36 Neb. 700 | Neb. | 1893
This is an action to subject certain real estate to the payment of the claims of the plaintiff. The testimony shows that Chris Johnson died in the year 1886; at that time he was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $922.50, which was allowed against his estate. The estate proved to be insolvent, and the plaintiff only received the sum of $577.31, leaving due to her on said claim $453.60, for which it is sought to subject the real estate in question. On the trial of the cause in the court below the issues were found in favor of the defendant and the action dismissed.
The plaintiff’s claim is for service and for keeping house for Chris, which began about 1882 and continued up to the time of his death. She claims that Chris put his money into the estate of his mother and thereby became insolvent; that the mother’s estate is liable for her claim. The proof fails to show that Chris J ohnson was insolvent when he made the improvements in question for his mother, or that he made the improvements in contemplation of insolvency. A person who is apparently able to pay his debts and believes himself to be so, and has no design to defraud his creditors, may make a valid gift to a relative. The gift, however, must not be disproportionate to his means, nor such as will produce insolvency. The proof fails to show that this gift, if such it was, produced the insolvency of Chris Johnson. The proof is meager upon this point and very unsatisfactory. The right of the plaintiff to reach the assets in the hands of a fraudulent grantee is undoubted, but the proof fails to sustain the charge. This is
Affirmed.