77 Iowa 615 | Iowa | 1889
On the twenty-fourth day of February, 1883, that being the day on which the premises were to be sold on the execution issued on the judgment of the defendant bank herein against the plaintiff herein and George W. Baker, the defendant Ryan, then being the attorney for the plaintiff and her husband, took from the plaintiff in that suit (the defendant bank in this suit) an assignment of its judgment and claim against George W. Baker, and paid therefor the sum of sixteen hundred dollars, and the execution was returned not satisfied. The particular facts of this assignment to Ryan of the judgment rest largely on the testimony, and will be noticed hereafter.
On the fourteenth day of January, 1886, the defendant Ryan took execution on the judgment assigned to him, and, by virtue thereof, he purchased the premises in question, and, after the statutory period for redemption, he received a sheriff’s deed therefor, which is the basis of his claim in this suit.
While many other facts are disclosed by the record, the foregoing are sufficient to a proper understanding and disposition of the case. We think it must be conceded that if the First National Bank of Davenport
For the facts as to this purchase we must look to the testimony. The purchase of the judgment took place on the day the premises were to be sold on the bank judgment against George W. Baker. There were present at the time Ryan, George W. Baker, and some parts of the time one George E. Gould, who was attorney for the bank, and who made the assignment for the bank, and one Shropshire. Neither Gould nor Shropshire was a witness to the entire talk between Baker and
The testimony of Baker is very uncertain. Prom his testimony alone it would be difficult to know what the
Ryan asked Baker what he should do about it. Baker answered that he could not do anything about it himself, and that Ryan would have to do it for him; that Ryan said, “Keep your seat;” that Ryan was gone a few minutes, and came back, and said to Baker: “It is all fixed,” and told Baker he would have time to make arrangements to pay his debts that Baker seemed very much “touched,” shed tears and said: “A friend in need is a friend indeed.” At that time the mechanic’s lien suit by the plaintiff against her husband was pending, and Ryan claims that it was part of the agreement that that suit was to be dismissed, and the judgment assigned to him was to be the first lien on the premises ; and he says in his testimony 'that after the assignment he wrote out a “dismissal” of the mechanic’s lien suit, in the presence of Baker, which he approved. Shropshire says that something was written by Ryan, but he does not know what it was.
From an examination of the testimony we are convinced that Ryan took the assignment of the judgment under an agreement as claimed by him. It does not appear to be a purchase of the judgment made in his own interest, but at the request of his clients, to give them an opportunity to pay the debt, and save the homestead. If this is true, it could not be claimed that the transaction was void because of the confidential relationship of the parties. If Ryan, while attorney for the Bakers, at their instance bought the judgment, and was to be repaid his money, and the judgment was, by agreement, to be the first lien on the premises, and the mechanic’s lien suit was to be dismissed, it would