
    ANTONIA QUESTEL v. NICHOLAS AND JOHN QUESTEL.
    Divorce — alimony—injunction to aid alimony — receiver—credit of answer.
    Where the husband separates from his wife without providing for her support, and conveys Iris property to his son to prevent her from obtaining alimony on a bill pending for that purpose, chancery will enjoin them from further changing the property,.and appoint a receiver to secure the income to satisfy the alimony.
    Where upon the whole case before the court the defendant appears unworthy of credit, slight circumstances in cases of fraud may overcome the answer.
    In Chancery. The bill alleges that the defendant, Nicholas, is the complainant’s husband, and having treated her with extreme cruelty, and left her without the means of support, fraudulently confederated with his son, the other defendant, to deprive her of -all means of support, and, without any consideration transferred to him $1600 in securities, and about ^1200 worth of real estate, all the property the said Nicholas had: That she has filed her petition under the law for a divorce and alimony, which is now pending and praying an injunction against conveying the estate or changing the securities until the final hearing, and then that said transfers and conveyances may be vacated and held void. A provisional injunction was allowed at the last term.
    The defendant John answered, admitting the transfers and con-. veyances, and claiming that they were made to him in good faith, by way of advancement by his father. Nicholas did not answer, and as to him the bill is -taken as confessed.
    
      Brazee, for the complainant.
    
      Nash, for the defendant John.
   Wright, J.

We are satisfied upon the evidence that the conveyances and assignments were made without consideration, in order ,to deprive the.complainant, the wife of one of the defendants, and the stepmother of the other, of her subsistence; and not made in good faith or by way of advancement to the son, as claimed by him. These parties were married in 1823; within two years it became matter of notoriety that they quarrelled, though they still lived together, John had been advanced a quarter-sectifin of land — the transfer of these securities was in 1826, and the deeds at a later date, and the two embraced the entire estate of the father. The son, in 1832, conveyed back the land, having been told that he could not hold it, but declared that he would contrive some other way to get her property! He afterwards induced his father to say that he owed him for services after he was. of age. He then made affidavit that his father was indebted to him in $.1900, and was an absconding debtor, though he had just returned from his residence and re-conveyance of the land. On this he sued out an attachment— attached the same land, and so proceeded until his proceedings were dismissed. He now claims, that with these oaths disclosed as a part of the case, we are to take his denial of the fraud in the answer as conclusive. His own oath and conduct in reference to the attachment and the whole case, show that no confidence should be placed in the answer. The other circumstances in proof are satisfactory, that the assignment of the notes as well as the conveyance of the lots, which he acknowledged was to keep his stepmother from it, was alike fraudulent and is void.

We therefore enjoin the defendants from proceeding in any way to change the said estate and sureties; and appoint Francis Le Clerq, Esq. receiver, to collect the interest of the money and the rents of the real estate, to secure the complainant the alimony which was decreed to her upon her petition for divorce, the surplus to he for the use of the defendants. But if the said defendants shall secure the alimony as is provided, in the decree for that purpose, from thenceforth the injunction shall be dissolved — and order that defendants pay the costs. ' ,  