160 Iowa 571 | Iowa | 1913
1. John Jetter and Caroline Jetter are husband and wife. On March 23, 1911, John Jetter on his own petition was declared a bankrupt, and the plaintiff was appointed as trustee of his estate. John Jetter was indebted in the sum of $662.81, and claimed to have no property. The plaintiff, as trustee, claimed that he owned certain personal property, which is specifically set out in the petition. It is alleged that John Jetter had for years been engaged in farming, and up to the time of being declared a bankrupt he had held himself out to the public as the owner of the property, and had the same in his possession, all with the knowledge of his wife and children, and no claims were made by them thereto, and that credit was extended to said John Jetter as owner of the property, and in such belief; and that it was contracted by him, he permitting such belief. It is also alleged that some time within two years prior to the institution of this action, for the purpose of cheating and defrauding his creditors, and especially the creditors whose claims are established in the bankruptcy proceedings, he transferred a part of his personal property to his wife and a part to his sons, the same being without consideration, they knowing the fraudulent purpose for which the same was transferred, and participating in said fraud. The two sons are minors; one being fourteen and the other about seventeen years of age. That the said personal property is all the property owned by said
The defendants admit- the bankruptcy of John Jetter and the establishment of the indebtedness alleged, but deny that John Jetter was the owner of any of the said property at the time of filing of his petition in bankruptcy, and that a number of the articles set out in the petition were not owned by the defendant, but that the balance of it was so owned by others long prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, and denying every allegation not admitted. The defendant Caroline Jetter claims that for many years they have been living on a rented farm, which was rented and operated by her, and that all of the personal property thereon was hers; and that she had bought the same for a valuable consideration, and had had the possession, and had exercised absolute control over same, and whatever authority was exercised by John Jetter was simply as her agent or servant. Defendants also plead their rights under the exemption laws. The guardian ad litem for the minors filed an answer in general denial, and also a cross-petition, claiming the ownership of a gasoline engine on truck and a corn sheller, one black horse named “Betty,” and one hog as the property of Henry Jetter, and the'bay mare named “Dolly” as owned by Louie Jetter, and asked that the same be- so decreed. The trial court held that it was without jurisdiction as to the real property in Crawford county, the action having-been brought in Shelby county, and no other real property was sought to be affected by the proceeding. Code, section 3491. This conclusion is not challenged on this appeal, but appellant’s argument is directed solely to his right to have the personal property in controversy subjected to the claims of the creditors of John Jetter, the bankrupt debtor. We, therefore, give no
II. It appears from the record that the indebtedness scheduled by Jetter in his application to be declared bankrupt consisted of obligations upon which he was liable as surety. It also is satisfactorily shown that it was the purpose, on the part of himself and his wife, to avoid the payment of such indebtedness by taking the benefit of the bankrupt law. ¥e therefore must determine the right to exempt property, and whether the property sought to be recovered in this proceeding, or any part of it, was transferred from Jetter to his wife, Caroline Jetter, or to his children at such time and in such manner as to render the transfer fraudulent as to his present creditors in bankruptcy, and also whether crops planted after the adjudication of bankruptcy, and property claimed by the children of Jetter, who are made defendants, can be subjected to the payment of his debts.
It is urged by appellant that as Jetter conveyed the property in fraud of creditors, and as his wife is not the head of the family, neither can claim -the exemption. Neither proposition is correct as applied to this case. Jetter had the right to transfer exempt property regardless of his indebtedness, and his wife, not as the head of a family, but if valid sale was made, as his vendee, as to such property was entitled to the protection which the exemption laws would have thrown over it had it been retained by him. See cases above cited.
Tbe husband and wife are not entirely agreed in their testimony as to tbe amount of money alleged to have been advanced to him by her at tbe time of their marriage. He states that she bad “between five and six, between seven and eight hundred dollars,” which she let him have, and upon which he agreed to pay interest. In her testimony before tbe referee in bankruptcy Mrs. Jetter fixed tbe amount at $800, and in tbe trial in tbe lower court at $734, perhaps not a substantial or material variance, when it is considered that no note was taken and many years bad passed and memory may have been at fault. She testifies that at tbe time she demanded a settlement with her husband tbe indebtedness with interest amounted to over $1,300, and that all tbe money be bad in the bank, which was turned over to her, being insufficient to satisfy tbe claim, be at her request also delivered to her as her own, in payment of'the indebtedness, all of tbe property on tbe farm leased by them. No inventory was made, no valuation was placed upon tbe property, no written contract or bill of sale was executed, and no receipt was given. With the funds thus received, added to some of her own, town lots in Crawford county were purchased, title being taken by her.
We must hold that, as to the trustee in bankruptcy and the creditors represented by him, the transfer from John Jetter to Caroline Jetter was fraudulent.
This conclusion requires some modification in the decree of the lower court. The case will be remanded to the trial court to determine the property subject to the control of the plaintiff as trustee in bankruptcy, to apply to the indebtedness of John Jetter, excluding therefrom the exempt property as considered in this opinion, and that found to belong respectively to Louie Jetter and ITenry Jetter. The costs of this appeal will be taxed, one-half to plaintiff, appellant, and one-half to Caroline Jetter, appellee.
The decree of the trial court is modified and Remanded.