In 1906 Charles Woelz and his wife bought of one Henly a residence property in Joplin subject to a deed of trust to one Weiler as trustee securing a note for $2,000.
On February 22, 1914, the sheriff of Jasper county (Weiler, the trustee, declining to act) sold the property, and, after paying the debt and costs, there remained in his hands a surplus of $2,092.37.
At the following September term of the circuit court of Jasper county the First National Bank of Joplin, for an indebtedness of its own and as assignee of the Citizens State Bank attached this surplus as the property of Charles Woelz and garnished the sheriff who thereafter answered admitting the money was in his hands.
H. H. Braly filed an interplea claiming this surplus money by virtue of a warranty ' deed of this property from Woelz and wife to him dated December 9, 1913, and recorded in Jasper county December 22, 1913. This deed, in form, is a warranty deed, there being no defeasance whatever. Braly claimed in his interplea that Woelz and wife made this conveyance to him as secur
In answer to the interplea the attachment plaintiff set up that at the time of the execution of the warranty deed from Woelz and wife to interpleader Braly (December 9, 1913) defendant Woelz was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $1,800 and interest, and to the Citizens State Bank in the sum of $1,500 and interest, and that said deed to Braly was a voluntary one without consideration and was made for the sole purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding plaintiff and the Citizens State Bank, creditors of Woelz, and of which purpose said interpleader Braly had full notice and participated therein at and before said deed was made and prayed that the deed be declared fraudulent and void and that the interpleader be adjudged to have no interest in the property or money attached and garnished.
The case was tried before the court on the issue thus made. No declarations of law were asked or given. The sole question was whether interpleader Braly was entitled to the surplus in the sheriff’s hands by virtue of his warranty deed from Woelz. The court after hearing evidence which covered a wide range found the issue in favor of the plaintiff and against the interpleader and rendered a judgment that the interpleader take nothing by his interplea, from which this appeal resulted.
As stated, Charles Woelz, the attachment defendant, acquired this property in 1906. It does not appear just when he and his brother,Gr. Woelz, opened their clothing business in Joplin. Charles Woelz had two brothers-in-law, Herman and Peter Janss of Los Angeles. The interpleader’s evidence tends to show that the Janss people had, prior to January 1910, advanced various sums of money to Charles Woelz as loans and that Peter Janss finally took his note dated January 13, 1910, for $10,000 payable $200-a month, and it is said that this note was intended to secure all indebtedness up to $10,000
It is unnecessary to notice in detail the statements Charles Woelz made from time to time to commercial agencies in which.no mention was made of the Janss loans, in one of which he stated that Peter Janss was interested in the business. Nor is it necessary to narrate the evidence to the plaintiff’s showing that Woelz by statements made led the banks heretofore mentioned to believe that he had no other indebtedness than what he owed them, nor statements said to have been made by Woelz to the banks that their indebtedness was to be taken care of out of the proceeds of the sale of his residence property whenever he was able to sell it to advantage.
Woelz left Joplin in August 1913 and at the time his deposition was taken he was a resident of Los Angeles.
As stated, the deed from Woelz and wife to Braly was a warranty deed, dated December 9, 1913, with no defeasance whatever.
Braly also lives in Los Angeles. . His father-in-law’s sister married Charles Woelz. Braly is a son-in-law of Peter Janss and brother-in-law of Herman Janss, and
About a month after the warranty deed from Woelz to Braly was dated, these banks received from a Los Angeles attorney a proposition that they agree "to an assignment on the part of Woelz for the benefit of his creditors to H. H. Braly of Los Angeles as assignee enclosing such an instrument already signed by Woelz, Braly and Herman Janss. Accompanying it was a letter from the attornéy in which he gave as a condensed statement of the liabilities the following: Herman Janss, $2,800; Peter» Janss, $4,638.95; Gr. Woelz, $850; John Woelz, $1,500; Citizens State Bank, $1,500; First National Bank of Joplin, $1,863; total, $13,151.93: He listed as assets the stock of merchandise as worth $6,000 and the real estate at Joplin as worth $4,000. The banks refused to enter into this arrangement and it fell through. Braly did nothing under it. It is not shown in the record that anything was due from Charles Woelz to Gr. Woelz or John Woelz. Soon after this proposition was rejected the stock of goods listed by the attorney as a six thousand dollar asset (and which Woelz had stated to commercial agencies was worth over thirteen thousand dollars) was shipped to Colorado where some of it was sold to the Woelz Brothers clothing store in Ft. Collins and the remainder shipped to Los Angeles and sold to another clothing company, bringing, according to the testimony offered by interpleader, in all a little over $400, which amount was credited on one of the Woelz notes held by Janss people.
It is shown that the loans by these banks to Woelz were made long before he left Joplin in August, 1913, one witness stating that the main loan was made before Woelz bought the Henly property. .
As to the claim that this residence property at Joplin was the homestead of Woelz and therefore exempt, it is sufficient to say that Woelz'left 'the state
Furthermore, it was brougth out by the inter-pleader in his cross-examination of plaintiff’s witness Jenkins that the main loan was made before Woelz acquired this property, and therefore it was not exempt as to such debt. [Sec. 6711, R. S. 1909, Butler and Mullins v. Roer,
As stated, no declarations of law were asked or given, so that it is not known on what theory the trial judge proceeded in rendering his finding and judgment, and, in such case, if there is any substantial evidence to sustain the judgment on any theory it must be done.
While it is true that fraud must be proved and is not to be presumed, still the intent to defraud may be deduced from circumstances for in the nature of things it is not' susceptible of direct proof. Appellant cites authorities to the effect that the fact 'that an insolvent debtor prefers his relatives as creditors does not of itself show fraud, yet, as held in State Bank of West Union v. Keeney,
We think this deed of December 9, 1913, purporting to convey the absolute title to Braly was, void as to attaching creditors in view of Braly’s testimony that it was not in fact what it appeared on its face to be because of a secret understanding that he was to merely take it as trustee for the benefit of the Janss people. Braly testified that this deed was not given to secure the indebtedness but to help pay it off, that he didn’t know what would become of the surplus, if any, under this arrangement, that he didn’t know anything about any equity Woelz might have in the surplus, if any, and that he supposed it would be up to Herman and Peter Janss to say what would become of it. While under the facts of this case the Janss indebtedness ap
The assignment of error that the court erred in admitting incompetent evidence is not briefed except for a short .paragraph at the close of the argument where it is said that the interpleader at the- trial objected to evidence of statements made by Woelz to Jenkins and Becker and Dufflemyer which objections were overruled and exceptions saved. There are other reasons which might be given for overruling this assignment but it is enough to say that the testimony claimed to have been improperly admitted is not pointed out by the plaintiff in error; the appellate court should not be compelled to search through the testimony of witnesses and weigh every objection'that may have been made. [Tuttle v. Davis,
The judgment is affirmed.
