Action to recover a balance 'alleged to be due upon a contract for the construction of an electric plant in the city of Conde. At the beginning of the action plaintiff caused an attachment to be levied upon the electric light plant, and also upon certain real estate which had been recently conveyed by defendant. This appeal is from an order dissolving the attachment. The writ of attachment was founded upon an allegation that defendant had assigned and disposed of his property with intent to defraud his creditors, and especially the plaintiff. The motion to dissolve was upon a specific denial that defendant had assigned or disposed of his property with intent to defraud his creditors. Defendant in his affidavit admits that he made- transfers of a portion of his property to his wife, May Ehrler, but alleges that such property at all times belonged to her, though the title thereto stood in his name, having been so taken as a matter of .convenience; that May Ehrler is his second wife; that he has two sons by his first wife, now deceased; that said transfers were made to the -end that in case of his death his wife, May Ehrler, might not be deprived of property which belonged -to her, by inheritance of the sons of property which stood in his name, but was not in fact his property. This affidavit at great length and with much minuteness discloses the sources from, which May Ehrler obtained her property, accumulated in Pennington county, where defendant and his wife formerly resided; alleges that until about the month
If it be conceded that the defendant transferred to his wife property w'hioh belonged to her, but which stood in his name, to the end that she be restored to her own, yet the facts disclosed by the record show that as a part of the same transaction he also transferred tc her other property to the value of several thousand dollars, to which she had no claim or right whatever; that over $7,000 which he received as insurance money remains unaccounted for or has wholly disappeared, so far as- can be ascertained from the record before us; that he does not own any visible unincum-bered property whatever; that these changes in his financial circumstances occurred after the controversy had arisen between himself and plaintiff, and threats of suit had been made to recover the alleged indebtedness.
Upon a careful consideration of these facts and of the entire record, we are of opinion that plaintiff did sustain the burden of proof resting on him to show that defendant had transferred at least a considerable portion of his property with actual intent to defraud his creditors, and that the trial court erred in dissolving the attachment.
The order of the trial court dissolving the attachment is therefore reversed.