Supreme Court of Canada
Elford v. Elford, [1922] S.C.R. 125
Date: 1922-06-17
Harry H. Elford (Defendant)
Appellant;
and
Mercie A. Elford
(Plaintiff) Respondent.
1922: May 15, 16; 1922: June 17.
Present: Sir Louis Davies C. J. and
Idington, Duff, Anglin, Brodeur and
Mignault JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR SAS-KATCHEWAN.
Husband and wife—Fraudulent conveyance—Property
in wife's name to defeat creditors—Principal
and agent—Power of attorney to husband—Transfer by attorney to himself—Right of
wife to relief.
A husband (the appellant) had certain
property put in his wife's (the respondent's) name, with her knowledge, for the
purpose of defeating his creditors. He held a general power of attorney from
her. A quarrel having occurred between them the husband registered this power
and, as his wife's attorney, he had the property transferred into his own name.
The wife sued to have the property re-transferred to her.
Held, Idington
and Brodeur JJ. dissenting, that
the wife was entitled to have the transfer to her husband set aside. In order
to succeed, she had only to invoke the illegal act of her husband in executing
as her attorney the transfer of the property to himself and she was not obliged
to disclose the alleged fraud connected with her own title; on the contrary,
the husband, in order to succeed in his defence, had to invoke such fraudulent
arrangement made to defeat his creditors.
Judgment of the Court of Appeal ([1921] 2
W.W.R. 963) affirmed, Idington and Brodeur JJ. dissented.
APPEAL from the judgment of the Court of
Appeal for Saskatchewan, reversing the
judgment of Taylor J., at the trial and
maintaining the respondent's action.
[Page 126]
The material facts of the case and the
questions in issue are fully stated in the above head-note and in the judgment
now reported.
John Feinstein for the appellant.
R. Hartney for
the respondent.
The Chief
Justice.—For the reasons stated by my brother Anglin
with which I fully concur, I would dismiss this appeal with costs.
Idington J.
(dissenting)—This is an action between husband and wife
who during twelve or thirteen years had resorted to various devices to defeat
the creditors of the husband who pretended to act for the wife and acting under
powers of attorney from her to preserve for him or her the fruits of his labour
and enterprise in fraud of his creditors.
But for his course
of so dealing having been properly held by the learned
trial judge a legal barrier in his way he was entitled to claim that his wife
was his trustee of the properties in question herein.
The correct inference to be drawn from the
history of the dealings between them is that in her giving the power of attorney in question it was given for
the sole purposes of continuing to
protect his property from and in fraud of his creditors.
She herein complains of his unexpected abuse of
such power of attorney in conveying the property to himself.
I cannot think that a suitor depending upon an
instrument so designed to perpetuate a fraudulent course of dealing, and thus
tainted with illegality, can properly ask the court to protect her from any abuse of such power. She has already had the
benefit
[Page 128]
It was mentioned
during the course of the argument that the creditors,
or some of them, had issued executions and registered judgments against the
lands in question.
Nothing I have said herein is to be taken (even
if concurred in by others of my brother judges) as in anyway deciding the
effect thereof in light of the legal puzzle arising out of the registration of
the conveyance by the appellant to himself having been recognized by the
registrar.
The creditors, of course, may, until that is
solved, have a mesaure of protection meanwhile.
I would allow the appeal herein with costs here
and below and restore the judgment of the learned trial judge.
Duff J.—This appeal appears to present little difficulty once the facts
are understood. The respondent was the
registered owner of the lands under dispute. She had given her husband a power of attorney conferring upon
him a wide general authority to deal with them, but this general authority did
not embrace the power to execute a conveyance in favour of the agent himself.
Any attempt to acquire a title by such a use of the authority vested in him
would be a fraud upon the power. Prima facie, therefore, the wife is entitled to have the husband declared
trustee for her.
The question therefore arises whether the
husband can displace this prima facie right of the wife's by alleging
that she held her title to the property for his benefit, but for the purpose of
protecting it from his creditors. In other words, whether her title was
acquired in pursuance of an unlawful design and plan to defeat the creditors of
the husband.
[Page 129]
It is quite clear, I think, that such a defence
is not competent to the husband. As Lord Hardwick said in Cottington v. Fletcher,
as long ago as 1740 such "fraudulent conveyances" are
"absolute against the grantor." It is quite clear that the husband
would not be heard in an action to impeach the wife's title brought by himself
to set up a claim based upon an arrangement of the character he now seeks to
rely upon. If authority were needed for such a proposition it would be found in
the judgment of Lord Selborne in Ayerst v.
Jenkins,
and it is equally clear that the wife is entitled to assert her rights
as owner, that is to say the rights incidental to her ownership against the
husband as well as against a stranger, so long as it is not necessary for the purposes of her case to rely upon
the fraudulent arrangement with her husband. The principle is illustrated
admirably in the judgment of Mr. Justice Maclennan in Hager v. O'Neil, and in the decision of the Court of Appeal in Gordon
v. Chief Commissioner of
Metropolitan Police.
The appeal should be dismissed with costs.
Anglin J.—I would dismiss this appeal.
The transfer to himself executed by the
defendant as his wife's attorney transgresses one of the most elementary
principles of the law of agency. It was ex facie void and should not
have been registered.
In order to succeed the plaintiff merely
requires to establish that in executing the transfer to himself of the property
in question, which stood registered in her name, her husband committed a fraud
on the power of attorney from her under which he professed
[Page 130]
to act. She does not have to disclose the
alleged intent to defraud her husband's creditors in which her own title to the
land is said to have originated, or to invoke any of the transactions tainted
by that fraud. Simpson v Bloss;
Taylor v. Chester;
Clark v. Hagar.
It is the defendant who brings that aspect of the matter before the court in
his effort to retain the fruits of his abuse of his position as his wife's
attorney; and to him the maxim applies memo allegans turpitudinem suam est
audiendus. Montefiori v. Montefiori.
Neither does the plaintiff seek any equitable
relief. The equitable maxim invoked by the defendant—"he who comes into
equity must come with clean hands''—is therefore inapplicable.
Nor did the defendant by making an unauthorized
and illegal use of his wife's power of attorney put himself in a position to
assert rights to property which the court would not have allowed him to prefer
had that property remained registered in the plaintiff's name, as it was prior
to his wrongful attempt to vest the legal title to it in himself.
The rights of the husband's creditors are not
affected by this litigation, to which they are not parties. The confessedly
guilty defendant cannot now shelter himself under the rights of his creditors
whom he sought to defraud—if indeed the creditors would be entitled to claim
under the void transfer here in question.
Brodeur J. (dissenting)—This
is a very sad case. This is an action between husband and wife. The husband
used his wife's name to shield himself
[Page 131]
against the actions of his creditors. The
properties acquired were put in his wife's name. All this was done by the
husband himself under a power of attorney which he had from his wife. They both
conspired together to defraud his creditors.
It has been found by the trial judge that the
husband most brazenly lied in a suit instituted by one of his creditors to gain
an advantage for his wife and himself; and that in this case the husband and
wife evaded telling the truth or would not hesitate to tell falsehoods.
The wife in that atmosphere of purity developed,
what is not surprising, an intimacy with a man named Iceton, whom she had as a
boarder in her house. The husband realizing how far this intimacy would lead
to, ordered this man to leave his house, but with not much success. He even
found his wife and that man searching in his papers the title deeds of the
properties which had been acquired. He then, using the power of attorney which
he had from his wife, had the properties transferred to his own name and
registered under the "Land Titles Act."
The wife now sues him to have the properties
re-transferred and registered in her name.
Her action was dismissed by the trial judge on
the ground that these properties had orginally been put in her name for the
purpose of defrauding the creditors of her husband and that the courts of
justice could not assist her in carrying out that fraud. Besides some creditors
in the meantime have -registered claims to have the properties made available
for payment of their claims; and the claims constitute a charge and lien upon
the land.
[Page 132]
The trial judge decided also that the power of
attorney was not wide enough to authorize the agent to transfer the lands in
his name.
The Court of Appeal agreed with the trial judge
that the power of attorney was insufficient to authorize the husband to
transfer the properties in his name; but they reversed his judgment and decided
that the transfers and their registration should be set aside.
If the husband had taken proceedings to claim
that the properties in question belonged to him he could certainly not have
succeeded; a man who is obliged to set up his own fraud as the basis for the
granting of an equitable relief should not succeed. The wife would have been
entitled to retain the property for her own use, notwithstanding that she was a
party to the fraud.
The husband, in such a case, could not be
relieved from the consequence of his actions done with intent to violate the
law. In other words, the courts are always refusing to assist in any way, shape
or form those who violate the law or who act fraudulently. Ex dolo malo non oritur actio. Gascoigne v. Gascoigne,
Scheuerman v. Scheuerman.
It is disclosed in this case that the wife had
conspired with her husband to deprive the creditors of the payment of their
legitimate claims and that the power of attorney she gave her husband was given
for the purpose of continuing the fraud intended against her husband's
creditors. She seeks however to have the courts transfer to her the properties
in question. It seems to me that, applying the principle mentioned in the cases
above quoted, we should refuse to assist her. The properties should remain in
the hands of the husband, to be sold for the payment of the legitimate claims
of the husband's creditors.
[Page 133]
The appeal should
be allowed with costs of this court and of the courts
below and the judgment of the trial judge restored.
Mignault J.—In my opinion the appeal fails.
It seems hopeless to contend that the husband
(appellant) under the power of attorney which he held from his wife
(respondent), could transfer to himself the properties standing in the land
registration office in the name of his wife. His counsel could cite no
authority permitting such a transfer, and it certainly cannot stand.
The wife's action to set aside this transfer was
therefore well founded. The husband, however, resisted her action by alleging
that the properties in question really
belonged to him and that they had been placed in his wife's hands merely
as a trustee to hold them for him. In the evidence it was disclosed that the
husband, who formerly lived in Halifax, had left unsatisfied judgments there
when he moved to the West, and for that reason, although these properties were
purchased with his moneys or from moneys coming from a partnership in which his
wife was nominally a partner, they were placed in her own name to hinder or
defeat the action of the husband's creditors.
If the wife was a trustee for her husband to
further any such purpose, the husband cannot be listened to to claim from his
wife the properties thus held by her. Montefiore
v. Menday Motor Components Co..
To demand their return he would have to rely on an illegal contract, and this
he cannot do. The wife's position is
different in this sense that the properties
[Page 134]
already stand in her name and all she does or
has to do is to attack the transfer which the husband made to himself under the
power of attorney granted by his wife. To succeed she does not have to rely on
an illegal contract, while the husband cannot get back the properties without
claiming them under a contract made in furtherance of an unlawful purpose.
I would therefore dismiss the appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant: Irvine & Feinstein.
Solicitors for the respondent: Hartney & Boyce.