Court Opinion

ID: 7968581
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 00:52:59.704517+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:42.826697
License: Public Domain

Buck, J.
This was an action brought by a creditor to set aside a conveyance by Ms debtor on the ground that it was made with intent to defraud creditors. The wife of the debtor had joined with her husband in the conveyance. The plaintiff joined as parties defendant to the action the wives of both the grantor and the grantee, each of whom interposed a demurrer to the complaint upon the ground that, as to her, it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
We will first consider the demurrer interposed by Nellie C. Roberts, the wife of the alleged fraudulent grantor James A. Roberts. The demurrer is well taken if the complaint fails to show a liability on her part in favor of the plaintiff. In determining this question, we must construe all of the allegations of the complaint together, and see if it states a cause of action against her. The appellant contends that she is not a necessary or proper party in this action. If she was a necessary party, then, of course, she was a proper party, but she might be a proper party without being a necessary party.
Who is a necessary party, and who is a proper party, is stated by Mr. Pomeroy, in Ms work on Remedial.Rights (section 329), as follows: “(1) Necessary parties,’ when the term is accurately used, are those without whom no decree at all can be effectively made determining the principal issues in the cause. (2) Proper parties are those without whom a substantial decree may be made, but not a decree which shall completely settle all the questions which may be involved in the controversy, and conclude the rights of all the persons who have any interest in the subject-matter of the litigation.”
As against the defendant James A. Roberts, the conveyance in which the wife, Nellie C. Roberts, joined, was' fraudulent and void, and the property attempted to be conveyed was subject to be sold upon the execution against Mm. But the judgment was not rendered against her, and her right or interest in the real estate of the husband could not be sold upon an execution issued upon a judgment rendered against him alone. It is charged in the complaint that she joined with her husband in this fraudulent conveyance, but it is *57very evident, taking the complaint as a whole, that the only act charged as being fraudulent was her simply joining as his wife in the conveyance of the property. He could have conveyed his rights as fully and completely without her joining in the deed as he could have done by her doing so. His act was a fraud of itself, and did not depend upon anything she did. Her joining with him in the deed added no weight or force to his fraudulent act or attempted conveyance. Nor did her joining in such conveyance in any way interfere with the plaintiff’s judgment, or his selling the husband’s interest on execution if he sees fit to do so. All fraudulent acts of the husband can be attacked and judicially determined now as fully and completely as though he had made the conveyance alone. She conveyed none of his right, share, or estate in the premises, but only her own inchoate interest. This was a remote interest, but, whatever it might be worth, the law has fixed such interest as absolutely hers; and that remote interest can no more be successfully assailed by the plaintiff now than before the judgment was rendered, because there is no judgment against her. Suppose that the plaintiff had not made the wife a party defendant in this suit, but had proceeded to sell the husband’s interest in the premises, and thereby obtained the husband’s perfect title to his share. Could he afterwards properly bring an action against the wife to have her rights in the property judicially determined, even though remote, inchoate, or contingent? Could he succeed in such action? Could she not successfully interpose a demurrer upon a complaint for such purpose, if it fully stated the facts which appear herein? It would be a useless proceeding against the wife, for her right could not be thus destroyed or cut off. The law gives her an inchoate right in the real estate of her husband, and upon that right she may rely with the utmost confidence. Creditors cannot seize it upon exécution, or- attach it in equity. The law giving that right was passed for the benefit of married women, and not for the benefit of the husband’s creditors, Here the plaintiff seeks the sale upon his execution of the fraudulently conveyed and mortgaged property, and to have removed, by the judgment of this court, any cloud resting upon the title obtained by such sale.
What more rights is he entitled to, either legal or equitable, in this action? We do not'concede the claim of the respondent’s coun*58sel that á party is one whom the plaintiff may make so at his option. However advisable it may be that necessary and proper parties be made parties to the action, that there may be an end to litigation, yet whether a person shall be made a party does not rest in the absolute option of the plaintiff or complainant. The necessary facts must exist to justify such a proceeding. Persons should not be made parties to lawsuits at the mere whim or caprice or option of another. To drag parties into court, and harass them with expense, loss of time, and the annoyance of legal proceedings, is not sanctioned by law or equity, unless the existing facts fully justify such proceeding.
Was it absolutely essential, in order that the court might render a valid decree or judgment, that she should be made a party, and therefore a proper party? She had no interest in the subject-matter of the litigation or action, and a valid judgment could be rendered against the husband without her being joined as a defendant, for it is his interest, not hers, which constitutes the subject-matter of the action. She has no rights to be settled by the controversy. The existing law settles her rights. She need not apply to the court, either as defendant or plaintiff, in such case. She had contracted no debt, and her right was subject to no judgment or execution, and there was no controversy for the court to settle. Her right in one subject-matter was one thing; the husband’s right in a subject-matter in the property was another; each distinct and separate, because the law makes them so. It is the existing law in respect to these subject-matters which completely settles the question, and the aid of the courts need not be invoked for this purpose.
As she.was not a proper party, she was therefore not a necessary party, and we need not discuss that phase of the case any further than we have incidentally referred to it.
With respect to the defendant Phoebe A. Roberts, wife of the fraudulent grantee, we are of the opinion that a different rule applies, and hold that she was at least a proper party. She is interested in the subject-matter, because, in case of the death of her husband, she would have become the owner of one-third thereof. And she admits by her demurrer that she claims an interest in the land covered by the conveyances which this action is brought to set aside. Whatever interest she may have in the premises, so far as the conveyance *59to her husband, James A. Roberts, is concerned, depends upon such interest being subject to plaintiff’s judgment, for such interest, as against such judgment, is admitted to be fraudulent. Admitting that the property was fraudulently conveyed to her husband makes any interest of hers in such property, by reason of her marital relation, subject to the equitable proceedings to have the conveyance declared void as to both husband and wife. Hei rights in the property are not fixed and absolute, like those of Nellie C. Roberts, but are subject to the legitimate result flowing from the fraudulent conveyance received by her husband; and whatever interest in the subject-matter she may have can be conveniently and completely settled in this action, and further litigation thereby prevented. She is therefore a proper party, and as to her the order overruling her demurrer is sustained, but as to the defendant Nellie C. Roberts the order overruling her demurrer is reversed.
Gilfillan, C. J., absent, took no part.
(Opinion published 60 N. W. 848.)
Petition for rehearing denied Nov. 23, 1894.