105 Iowa 624 | Iowa | 1898
— The defendant in. judgment is the Holcomb-Brown Iron Company. It never had legal title to the lands. Claim is made that it at all times was the equitable owner, and that plaintiff’s judgment is or should be made a lien thereon. John F. Holcomb held the legal title from January 27, 1891, to June 3, 1892, when he conveyed to Fleming as trustee. This deed was made to secure about four thousand dollars of the indebtedness of the Holcomb-Brown Iron Company to Richard Brown, the National State Bank, and others. In May of 1894, Holcomb quit-claimed the property to Brown, and Fleming, trustee, conveyed to him, June 12, 1894, by special warranty deed reciting that Holcomb had conveyed, and requested him to; and, the
We are satisfied that Holcomb held the property, in trust for the benefit of the Holcomb-Brown Company, and that the conveyances to Fleming, trustee, and to Brown, were made to secure the creditors of that corporation, among whom were the National State Bank and Brown himself, who, it appears, had made large advancements to the corporation. We are further convinced that Brown conveyed to Joyce and others, in consideration of thirty thousand dollars in stock in the Western Iron & Steel Company, and that, while he may have held the property in trust, yet, when appellees purchased, the records disclosed absolute title in Brown, and that the trust impressed upon the land by the conveyance to Fleming had been discharged. It is clear that when Holcomb conveyed to Fleming as trustee there was nó lien upon the land, and, as this conveyance was made for the benefit of the bank, Brown, and others, the conveyances by Holcomb and Fleming, the trustee, were in execution of that trust, and related back to the making of the original trust deed. Brown’s interest was, therefore, prior and superior to the lien of plaintiff’s judgment, conceding such judgment to have been a lien from the time of its rendition.
As no question is made regarding the bona fides of the indebtedness to the bank or to Brown, it is clear that Brown, if he held the title, would be entitled to