Finch v. . Cecil

This is an action by the trustee in bankruptcy of P. S. Cecil to subject certain lands now held in entirety by the said bankrupt, P. S. Cecil and his wife to payment of the debts due by P. S. Cecil. The plaintiff alleges that said P. S. Cecil was insolvent for more than two years before he failed, and that during that time he took deeds in the joint names of himself and wife for said lands, which were paid for by said P. S. Cecil alone, and that the title was thus taken in entirety to hinder and delay his creditors, and asking that the said Cecil and wife be adjudged to hold said lands in trust for his creditors and that the same be sold by the plaintiff under the orders of the court. The defendants allege that P. S. Cecil was not insolvent at any time prior to the bankrupt proceeding, and that the said deeds were not voluntary, but were made in usual course of dealing, without any purpose of delaying, hindering or defeating creditors.

Taking the evidence in the most favorable light, the plaintiff failed to show insolvency on the part of P. S. Cecil, fraud or intention to hinder and delay his creditors. The deeds in question, according to the evidence, were based on good consideration. Even if the deeds were voluntary the joining of the wife as grantee would not make them *Page 162 fraudulent if sufficient property was retained to fully satisfy the then creditors of P. S. Cecil. Revisal, 962.

The plaintiff's evidence showed that both defendants owned some property and that in one case the land was brought by the husband (115) and wife jointly, she being made one of the grantees, it would seem, because, according to the evidence, her husband was indebted to her.

There being no sufficient evidence to contradict the express terms of the deeds, which recite that they are based on a valuable consideration, or to show that the grantors therein executed them through fraud, or that the defendants participated in any fraud, and in the absence of evidence that any of said lands were conveyed to defendants to hinder, delay, or defeat the rights of creditors, and the plaintiff having failed to establish the insolvency of the defendant P. S. Cecil, or to show that he did not retain property sufficient and available to satisfy his then creditors, the judgment of nonsuit was properly granted.

Affirmed.

Cited: Hood, Comr. of Banks, v. Cobb, 207 N.C. 130 (g).