52 Iowa 265 | Iowa | 1879
It is very doubtful whether the letter, if admitted, would have any tendency to show what it is claimed that it would. But the letter, we think, was properly excluded upon other .grounds. Mere declarations of a vendor are not admissible to
Tlie letter appears to have been written after C. A. Lundy had left the county where the mortgage was executed, and where the property was situated, and had started to leave the state. He was evidently not in possession, and tlie declarations were inadmissible for that reason if for no other.
II. The plaintiffs introduced as a witness one Bryson Fitzgerald, and offered to show by him certain declarations. The court excluded the testimony and tlie plaintiff excepted.
The declarations do not appear to have been made concerning the property in question, and the testimony was properly excluded.
III. The plaintiffs introduced as a witness one James Fitzgerald, and offered to show by him a conversation between him and C. A. Lundy, a few days before the execution of the mortgage. The court excluded the testimony and the plaintiff excepted.' The conversation at most could have shown only a declaration of intention on the part of C. A. Lundy to dispose of his property with the intention of defrauding his creditors. The evidence was clearly inadmissible.
The mortgage was given ostensibly for a loan to L. J. Lundy, of $1,400. From that amount somewhat less than .$100 was deducted, on account of a prior indebtedness of L. J. .Lundy to the intervenors. The balance went to O. A. Lundy by L. J.’s direction, and ostensibly as a payment by L. J. to O. A. Lundy of the purchase money. In paying this balance to O. A. Lundy, by tlie intervenors, a portion of it was apjdied by them upon a prior indebtedness of 0. A. Lundy to them. If, as the jury found, the mortgage was taken by the intervenors
Y. The plaintiffs asked an instruction in these words: “If the alleged sale of the property was not valid, and conferred no title upon L. J. Lundy, he, the said L. J. Lundy, could not sell or mortgage the property so as to divest the creditors of O. A. Lundy of a right therein.” The court refused the instruction and the plaintiffs excepted.
Of course, if no title passed from 0. A. to L. J. Lundy, the mortgage to the intervenors could not "be sustained. But as-between them it did pass. At least 0. A. Lundy could not be heard to dispute it. According to the finding of the jury, an honest loan was made by the intervenors to L. J. Lundy upon the property, and no one would claim that the mortgage was-not valid as against the Lundys. The intervenors, then, had a valid lien upon the property prior to the plaintiff’s attachment,, and no good reason has been suggested why the attachment should be held to be paramount.
YI. The plaintiffs asked an instruction in these words: “ If the jury find, from all the evidence in this case, that the alleged sale and mortgage of this property was made for the purpose of preferring certain creditors to the exclusion of others, such sale and mortgage are void in law.” The court refused the instruction and the plaintiffs excepted.
According to the finding of the jury the mortgage was'not a transaction, in form or effect, as between the intervenors and C. A. Lundy. They did not, then, take the mortgage as creditors of 0. A. Lundy. In no view, then, could they be regarded as preferred. Under the finding the instruction was inapplicable.
Other instructions are complained of, but they are not reviewable for the same reason.
Aeeirmed.