24 Neb. 793 | Neb. | 1888
This was a creditor’s suit brought in the district court of Douglas county by Meyer Heilman and Aaron Calm, plaintiffs, against James W. Davis and Elizabeth Davis and James M. Woolworth, defendants.
• Thé petition alleges that, in the year 1868 the said James W. Davis and others were engaged in certain business enterprises in the name and style of James W. Davis and associates; that in the months of April, May, and June of said year, the said James W. Davis and associates became indebted to the plaintiffs at various times and in various amounts, aggregating $3,104.05; that in the year 1870, said sums remaining unpaid, the plaintiffs drew on said James W. Davis and associates for the amount, which draft was duly accepted, but which still remaining unpaid, the plaintiffs brought suit against the payees in the district court; that on June 30, 1874, in said court, they recovered judgment against said James W. Davis and asso
The defendants, Elizabeth Davis and James W. Davis, answered, denying all allegations except such as they expressly admitted in answers.
I. They admit that in 1868 James W. Davis and others were engaged in business under the name of James W. Davis and associates; that said firm became indebted to the plaintiffs, but not at the times nor in the amounts •claimed; that on July 1, 1870, the plaintiffs drew on James W. Davis and associates for $2,104.05, and not for $3,104.05 as stated; they admit the acceptance of the draft, •on its date, July 1, 1870; they admit the suit of the plaintiffs against James W. Davis and associates in the district court of Douglas county, and the recovery of judgment June 30, 1874, for $3,319.78 and costs, $11.35, but not for a larger sum as stated. They aver that the judgment was void for want of jurisdiction of the court of the persons of defendants, and for the reason that the petition in •said suit did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendants, and deny that the sums in the petition mentioned are still due and owing from James W. Davis and associates to the plaintiffs, but that on the......day of........., 18..., the plaintiffs received a large amount to be applied as credit on said draft as dividend to be paid thereon in certain judicial proceedings then pending in the supreme court of the city and county •of New York, the amount of which the defendants are not advised and cannot state.
But on the contrary they aver that at the time of the purchase of the lands the said firm were not indebted to the plaintiffs on the cause of action mentioned, or on any part thereof; that said firm and James W. Davis, individually, were then, and for a long time thereafter, entirely solvent and abundantly able to pay their indebtedness; that the money by which the lands were purchased was the individual money of the defendants, Elizabeth Davis and James W. Davis, and that the title was taken by Elizabeth in good faith, with no intention of defrauding the creditors of the firm or any member thereof; that the purchase was made for the purpose of securing a home to the
II. For a further defense, the defendants say that the •cause of action stated did not arise at any time within four years next before the commencement of this suit, and they pray the same benefit of this defense as if the same were .taken advantage of with demurrer.
III. For a further defense, the defendants say that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause •of action in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants, or to entitle them to any relief in equity, and they pray the same benefit of this as if taken advantage of by ■demurrer.
"The defendant, J. M. Woolworth, answered, admitting that, in 1868, J. W. Davis and associates were engaged in .business enterprises; that .on January 24, 1871, J. W. Davis and Elizabeth Davis had occasion for $2,000, which he advanced to them on their promissory note of that date for that amount, at 12 per cent interest, payable to his order six months after date, secured by mortgage on the lands mentioned, conditioned if the said J. W. Davis and Elizabeth Davis paid the note according to the terms thereof, the conveyance to be void, otherwise to be in force; that failing to pay the note, or any part thereof, on April 10, 1873, in a civil action in the district court of Douglas •county, wherein the First National Bank of Omaha was plaintiff, and the defendant and J. W. Davis and Elizabeth
There was a trial to the court, with a finding and decree for the defendants, dismissing the petition with costs. Motion for a new trial was overruled, and the plaintiffs bring the cause to this court on error.
There are three principal questions presented by the record:
I. The sufficiency of the judgment against J. W. Davis upon which to found a creditor’s suit.
• II. Whether the action is not barred by the statute of limitations.
III. That arising upon the merits of the case.
The first is not maintained by the plaintiffs in error in their brief, nor is it presented by the record as a salient .and tenable basis of discussion of the points involved, and as its decision is not deemed necessary to a proper disposition of the case, it will not be further considered.
The deed of conveyance from Henry O. Jones to Elizabeth Davis of the lands in question, which forms the basis of the alleged fraud, and by which it is claimed the defendant, James W. Davis, with the design of defrauding the creditors of James W. Davis and associates, and his individual creditors, and especially the plaintiffs, and for the purpose of covering and concealing the property of
If this transaction was fraudulent, and a cause of action inured to the plaintiffs, the statute of limitations commenced to run thereon 'prima, fade at that date, and would have fully fun long before the commencement of this suit. The plaintiffs, however, set up that they had no knowledge of the primary facts of fraud until the year 1882. This allegation is denied by the defendants. We are obliged, therefore, to look into the evidence for such facts as may have come to the plaintiffs’ knowledge at or about the time, or within the statute of limitations, next before the bringing of the suit. The only evidence of record pertinent is that of the testimony of the plaintiff, M. Heilman. In his-examination in chief he testified in reply:
Q. When did you receive the information which led you to bring this creditor’s bill?
A. In the fall of 1883.
Q,. Did you have any knowledge of the facts set forth in the petition before that time?
A. No, sir.
Q,. Did any of the members of your firm, to your knowledge?
A. No, sir, they did not.
On cross-examination, the witness further testified:
Q,. You say you knew nothing of the facts set up in this bill until the fall of 1883?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. You knew you had an indebtedness against James W. Davis & Co.?
A. Yes, sir.
*801 Q,. You knew you had got judgment against them?
A. Yes, sir.
Q,. You knew Mistress Davis had the title to this land ?
A. I did not know anything about it until Mr. Hall came to me and told me.
Q,. You did not know Mrs. Davis had this land?
A. I don’t remember whether I knew anything about it or not.
Q,. You knew where Mr. and Mrs. Davis .lived?
A. I knew they lived out there.
Q,. You knew there was considerable land that they were living on, didn’t you?
A. I knew there was some land out there that they claimed to own, but I didn’t know anything at all about that until Mr. Hall came and told me.
Q,. Didn’t know anything about what? — about their living there?
A. About, that we could make that judgment against them.
Q,. What fact was it you learned in 1883?
A. Mr. Hall came to me and told me that he thought he had a good way of making that claim I had against James W. Davis and associates.
Q,. That was what you learned then?
A. Yes, sir.
Q,. Was this the fact you referred to when you said you never learned it until 1883?
A. Yes, sir.
Q,. The other facts you knew about, — your having a judgment, and about Maj. Davis and Mrs. Davis living on the land out there, and about their having a considerable quantity of land, and the title being in Mrs. Davis, — you knew all that?
A. I knew they owned some land out there. I didn’t know what shape it was in until Mr. Hall came and told me about it.
*802 Q,. Until he came and told you he could make the amount of that judgment?
A. Yes, sir.
Q,. That is the fact you learned in 1883?
A. Yes, sir.
Q,. The other facts in the petition you knew long before?
A. What facts do you have reference to?
Q,. Those you have stated in the petition and have sworn to, — you knew them before 1883, except the fact that Mr. Plall told you that he could make the amount of your judgment, and that was the fact that you learned, —that was the new fact?
A. Yes, sir.-
This is the force of the plaintiff’s testimony.
The statute (Sec. 12, civil code) provides that an action for relief on account of fraud shall be commenced in four years, but the cause of action shall not be deemed to have accrued until the discovery of the fraud.
This section was construed by this court in the case of Parker v. Kuhn, 21 Neb., 413, and the construction given in the syllabus of the report is, that “an action for relief on the ground of fraud may be commenced at any time within four years after a discovery of the facts sufficient to put a person of ordinary intelligence and prudence on an inquiry which, if pursued, would lead to such discovery.”
It may be said without doubt that there is no evidence of the discovery of any fact whatever by the plaintiffs within four years next before the commencement of the suit. Indeed, the only occurrence testified to by the plaintiff as a witness as having come to his knowledge within the statutory time is, that his attorney, in 1883, told him that “he thought he had a good way of making that claim I had against James W. Davis and associates.”
If the land was paid for with the money of James W. Davis, either individually or associated with others, and
The evidence upon the third point, as to the insolvency •of Davis at the time of the purchase of the land, or the payment for it, or the ownership of the money invested, will not be considered, as whatever might be our conclusion upon such examination, it could not relieve the case •of the bar of the statute.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Judgment aeeirmed.