24 N.E.2d 916 | Ind. | 1940
It is alleged in the appellants' second amended complaint that certain of the appellees persuaded and induced Jane L. Johnson to mortgage her real estate to them, without consideration, to cheat, hinder, and delay the appellants, who were her creditors. Thereafter, appellants sued her on her obligations to them, but she died pendente lite. The executor of her estate was substituted as sole defendant and judgments were rendered in favor of the creditors and against the estate.
The present action is against the said mortgagees and the heirs at law and devisees of Jane L. Johnson, deceased. The suit is to set aside the appellees' mortgages on account of fraud; to establish the priority of the appellants' judgment liens on the land of which Jane L. Johnson died seized; and to subject it to sale to satisfy appellants' judgments.
There was no error in striking from the amended complaint the allegation to the effect that after the creditors' judgments were obtained, transcripts thereof were filed in the county 1, 2. where the real estate was situated, and that said judgments thereupon became liens upon the real estate ofwhich Jane L. Johnson died seized. The italicized clause is purely a conclusion of law, and the statute with reference *540
to the sufficiency of conclusions in pleadings, in the absence of a motion to require the facts to be pleaded (§ 2-1005, Burns' 1933, § 155, Baldwin's 1934), has reference to conclusions of fact and not to conclusions of law. Greathouse v. Board, etc.
(1926),
A creditor of a decedent may maintain an action to set aside a fraudulent conveyance or encumbrance made by such decedent in his lifetime and to subject land so conveyed or encumbered to 3. the payment of the debts of the decedent. Tyler v. Wilkerson (1863),
"Appellants assert that the personal representative of the estate of Jane L. Johnson was not a necessary party defendant in this action because appellants' complaint shows that said estate was settled without paying appellants' judgments. . . ." (Our italics.)
It may also be noted that Harry Johnson, as executor, is not a party to the judgment appealed from; nor is he named as such in the assignment of errors.
The present case does not come within the rule that the holder of a lien on real estate may, when the owner dies, stand by and allow the estate of the decedent to be settled and 4, 5. thereafter assert his lien against the land. In such a case the lienholder waives his right to participate in the personal estate of the decedent, but he may, nevertheless, thereafter enforce his lien against the land by appropriate proceedings. Beach v. Bell (1894),
The trial court sustained the separate demurrer of a part of the appellees and the separate motions of the others to dismiss the cause. The motions to dismiss the cause were 6, 7. improperly based upon Chapter 185, Acts of 1937, which was abrogated by the rules of this court promulgated on June 21, 1937, but the reasons assigned in the motions would have been appropriate to a demurrer. The form of the pleading or what it is called is not important; it is the substance that is controlling. Lambert v. Smith (1939), ante p. 26,
Judgment is affirmed.
Swaim, J., not participating.
NOTE. — Reported in