57 Ind. 374 | Ind. | 1877
This case comes to us on certain questions of law, which aroseduring its progress in the court below, and which were reserved for the decision of this court under sections 347 and 348, 2 R. S. 1876, p. 177.
The first question, considered in its natural order, arises on the sufficiency of the complaint, which is, in substance, as follows:
Peter Dunkle, plaintiff in this suit, complains of David E. Bentley and Rosa C. Bentley, his wife, defendants, and shows to the court that the defendants are husband and wife, married prior to the year A. D. 1867, hut where the plaintiff can not say; that, on the 15th day of May, 1867, the defendant Rosa C. Bentley purchased of one Edward N. Talbott the following described real estate in Cass county, Indiana, to wit: The east half of the west half
To this complaint the defendants demurred, but the court overruled their demurrer, to which they excepted.
It is objected, that the complaint is defective in not averring that David E. Bentley was indebted to the plaintiff at the time he made the alleged payments on the real estate purchased by his wife.
We think that objection is well taken. Unless the plaintiff was, at the time of these payments, a creditor of David E. Bentley, he was not in a condition to be injured by such payments, according to the facts as otherwise alleged in the complaint. It was competent for said Bentley to make such provision for his wife as he chose, unless existing creditors were thereby injured or defrauded.
It is also true, that the complaint alleges facts from which we might reasonably infer that David E. Bentley was indebted to the plaintiff from time to time, during the years 1869 and 1870, but there is no averment of indebtedness at any particular time, or in any specific amount, until the time of the rendition of the judgment in December, 1870, which was nearly six months after the last payment complained of was made. It does not follow, that because there was an indebtedness when the judgment was rendered, there was an indebtedness at any particular previous time.
The complaint does not, therefore, show with sufficient certainty, that the plaintiff was a creditor when any of the payments were made by David E. Bentley on his wife’s property, and is hence open to objection for that reason.
The complaint does not aver that David E. Bentley made the alleged payments on his wife’s real estate, with the fraudulent intent of cheating, hindering or delaying the plaintiff. "We think it is also defective for the want of this or some equivalent averment.
"We are also of the opinion, that the complaint is insufficient in not showing that, at the time he made the payments complained of, the said David E. Bentley did not have sufficient property remaining, subject to execution, to pay all his debts. If he had sufficient property so remaining, then the plaintiff, in legal contemplation, was not injured and had no cause to complain. The allegation that the said David E. Bentley, more than six months after the last payment, did not have any property subject to execution, does not supply the omission. He may have had sufficient property when the payments were made, but lost it in the meantime. Sherman v. Hogland, 64 Ind. 578; Evans v. Hamilton, 56 Ind. 34.
The other questions reserved arose on the trial of the cause, and, as they may not again arise ón a subsequent trial, we will not consider them now.
The judgment is reversed, at the costs of the appellee, and the cause remanded for further proceedings, in accordance with this opinion.