66 P. 812 | Or. | 1901
delivered the opinion.
This is a suit to set aside a deed as to a part of the real property conveyed thereby, and to subject such part to the payment of a judgment. The admitted facts are that the defendant Ira E. Wheeler executed to B. Phillips, August 19, 1893, three promissory notes, each for the sum of $200, payable in ninety, one hundred and fifty, and two hundred and ten days, respectively; that Wheeler was then the owner of the property so conveyed, which, on October 5, 1893, for the expressed consideration of $8,000, he conveyed to his brother, the defendant David R. Wheeler; that said notes were assigned to the plaintiffs, and, no part thereof having been paid, they, on April 13, 1895, secured a judgment in the circuit court for Multnomah County against the maker for the amount due thereon, and on February 25, 1897, executions .theretofore issued thereon to the sheriffs of Multnomah and Washington counties were returned nulla bona; that David Wheeler conveyed away a part thereof, and now owns only lots Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, and the west half of lot 9, in Wheeler’s Subdivision in Washington County, as appeared by the recorded plat thereof. It is alleged in the complaint that Ira E. Wheeler fraudulently conveyed said land to his brother without consideration, and with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud his creditors; that upon the execution of the deed he became, and still is, insolvent; and that no part of said judgment has ever been paid. The defendant David R. Wheeler, an
From a. careful examination of the testimony, we do not think David had any knowledge or notice of his brother’s intention to defraud his creditors, if such intention existed. At the time Ira’s property in East Portland was attached it Avas estimated to be worth about $3,000, though incumbered by a mortgage for the sum of $500. That property was sold under an execution issued upon the breAving company’s judgment, and was never redeemed. But such failure to Secure a restoration of the estate does not necessarily prove that Ira entertained an intent to defraud his creditors at the time he executed the deed to his brother, for he may have thought the East Portland property sufficient to pay the sum due on plaintiff’s notes, which seem to be a part of the series executed by him, to which the Gambrinus Brewing Company note belonged. The financial crisis which occurred about the time of or soon after the property was attached disappointed the expectations of many debtors in respect to the value of their property, and defeated their hopes of its bringing, upon a forced sale, any greater sum than the creditors’ demand. The
Plaintiffs’ counsel, in support of their contention that the court erred in dismissing the suit, rely upon the case of Marks v. Crow, 14 Or. 382 (13 Pac. 55),where it was held that one who was in debt at the time of conveying substantially the whole of his estate to his brother, ostensibly in satisfaction of his debt to the latter, in a suit by creditors to set aside the deed for fraud it is incumbent upon the grantee to establish by satisfactory proof that there was a valuable and adequate consideration for the deed, and unless he can give a clear and precise account of the items constituting the alleged debt a fraudulent intent will be inferred. But in the case at bar the trial occurred about five and one half years after the deed was executed, and it is not strange that the defendants cannot give a
It follows that the decree is affirmed. Affirmed.