166 P. 270 | Idaho | 1917
This action was brought by respondent, Maggie A. Bates, for the purpose of quieting title in her to lot 18, block 4, Sunnyside addition to the city of Kellogg, Shoshone county. Appellant filed an answer and cross-complaint setting up an interest in the property adverse to respondent, under a purported sheriff’s certificate of sale on execution to satisfy a judgment against respondent, John L. Bates, and alleging that he was the owner of the property, subject only to the right of redemption in the latter. And further alleging that the lot was purchased by John L. Bates on the 9th of October, 1913, from one Clarence C. Plemmons for the sum of $160, which was loaned to Bates for that purpose by the First State Bank of Kellogg, the bank taking his promissory note therefor; that about April 1, 1914, Bates entered into an oral contract with one Bellinger for the construction of a frame dwelling-house upon the lot; that during the period of construction a consignment of materials arrived and that in order to take up the bill of lading, so as to enable him to have the materials delivered, Bates borrowed $105 from the Weber Bank of Wardner, giving his promissory note therefor; that all payments upon the contract with Bellinger were made by John L. Bates except the sum of $50.14; that the note to the First State Bank of Kellogg was renewed several times but that neither this note nor the one to the Weber Bank had ever been paid; that on the 11th day of December, 1914, Bates attempted by deed to convey the property to
Respondent, Maggie A. Bates, answered the cross-complaint, putting in issue the material allegations thereof and alleging affirmatively that the property had been sold and transferred to her by her husband in payment of a note for the sum of $700, which note had theretofore been given to her by her husband for a loan of money which was the proceeds from a sale of her separate property and a valid and existing debt from her husband. John L. Bates filed a separate answer to the cross-complaint to the same effect.
The case was tried before the court without a jury. The court found, among other things, that the $700 note represented a valid and subsisting indebtedness owing from Bates to his wife and was her separate property; and that the transfer of the lot to Mrs. Bates was not made to hinder, delay or defraud creditors, and gave her judgment, as prayed in her complaint. A motion for a new trial was overruled and this appeal is from the judgment and from the order overruling the motion for a new trial.
The record shows that the property was purchased and a house built thereon, as alleged in the pleadings; that the notes given for the purchase price of the lot and the materials were not paid at the time of the transfer of the property from Bates to his wife; that in 1903 respondents, as husband and wife, were employed on a ranch in Montana as foreman and
The rule in such cases has been recently announced by this -court as follows: “We think the rule to be that wherever there is a true debt and a real transfer for an adequate consideration, “there is no collusion, and that fraud in its legal sense cannot be predicated on such a transaction.....”
In this view,- under the facts as found by the trial court, it cannot be said that there was any error in refusing to grant a new trial. The judgment is affirmed. Costs awarded to respondent.