contract, by which her statutory real or personal estate is to be charged in equity, without the written consent of her husband. But where the consideration is for her necessary personal expenses, or for the support of her family, or where it is necessary, in order to pay her ante-nuptial indebtedness, she may so charge such real or personal estate, without such consent of her husband.' But in view of the express requirement of law that the husband and the (311) wife shall join, with privy examination of the latter, in aliening an interest in real property, the foregoing construction of the section is, in the same case, modified in its application to the separate real estate of the wife, and the Court say that the wife's `power to charge her separate real estate by an engagement in the nature of a contract, is measured and limited by her power to dispose of the same, and it must follow that if the wife, with the written consent of her husband, had expressly charged her statutory separate real estate, it would have been of no avail without privy examination.'"
She cannot, therefore, subject her land, or any separate interest therein, to a lien in any possible way but by a regular conveyance executed according to the requirements of the statute, and the law will not allow her to dispense with these necessary forms and accomplish what she is prohibited from doing directly, by a silence that will estop her or prevent her from enjoying the benefit of the enhanced value of her interest because she is supposed to have been a participant in the fraud of her husband. In Lambert v. Kinnery, 74 N.C. 348, and in Littlejohn v. Egerton, 76 N.C. 468, this Court held, in effect, that a debtor could not evade the law and pass his right to a homestead by any act that amounted to an estoppel in pais, and that he could not waive it in any way in favor of his creditors "except by a deed in which the wife should join, with privy examination." Hughes v. Hodges, 102 N.C. 236-244. Neither can we concur in the view that the fraud of the husband in expending money which justly belonged to his creditors, and the silence of the wife (even if she had known his pecuniary condition, which does not positively appear), shall have the force and effect of subjecting the wife's interest to sale, when we have said that no charge or lien upon it could be created except by deed proven in the regular mode. Farthing v. Shields, supra.
(312) It must be remembered that the land was conveyed to the feme defendant on the 12th of May, 1886, and immediately subjected to the lien of a mortgage deed in which she joined her husband to secure the three notes for the residue of the purchase-money. Some of the debts due the plaintiffs' judgment creditors, were contracted before that deed and mortgage were made, while all of them were created during the year 1886. The house and improvements were not completed, but were being constructed during the year 1887. It does not appear that the wife knew that the husband was insolvent, or, indeed, owed any debt except the notes payable to Washington signed by both. She expended of her own means one hundred and fifty dollars of the purchase-money, and two hundred and fifty in improvements, the creditors sitting idly by with notice of the nature of the deed and mortgage, and with power at any time to institute against the husband proceedings supplementary to execution, since it appears that all, or nearly all, of the judgments were rendered and docketed in the year 1886, before any money was expended in betterments. We see, therefore, no peculiar hardship in protecting the rights of the feme covert against the probable sacrifice of what she has expended on an incomplete house; but, whether the creditors are made to suffer or not, we must adhere to the interpretation placed upon our statutes. In Farthing v. Shields, the Court said, in reference to the rights of the wife: "As to her not being privileged to commit fraud, there can no fraud grow out of the contract of a married woman. It stands upon its own strength, both in law and equity. If perfect, then well and good; if imperfect, it is an absolute nullity." Towles v. Fisher, 77 N.C. 437.
So no one should be misled by the conduct of a married woman. He should recollect that she cannot incur liability amounting to a lien on her land, indirectly or directly, and take measures for his own protection accordingly. We are aware that the decisions in some of the (313) States, two of which were cited and another examined by us, are in apparent conflict with the views we have expressed. It is our duty to construe our statutes and endeavor to make our own interpretations, in the different phases in which we apply them, harmonize. These differences among the Courts often grow out of the varying provisions of the laws of the different States. Cord (in his work on the Legal and Equitable Rights of Married Women, vol. 2, sec. 1287) stated the principle as follows: "Where the wife has not the power to contract, she cannot by any act of hers estop herself as to her title or right, not even her assent to the gift or dedication of her land for the use of a railroad, by her husband. * * * She could only dispose of or encumber it in the way prescribed by statute. And what she could not deprive herself of by direct and express contract with the defendant, we think it clear that she could not lose by the indirect method of an estoppel in pais." Todd v. Pittsburg, c., Railroad Co., 19 Ohio, 514.
Whether the rule, ordinarily applied in transactions between men with reference to fraudulent deceptions, can be made to operate as to married women in any case, without giving an indirect opportunity to alien or encumber, contrary to the statute or not, it is certain that her simple silence in this case, without proof of participation in the fraud, or her failure to prevent her husband from building on the land, does not, according to any adjudication of this Court, work an estoppel or create an encumbrance for which the wife's interest can be subjected to sale. See Weathersbee v. Farrar, 97 N.C. 106; Loftin v. Crossland, 94 N.C. 76; Burns v. McGregor, 90 N.C. 222; Towles v. Fisher, 77 N.C. 437; Rencher v. Wynne, 86 N.C. 269; Clark v. Hay, 98 N.C. 421; Boyd v. Turpin, 94 N.C. 137.
It has been settled that if the wife refuses to perfect the title to land taken in exchange by another for land vested in her, she will be held bound to carry out the trade by paying the difference in (314) price. Burns v. McGregor, supra. But while equity can, by refusing its aid, or otherwise, and will prevent a feme covert from taking an unconscientious advantage, it cannot give to her acts the effect of repealing a statute.
It was held in Crummen v. Bennet, 68 N.C. 494, that a debtor who attempted to convey his land to defraud his creditors did not thereby forfeit his right to a homestead, when the creditor caused the fraudulent deed to be declared void; and, in subsequent adjudications, this ruling has been repeatedly approved, either directly or by implication. Whitehead v. Spivey, 103 N.C. 66; Burton v. Spiers, 87 N.C. 87; Duvall v. Rollins, 71 N.C. 218; Lambert v. Kinnery, 74 N.C. 348; Gaster v. Hardie, 75 N.C. 460.
In Dortch v. Benton, 98 N.C. 190, this Court held that a purchaser of land under an executory contract of sale, who had paid a part of the purchase-money, became immediately the equitable owner of the land, subject to the lien of the purchase-money due, and was entitled to have his homestead allotted in the land. The ruling in that is drawn in question in the discussion of the present case. Pomeroy (in his work on Equity Jurisprudence, vol. 1 § 372) says, in reference to the interest of vendor and vendee: "If the contract is made upon an actual valuable consideration, and complies in other respects with the requisites prescribed by equity, then, as soon as it is executed and delivered, the vendee acquires an equitable estate in the land, subject simply to a lien in favor of the seller as security for the payment of the price, while the vendor becomes equitable owner of the purchase-money. There is in this case, as in the last, an equitable conversion. The vendee's interest is at once converted into realty, with its features and incidents, while the vendor's interest is, to the same extent, personal estate."
In Gaster v. Hardie, 75 N.C. 460-461, BYNUM, J., says: "For it is well settled that, as between the debtor and the creditor, the (315) former is entitled to his exemption, whether he has made no conveyance of his property at all, or has made one fraudulent as to his creditors. It is equally well settled that the debtor is entitled to the homestead in an equity of redemption in lands only subject to mortgage debt."
In a case not unlike the present, the Supreme Court of Illinois held that an insolvent debtor would not be deprived of the benefit of the homestead exemption where he purchased the property with his own money, merely because he procured the title to be vested in his wife. Chipperly v. Rhodes, 53 Ill. 350. This view of the law was sustained by DILLARD, C. J., in Cox v. Wilder, 11 Wis. 114.
In Rooks v. Hoke, 3 Lea (Tenn.), 302, it was held that where a husband voluntarily conveys land to his wife to hinder and delay his creditors, the right of homestead was not defeated. See also Boynton v. McNeill, 31 Grattan, 456; Thompson on Homestead, § 331.
The case of Hixon v. George, 18 Kansas, 253, was one in which an insolvent debtor expended his money for land, took the title in the wife's name, and constructed improvements on the land with his own means, and yet the Court sustained his claim to a homestead in the land.
If a mortgagor can claim a homestead in an equity of redemption, the legal estate being in the mortgagee, as this Court has held, the objection that a homestead cannot be assigned in a mere equity will not lie, and if the interest of a vendee is in equity, the ownership of land, a resulting trust, must be also an equitable estate. If the objection be based upon the idea that, as between husband and wife, the presumption is that the purchase-money for land, to which title was made to her by direction of the former, was advanced for her benefit, and until the creditors move, the whole estate, legal and equitable, is in her, the reply is, that just in the same way every conveyance made to defraud creditors is good inter partes. So that if any fraudulent grantor is (316) entitled to a homestead after his conveyance is declared void by the Courts, the same reasoning must make it lawful to allow a homestead to be allotted in cases like the present.
We conclude, therefore, that a homestead should be allotted in the equitable estate in four undivided sevenths of the land, and that the wife is the owner of three undivided sevenths. The judgment below must be modified accordingly. Neither of the parties can recover costs in this Court.
Judgment modified.