23 Neb. 84 | Neb. | 1888
This action was in the nature of a creditor’s bill, commenced in the district court of Lancaster county. The allegations of plaintiff’s petition were, in substance, as follow:
That on the 17th day of February, 1876, defendant William L. Hobbs obtained a judgment against defendant W. S. Latta, for the sum of $328.65, and $9.20 costs, amounting to the sum of $337.93, and on the 20th day of October of the same year, a transcript of said judgment was duly filed and docketed in the office of the clerk of the district court of Lancaster county, and entered on the proper records of said court. That executions had been entered on said judgments at short intervals of time from that day until the commencement of' the action, and that judgment was in full force and effect, and wholly unsatisfied; That defendant William S. Latta, by the fraudulent conveyances and devices mentioned in the petition, had wholly rendered himself insolvent, and had no property whatever liable to execution to satisfy said judgment. That since the recovery thereof said judgment had, through mesne conveyances and assignments, been transferred to plaintiff, who was the owner and holder thereof, but that Hobbs and Smith were made defendants to the action, merely that all equities asserted for or by them might be barred. That the indebtedness upon which the judgment was based accrued in 1873, for money paid out in payment of taxes upon certain lands in Cass county belonging separately to defendants William S. Latta and Sarah A. Latta; and that when said indebtedness accrued said William S. Latta was a man of ample means, and as late as December, 1875, had real and personal property in the counties of Cass, Lancaster, and Butler, of great value, and was worth more than ten thousand dollars above all indebtedness and liabilities. That from said date to the
It is further alleged that although said "William S. Latta was a man of large means at the time plaintiff’s indebtedness accrued, and up until December, 1885, and was worth at least $10,000 in property subject to execution, in the ■city of Lincoln, and over and above liabilities and exemptions, yet he, being then somewhat embarrassed by some cer
It is further alleged that the income from defendant’s professional services, from May 1, 1883, to the time of the commencement of this suit, amounts to not less than $145 per month, so that the total amount of professional services and the real estate and money transferred to S. A. Latta amounts to the sum of $9,515, and that the value of the real estate being $24,400, and producing rents, exclusive of the homestead, to the amount of $1,800 per year, the incumbrances thereon being only of the amount of $6,000. It is alleged that in March, 1874, after the indebtedness of plaintiff* accrued, that defendant, Sarah A.
It is further alleged that during the year 1884, the •better to sustain the fraudulent transfers of the property, the said William S. Latta fabricated certain written instruments purporting to be contracts made between himself ■and his wife, one a note bearing date March 9, 1884, due •in one day after date, with interest at ten per cent, and which note bears three endorsements of amounts paid thereon, dated respectively,-January 22, 1876, for $1,500, February 12,1876, for $1,000, March 12,1876, for $840; the other instruments in two copies bearing date on or about March 1, 1886, with erasures thereon, changing said dates to 1876, and both copies signed by said William and Sarah, in which, in consideration of his therein recited and enjoyed considerations, she contracted to maintain the family, and he contracted to pay to her his professional incomes, by one copy of said contract $60 per month for three years thence ensuing, $75 per month for the second three years, and $100 per month for the time thereafter to May 11, 1883; and by the other copy of said contract, by erasures therein made, changed the periods from three to two years, it was provided that he should pay her $60 for two years,
To this petition defendant Smith filed answer, averring a due recovery of the judgment by Hobbs against William S. Latta, and the assignment to plaintiff, the want of knowledge of the alleged frauds, and the denial of any claim or interest in the judgment.
Defendant Hobbs filed substantially the same answer.
Defendants William S. and Sarah A. Latta filed their answer, by which they admitted the recovery of the judgment in favor of Hobbs, at the time alleged, and the docketing of the same in the district court, but deny the ownership of plaintiff, and allege that neither the plaintiff nor Smith was ever the owner thereof, but that the same belongs, to William L. Hobbs, and1 that there was then pending in the same court an action between defendant W. S. Latta; and said William L. Hobbs, wherein said Latta as plaintiff sought to have said judgment applied on the direct payment of a certain judgment rendered in the district court against said Hobbs, and owned by William S. Latta. All the allegations in the petition are denied.
The allegations of the answer by which it is alleged that the judgment is still owned by Hobbs are denied by the reply of Hobbs and Smith.
By what is called a supplemental answer of the Lattas, the bar of the statute of limitations is presented and the payment of the judgment in favor of Hobbs, which is alleged to be the property of the plaintiff, with the exception of$180.
In the reply subsequently filed by plaintiff he denies the allegations concerning the limitation, and alleges that defendants are estopped by the adjudication and judgment of the county cour¡fc from setting up their alleged defence' thereto.
The trial was had by the court, and upon request of plaintiff the court found especially its conclusions of fact and of law, which were as follows:
“ 1. The court finds that the plaintiff was, at the commencement of this action, and still is, the owner and holder of the judgment rendered in favor of William L. Hobbs against William S. Latta, in the county court of Lancaster county, February 17, 1876, and that the same is still in full force, unpaid and unsatisfied.
“2. The court finds that in the year 1874 the defendant, William S. Latta, was indebted to his wife, the defendant Sarah A. Latta, in the sum of between $5,000 and $6,000.
“3. The court finds that Eikenbury bought the land in Butler county of said William'S. Latta, in good faith and for a valuable consideration, and that he afterwards sold and conveyed the same, in good faith and for a valuable consideration, to said Sarah A. Latta; that said William S. Latta applied the consideration received by him from the sale of said lands to Eikenbury on the indebtedness owing by him to his said wife, Sarah A. Latta.
■ ££4. The court finds that the sum of $1,608.75 insurance money referred to in the petition was applied by said William S. Latta to the payment of an indebtedness owing
“ 5. The court finds that there was no completed sale of said lots 9 and 10 to said Mozer; that said William S. made the conveyance to said Mozer of said lots in expectation that Mozer would purchase and pay for the same, but that said Mozer did not make the purchase and paid no consideration for such conveyance, and • that such conveyance has always been considered and treated by the parties thereto as of no validity and as of no force or effect.
“ 6. The court finds that the liens on said lots 9 and 10 were bona fide and valid liens, and that the suit brought to foreclose them was brought and prosecuted in good faith by the owners and holders thereof, and for the sole purpose of enforcing such liens, and that said lots were sold under the decree rendered in said suit, and such sale confirmed in good faith for like purpose.
“7. The court finds that said lots 9 and.10 were purchased at said sale by the plaintiffs in said suit, or some of them, and the sheriff executed to them a deed to said lots on the day of the confirmation of said sale, and said purchasers on the same day conveyed said lots to said Sarah A. in consideration of the amount of their purchase price, together with interest, costs, and expenses incurred in said suit, and subject to a certain mortgage thereon of $475; that the said Sarah A. obtained a portion of the money, to-wit, $1,000, with which to pay for said lots from said Brush, to secure which she gave him a note signed by herself and William S., which note was • afterwards secured by a mortgage on said lots; that said Sarah A. paid the purchase price of said lots and has also paid said mortgages.
“ 8. The court finds that William L. Hobbs, the then
“ 9. The court finds that said William S. and Sarak A. Latta have, ever since 1874 and prior thereto, continuously occupied and still occupy said lots as a homestead,, and, with the exception of the title acquired by the purchasers at such foreclosure sale, either said William S.. Latta or Sarah A. Latta has during all the time aforesaid owned and held the title to, and still owns and holds-the title to said lots.
“10. The court finds that said William S. and Sarah A. Latta made and entered into a contract or contracts by which he agreed to turn over to her his professional earnings, in consideration that she would maintain him and his family; that said contract or contracts was fraudulent, and made for the purpose of placing such earnings beyond the reach of his creditors; that said contract or contracts-was acted upon by the parties thereto, and that between the years 1875 and 1883 said William S. earned in his-profession and turned over to his said wife, under said contract or contracts, the several sums of money alleged in the petition, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of' $7,805.89; that it does not appear that any of said money was used in the purchase of said real estate or any part, thereof by said Sarah A., nor does it appear how much money was usual or necessary to, maintain said William S.. and his family.
“If. The court finds that at the time said Sarah A., purchased said lots 9 and 10, to-wit, October 5, 1877, there were three houses situated thereon, from two of which she has received an income from rents in the sum of about, $55 per month, and has also received some income by-keeping boarders in the third house, in which said William S. and his family resided, and that she has also received some income from a farm known as the Worl farm, owned by her and which was bought by said William S. fromi
“12. The court finds that the indebtedness on which said judgment of Hobbs against Latta was recovered was. contracted in the year 1873.
' “ CONCLUSIONS OP LAW.
“1. As a conclusion of law, the court finds: First,, That said judgment of William S. Hobbs against William. S. Latta is a lien on said lots 9 and 10, but that the same-cannot be enforced by a sale of said lots while they are-owned and occupied by said William - S. and Sarah A„ Latta as a homestead, and that said lots are now owned and occupied by them as a homestead.
“2. That the plaintiff is entitled to a decree adjudging-said judgment to be a valid and subsisting lien on said lots-9 and 10, but is not entitled to any of the other remedies-prayed for in petition.”
The judgment and decree of the court was, that plaintiff “ Is entitled to and has a valid and subsisting lien by his-judgment, from the 20th day of October, 1876, in and. to said lots 9 and 10 in block 88 of the city of Lincoln, for security and satisfaction of said judgment, amounting to> the sum of $337.93, with interest thereon at the rate of' ten per cent per annum from the 17th day of February, 1876, and costs to accrue, which is, however, subject to the-right of homestead of the defendants, William S. and Sarah. A. Latta, which had prior thereto attached to said real estate, and that plaintiff recover of and from said defendants, Sarah A. Latta and William S. Latta, the costs of this, action,” etc.
From this judgment defendants Latta appeal. Pending;
We take it to be the well-established law of this state that a motion for a new trial is necessary to obtain a review of the case on error in this court, and that the errors relied upon should have been specifically pointed out to the district court. M. P. Railroad v. McCartney, 1 Nebraska, 398. Cropsey v. Wiggenhorn, 3 Id., 117, Stanton County v. Canfield, 10 Id., 390. Russell, Moderator, v. State, ex rel. Armor, 13 Id., 68. Cruts v. Wray, 19 Id., 581.
There were no exceptions taken by plaintiff to the findings of fact or conclusions of law as found by the court. Therefore the petition in error need not be noticed.
The finding of fact by the' district court upon the issues of fact involved in the cause must be taken as final, and they will not be discussed. By them it is found that in 1874 defendant, W. S. Latta, was indebted to his wife in the sum of $5,000 or $6,000; that the Butler county lands were purchased by Eikenbury of W. S. Latta, for value and in good faith, and that he afterwards conveyed the same, bona fide and for value, to defendant, Sarah A. Latta; that the $1,608.75 insurance money referred to in the petition was applied by W. S. Latta to the payment of the indebtedness owing by him to Brush, and that Brush loaned it to Sarah A. Latta, who invested it with other moneys in the purchase of the real estate above referred to, in Cropsey’s subdivision, and that Sarah A. Latta paid the purchase price of said land, and repaid the loan to Brush; that the conveyance of lots 9 and 10 to Mozer was made in contemplation of a sale to him, but that the sale failed and that the conveyance to him has always been considered and treated by the parties thereto as of no ' validity; that the liens on lots 9 and 10 were bona fide and valid, and that the suit brought to foreclose them was
To the mind of the writer these findings must be conclusive as to the bona fides of the real estate transactions,
Our attention -will be next directed to the conclusions of law, the first of which is that the judgment of William L. Hobbs against William S. Latta is a lien on lots 9 and 10. To this we cannot agree. Referring again to dates, it will be found that the judgment was obtained in the county court on the 17th of February, 1876. No transcript of this judgment was filed in the district court until October 20th, of the same year, and at that time the foreclosure proceedings were pending, having been instituted on the 3d day of July previous.
It is perhaps true that Hobbs was not made a party to that proceeding, neither was it necessary that he should be. The judgment in favor of Hobbs could not be a lien upon the premises until it was filed in the district court. At the time of the commencement of the foreclosure proceedings, no such judgment was on file, therefore he had no lien to be effected by the suit.
If the plaintiff's judgment was foreclosed in that action, as it was, then the judgment could not become a lien on the premises, however fraudulent the contract between the Lattas concerning the professional services of W. S. may have been, and no amount of fraud in that behalf could by any possibility have rendered it such.
In Stout v. Lye, 103 U. S., 66, it was held, Chief Justice Waite writing the opinion of the court, that the procuring of a judgment during the pendency of a suit to foreclose a mortgage was in legal effect no more and no less than an incumbrance of the equity of redemption by the mortgagor, under the operation of judicial proceedings which had been instituted against him to enforce the payment of a debt he owed, and that as such incumbrance was created pendente lite, the judgment creditor was bound by the foreclosure proceedings, although not a party to the action. See also Comer v. Dodson, 22 O. S., 615. Cr
We therefore conclude that the conclusion of law, that the Hobbs judgment was a lien upon the premises, was incorrect and not sustained by the facts found by the sixth and seventh findings of fact.
It follows that in this respect the decree of the district court must be modified, which is done, and a decree will be entered in this court dismissing plaintiff’s bill.
Decree accordingly.