| Wis. | Oct 9, 1888

Cassoday, J.

Uo objection is made to the formal execution of the assignment. Undoubtedly it was drawn and executed in conformity to the statutory requirements. • The statute provides that “any property, moneys, credits, and. effects, held by a conveyance or title void as to the creditors of the defendant, shall be embraced in such liability ” of the garnishee (sec. 2768, R. S.), except as limited by sec. 2, ch. 86, Laws of 1881. The real issue for trial in this garnishee action, therefore, was whether the assignment to Reinig was void as -to the plaintiffs, as creditors of Haber-korn; that is to say, Was it made with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud such creditors? The special verdict of the jury, confirmed by the court, cohered all phases of that issue. The forcible argument of the learned counsel for the plaintiffs at the bar, and a careful examination of his printed brief and case, fails to convince us that any portion of that verdict is unsupported by the evidence. This being so, we are not at liberty to disturb the judgment, unless the record discloses a substantial error of law prejudicial to the plaintiffs. The brief of the appellants fails to “ contain a distinct enumeration, in the form of propositions, of the several errors relied on,” as required. Bule IX. The brief failed to comply with the rules in other respects. If we fail to notice all the propositions discussed, it may be attributed to *392such omissions in the brief, or because we regard them as immaterial to the issue involved.

1. It is claimed that the court erred in not permitting a more wide and liberal range of examination of witnesses'on the part of the plaintiffs. In support of this, numerous folios of the printed case are referred to where questions were asked and, upon objection being made, were excluded, and the plaintiffs excepted. Much of the testimony so excluded consisted of attempts on the part of”the plaintiffs to impeach their own witnesses by asking them on their direct examination, in effect, whether they had not sworn or stated at some other time and place something in conflict or inconsistent with the testimony which they had just before given. Much of it was entirely foreign to the issue on trial. There can be no question as .to the correctness of such rulings. The court certainly permitted a very wide and liberal range of examination on the part of the plaintiffs. Such examination was allowed to cover many years of Haberkorn’s business transactions. There is more reason for saying that such examination should have been more restricted to the issue on trial. But the plaintiffs cannot complain of such want of restriction. "

2. The court very property refused to allow counsel to read to the jury an extract from, an opinion of this court in another case, and characterizing another transaction. It was entirety irrelevant. Even had it been a legal proposition applicable to the case, yet it is to be remembered that juries are to be guid,ed, as to the law applicable to the case on trial, by the trial judge — not by this court.

3. Counsel claim it was error for the court to charge the jury that “ while it is the duty and the right of counsel to address you and explain and elucidate the testimony, the better to enable you to understand the questions which you are to decide, yet if counsel inadvertently mistake the evi*393dence you are to follow the evidence and not the statement of counsel in arriving at the conclusion as to the answers to be given in this case.” This was simply telling the jury that they were to arrive at their conclusion from the evidence itself, even if counsel inadvertently misstated it. It furnishes no ground for criticism. It manifest^ was called for by some statement made by counsel not incorporated into the record. Such absence of such statement from the record is of itself a good reason for not sustaining such exception.

4. There is evidence tending to' show that, the morning before the assignment was executed, Haberkorn received a due-bill from a creditor of $20. It is claimed that this due-bill did not go into the hands of the assignee. Upon that question the jury'were, in elfect, instructed-that as there was no direct or positive evidence that Habei’korn did not turn over to Reinig all of the property and assets owned by him at the time of the assignment, they were to determine from the facts and circumstances in the case whether he concealed, withheld, or failed to turn over to him any property not exempt. The court also charged the jury that, “ the plaintiffs are required to show by a preponderance of the evidence that the assignor, ITaberkorn, had property, assets, or money, at the time of the assignment, which he did not deliver to the assignee, Reinig, before you can answer the first question in the negative.” At the time Hab-erkorn received the due-bill he still had possession of his other property. The mere receipt of it, therefore, was no evidence that it was not turned over with the other property as the jury found. If the due-bill was described in the inventory, then the title to it passed to the assignee, and made him accountable for it; but if omitted from the inventory that would not necessarily in validate the assignment. Even fraudulent transfers of property by a debtor just previous to a general assignment do not avoid such assignment, *394but are themselves avoidable under it. Batten v. Smith, 62 Wis. 92" court="Wis." date_filed="1885-01-13" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/batten-v-smith-6604597?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6604597">62 Wis. 92. The burden was upon the plaintiffs to show thejin-correctness of the inventory. Batten v. Richards, 70 Wis. 272" court="Wis." date_filed="1887-12-13" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/batten-v-richards-6605899?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6605899">70 Wis. 272. Had they shown such omission, then the burden of showing that it was not intentional, but made by mistake, wojuld have been upon the defendant. Ibid. The real question is whether Haberkorn made the assignment with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud his creditors. That was' necessarily a question of fact, and that was found adversely to the plaintiffs by the trial court and jury.

5. Counsel complains of those portions of the seventh and tenth questions submitted to the jury requiring them to give particulars. Put as the jury never reached the tenth question at all, and the answer given to the seventh made it unnecessary to give any particulars, it is not perceivable how the plaintiffs were prejudiced.

6. The charge of the court seems to be fair and impartial. We fail to discover in it the “sentiments which an advocate would present in excuse of his client’s actions,” as claimed by counsel.

7. The plaintiffs requested the court to give to the jury thirty-six different instructions, covering ten printed pages, and they take exceptions because they were refused. We do not feel called upon to consider them seriatim. It is enough to’say that the issue on trial was very simple and was fully covered by the charge of the trial court.

By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

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