63 Iowa 233 | Iowa | 1884
This case comes to us for trial de novo, if at all. The defendants insist that it cannot be so tried. They contend, First, that the evidence is not properly certified, and, Second, that the abstract does not purport to be an abstract of all the evidence.
The abstract should present to us all the evidence which we need, to examine, and, if the case is to be tried de novo, the appellant should make a statement which is sufficient to show that he claims that he has presented an abstract of all the evidence. We do not examine the statement quite as critically as we do the certificate of the judge, by which the
We come, next, to the question as to whether the conveyance from Peter Miller to the plaintiff was fraudulent; and we have to say that we think it was not. So far as the impeachment of the plaintiff’s good faith is concerned, the defendants rely wholly upon what they deem unnatural circumstances. But they are not in our opinion sufficient. We have all reached this conclusion upon a separate reading of the evidence, and, while it is not very voluminous, we must be allowed to state our conclusion without setting the evidence out.
That a person holding under a quit-claim deed takes subject to such equities as might have been asserted against his grantor, is not to be denied. But a creditor, merely as such, has no interest, legal or equitable, in his debtor’s real estate.
We do not think that the evidence shows the rendition of a nunc fro tunc judgment. "We do not care to set out what is relied upon, because we do not think that it is competent for a court to bind by a lien the land of a third person, by the rendition of a nunc fro tunc judgment against his grantor. A purchaser of real estate takes it charged with the lien of only such judgments as are actually existing at the time he purchases.
"We think that the plaintiff did not need to redeem to protect his rights, and that the court erred in directing the clerk to pay the money in his hands to the defendant administrator, and in rendering judgment in favor of the defendants for costs.
Reversed.