85 Iowa 566 | Iowa | 1892
This action was commenced on the fourteenth day of December, 1889, to recover sixty-two hundred and eighty-three dollars, with interest and costs. On the twentieth day of November, 1889, the defendants, Johnson & Maring, merchants, of Center-ville, were insolvent, owing to the plaintiff, the Center-ville National Bank and others large sums of money. The bank insisted upon payment, and, after attempting to make other arrangements, on the twenty-eighth day of the month named the defendants executed and delivered to the bank a chattel mortgage on their stock of merchandise to secure the sum of thirty-three hundred and twenty-four dollars and thirty-six cents. At the same time they executed four other mortgages on real estate, and filed them for record, without the knowledge of the mortgagees. One of the mortgages so executed was in favor of the plaintiffs, but has not been accepted by them. On the same day the defendants executed twelve other mortgages, none of which, however, were delivered as recorded. The mortgages so drawn included all or nearly all the property of the defendants, and were designed to secure all their creditors, giving preferences first to certain home creditors, then to the plaintiffs and to others. After the mortgages were executed the defendants sold their interest in the stock of merchandise to Evans, taking his notes therefor to the amount of three thousand dollars, and turning them over to the bank. On the twenty-ninth day of November, the defendant, Johnson, went to Chicago to confer with the plaintiffs. The conference resulted in an agreement by which the defendants were to turn over what property they had,
I. The appellants complain of the rulings of the court in sustaining objections to certain questions asked a witness. The questions, so far as material and competent, were fully answered by the witness in other portions of his examination, and no prejudice could have resulted to the plaintiffs from the rulings in question.
II. The principalpart of the argument for the appellants is made in support of their claim that the evidence shows that the assignment was fraudulent. Whether it was so was a question for the jury to determine. They found specially that when the mortgages were executed it was not the intention of the defendants to make a general assignment for the benefit of creditors; that the mortgages given to the bank and those filed for record did not incumber all the property of the
III. Portions of the charge to the jury are criticised. We have examined the various objections made with care, but do not find them to be well founded. The' charge, considered as a whole, presents the case for the plaintiffs fairly, omissions in some paragraphs being supplied in others; and instructions asked by the plaintiff, so far as correct and important, were incorporated in the charge. The conclusions we have announced dispose of all material questions in the case.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.