33 Haw. 364 | Haw. | 1935
Summarized briefly the facts in this case are: The plaintiff in error, appellant herein, IColi Iwakami, is the surviving partner of the firm of Iwakami & Company, heretofore doing business in Honolulu. In the month of August, 1923, this firm instituted in the circuit court of f.he first judicial circuit its action in assumpsit against K. Yamamoto for the recovery of judgment- in the sum of $6000 with interest, etc., alleged to have been due on certain promissory notes and caused a writ of attachment to lie issued and levied upon certain real and personal property then owned by the defendant. Yamamoto thereafter and before the trial of the cause appeared in court and requested that certain of the property attached be released therefrom on the ground that the value of the property under attachment was far in excess of the amount claimed by plaintiff. This application came on before the judge-of the circuit court and after hearing the court entered a minute order releasing from the attachment the real estate and household goods theretofore levied upon. Certain other property including three merchandise stores
It appears that Yamamoto was at the time indebted to other creditors including substantial sums to Davies & Company, Limited, and Hayama Shoten, both mercantile concerns of Honolulu. On December 21, 1923, in order to secure payment of these latter obligations as well as to liquidate accounts of creditors other than Iwakami & Company, Yamamoto executed a mortgage for $12,000 conveying by way of mortgage the Kaimuki tract lots to Charles M. Hite, trustee for Davies & Company, and Hayama Shoten, which mortgage was on the same day recorded in the office of the registrar of conveyances. On December 31, 1924, the plaintiff in the assumpsit case appeared in the circuit court on a motion seeking an amendment of the minute order theretofore entered by the court so that the same would show that the attachment was released solely' as to the household furniture of the defendant. This motion was duly heard, considered and denied by the court on January 15, 1925. The mortgagee having made default in the payment of the mortgage Hite went into equity, obtained a decree of foreclosure and on January 30, 1925, by direction of the court, sold the property at public sale to Security Investment Company, Limited, the defendant in error herein, for the consideration of $11,000. The Iwakami Company having obtained judgment in its assumpsit action against Yamamoto caused execution to
TAvakami noAV comes to this court on a Avrit of error, assigning eighteen separate specifications of error as grounds for reversal of the judgment entered in the court beloAV. The record before us is voluminous but contains surprisingly little that merits consideration by this court. The present counsel for plaintiff in error Avith commendable frankness have reduced the specifications of error to four in number. The first of these specifications reads as follows. “The land court erred in denying plaintiff in error’s motion to dismiss defendant in error’s petition and in alloAving defendant in error to amend its petition.” In its original application the Security Investment Company, Limited, alleged OAvnership of the land in itself but during the progress of the trial it developed that while the applicant owned the legal title to the property the same Avas held by it in trust for Theo. H. Davies & Company, Limited, the latter company being the beneficial and equitable oavu
The second assignment of error embodies the objection of plaintiff in error to the court’s refusal to permit plaintiff in error to try an issue Avhich had been heard and determined by the circuit court in the trial of the assumpsit case, LaAV No. 10333, in January, 1925,- Avhicli came up on the motion of plaintiff in that case (the present plaintiff, in error) to amend the minute order of the court entered therein releasing the property in question from attachment. The plaintiff in the assumpsit case prosecuted no appeal to this court from the decision of the circuit judge who presided at the trial of the assumpsit case refusing to permit any amendment to the minute order but subse
The third assignment challenges the correctness of the giving of defendant in error’s requested instruction number four and refusing to give plaintiff in error’s requested instructions Nos. 8,11, 11B, 12B, 13, 15A, 16, 21, 22 and 23. Instruction number four requested by defendant in error and given by the court is a correct pronouncement of the laAV AAhich is to the effect that it is not fraudulent for a debtor in failing circumstances to prefer one or more of his bona fide credilors to the exclusion of other creditors, he having a legal right, although insolvent or in failing circumstances, to prefer one or more of his creditors by giving security for and limited to the amount of his valid debt notwithstanding that the claims of other creditors Avill thereby be delayed or defeated; that such a preference although it may exhaust or reduce the assets of the debtor so as to leave other creditors unpaid and Avithout the means of collecting their claims does not of itself hinder, delay or defraud creditors Avithin the meaning of a fraudulent conveyance to deprive them of any legal rights, (See 12 R. C. L. 536.)
We have carefully considered the other instructions requested by plaintiff in error, that is to say, 15A, 16, 21, 22 and 23 and can find no error in the refusal of the court to submit them, or any of them, to the jury. They do not merit further discussion.
The final specification of error is general in its nature and merely recites that the verdict of the jury is contrary to the law, the evidence and the weight of the evidence and that the circuit court erred in accepting the same as the true and lawful verdict in said case. The record fails to support these conclusions. There was an abundance of evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury and we can find no basis for the claim that the verdict contravenes the law. All of the numerous assignments of error have been examined by us with care. We can find no merit in any of them.
If it is true, as now contended, that the circuit judge presiding in the assumpsit case (Law No. 10333) committed error in refusing to grant defendafit’s motion to amend the minute order entered by the court, he could have secured relief by appeal to this court. For some undisclosed reason he did not choose to take that course nor does it appear that he went into equity on a bill to set aside petitioner’s deed on the ground that it was fraudulently ob
The decree appealed from is affirmed.