Thweatt v. McCullough

SOMERYILLE, J.

Tbe evidence tends to show that tbe plaintiff, McCullough, bad, from time to time, placed funds in tbe bands of tbe defendant, Thweatt, to be specially applied by him to tbe uses of a certain minor, who was tbe ward of tbe plaintiff, and for whom be bad been appointed guardian.

This fact being satisfactorily proved, with tbe amount of tbe funds thus deposited with tbe defendant, tbe burden would be upon tbe defendant to show that be bad applied the money as directed. Where money is delivered by one person to another, without any present valuable consideration, with direction to apply for tbe use of a third person, tbe order to' apply may be countermanded by tbe depositor at any time before the receiver has appropriated it to tbe uses intended, or has, expressly or impliedly, entered into some arrangement with tbe other party by which be would be prejudiced by tbe revocation of tbe original order. — Coleman v. Hatcher, 77 Ala. 217; 2 Greenl. Ev., § 119. Tbe bringing of tbe present suit operated, in this case, to cast on tbe defendant tbe burden of proving that be bad appropriated tbe funds received from tbe plaintiff to tbe uses designated, and tbe court, in effect, so ruled on tbe trial. .

Tbe Circuit Court, however, improperly allowed tbe fact to be proved that tbe plaintiff bad been sued for tbe tuition of bis ward. This was, at most, merely a naked assertion by tbe plaintiff in that action, that tbe tuition bad never *519been paid by tlie defendant out of the funds deposited with him for that purpose, dignified, it may be, by a resort to a court of justice. As to the defendant it was res inter alios acta, or mere hearsay evidence, and was inadmissible to prove that he had not paid the debt in question. For this error the judgment must be reversed.

We notice but one other point, which will be likely to arise again on another trial. This is the status of the fund accruing from the Huggin’s note. It is claimed by the defendant that this note was in fact the property of the defendant’s wife, as a part of her statutory separate estate, although it Avas made payable to the plaintiff’s ward, who washer daughter. The maker, Huggins, oAved Mrs. Barclay, the mother of Mrs. Tlnveatt, and the grand-mother of the ward. Mrs. Barclay proposed to have the note made payable to Mrs. Thweattby way of a gift toiler. She being then a widow, and financially embarrassed, permitted or procured the note to be made payable to her minor daughter, above alluded to as the plaintiff’s ward, as the evidence tends to - show in order to prevent her creditors from reaching it. If this be true, the note became the property of the daughter, and never belonged to the mother. By authorizing the note to be made payable to the daughter, she declined to become the donee of the debt due by Huggins; and, moreover, by procuring it to be made payable to another for the purpose of placing it beyond the reach of her creditors, she is in the attitude of a grantor avIio is not permitted to re-claim property that has been fraudulently aliened to a grantee or donee. The law punishes the grantor by estopping him from assailing the validity of his transfer, as the best and only practical mode of discouraging such covinous transactions, and promoting honesty and fair dealing between debtor and creditor. It is the policy of the law to make the fraudulent transaction as perilous as possible.

Beversed and remanded.