Caudill v. Goebel
Caudill v. Goebel
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The only question involved in this case is, was the conveyance by Mrs. Frizzelle to her son-in-law Caudill fraudulent as to her creditors ? There can be no doubt as to the indebtedness of the mother-in-law at the time in a sum sufficient to swallow up her estate, and further that her financial embarrassment caused the execution of the conveyance to her daughter and to her son-in-law. Caudill says in his answer and also in his deposition that he knew nothing of the mother’s indebtedness when she sold him the land or executed to him the deed. He lived in the same county with her or at least not many miles distant and with the conveyances that were being made of her property and the executions levied upon her land it is a little strange to say the least of it that he never heard of the pecuniary trouble that finally swept from his mother-in-law all of her estate.
There is nothing to show that they were unfriendly or in any manner estranged from each other. She was making conveyances to her daughter, the wife of the appellant, and must have disclosed in the nature of things her condition to those upon whom she was relying according to her own testimony for her support. The appellant had no property subject to execution, and no available means so far as was known to the witness, and it is not pretended by appellant that he was the owner of any property of much value except what had been conveyed to him by his mother-in-law. It is difficult to establish fraud by the testimony of those who are participants in it, but their relation to each other and the circumstances surrounding the parties will often bring it to the surface so plainly as that he who runs may see it in every act and conduct of the parties. This is that character of case. The son-in-law is insolvent, his wife made a feme sole by statute, becomes the owner of the real estate of the mother-in-law when she is largely indebted upon a consideration
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.