Beagle v. Bradle
Beagle v. Bradle
Opinion of the Court
The appellant, George Beagle, obtained judgments at law, on several notes against Andrew Bradley, upon which executions were issued and placed in the hands of the sheriff, and by him returned “no property found.” He then filed the present suit in equity against the appellees, Andrew Bradley and his wife, Angeline Bradley, in which he alleges that Bradley was the owner of a tract of land in Harrison county in his own right, and that he exchanged this land with a man by the name of January for his (January’s) land, and caused a deed to be made by the latter to his (Bradley’s) wife, for the purpose of defrauding his creditors, etc.; that Bradley was at the time insolvent, and the conveyance made to his wife long after the creation of appellant’s several debts. The appellees filed an answer, in which they say that the deed to Mrs. Bradley was recorded in the Harrison county clerk’s office, and that the only consideration for its execution to the wife by January was the conveyance of this tract of land owned by the husband. They also allege that the making of the deed, and the consideration therefor, were all facts within the knowledge of the appellant more than five years previous to the institution of his suit. The deed to Mrs. Bradley was recorded in the year 1859, and the proof shows that the appellant knew all about its execution and the consideration therefor, and was, shortly after its date, threatening to have it cancelled and subjected to the payments of his debts.
The appellant insists, however, that the conveyance to the wife was voluntary and, therefore, void, and that the statute of limitations is no bar to the action, as the void conveyance vested the wife with no title, and left the equitable right thereto in the husband. We are not prepared to agree with counsel for the appellant in saying that the five-year statute is not an available defense in such a case, and, without determining this question, we can not perceive how this case is embraced by the statute declaring voluntary conveyances void. There was no conveyance in this case by the husband to the wife, although the facts show that the sole consideration for the conveyance made to the wife was the land conveyed by the husband to January. In the case of Doyle vs. Sleeper, 1 Dana 572, this court decided that the statutes against fraudulent conveyances was intended to operate only in cases where the debtor himself had made the conveyance, and not where the debtor had
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.