124 Iowa 437 | Iowa | 1904
William H. No ell was adjudged a bankrupt on October 11,1902. Blaintiff is a trustee in bankruptcy, and as such brought this suit, claiming that on September 1, 1902, Koell had a stock of goods at Hampton, in this State, worth about $2,000, and that, with intent to cheat and defraud his creditors, he traded this said stock to the defendant for land in Minnesota worth not to exceed $1,000, taking title to the land in the name of his wife, and executing a mortgage thereon to' the defendant for the sum of $225; that thereafter the wife conveyed the land so received to innocent purchasers; -and that plaintiff is entitled to judg
In one paragraph of the charge the trial court instructed the jury as follows:
“ You have been told in the preceding instructions that if such a sale was not in good faith, as defined for you, then defendant will be liablé in this action to plaintiff for the damages caused him, which damages are hereinafter brought to your attention in other instructions. You have been also told that if said trade was not for a present, fair consideration, then defendant would also be liable for said damages. It becomes necessary, in view of this statement, to define for you the meaning of the words ‘ fair consideration,’ as thus used. Now, if the price paid by defendant for. the said stock of goods and fixtures was so much less than the fair market value of the said stock of goods and fixtures, at the time the trade was made, as in itself to put an ordinarily prudent person on guard — that is, to arouse his suspicions as to the intent or purpose of said No ell in making the trade of said stock of goods and fixtures for the price then paid — the consideration paid by defendant was not a fair consideration; that is to say if there was so great a difference between the fair market value of said stock and fixtures at the time of said trade, and the price paid therefor by defendant, as in that fact alone to arouse the suspicions on the part of an ordinarily prudent person of a wrong intent on the part of Noell to then dispose of said stock and fixtures, then the price paid by' defendant was not a fair consideration. By ‘ wrong intent ’ is meant an intent to hinder, delay, or defraud a creditor or creditors.”
Plaintiff contends that this instruction is erroneous, and that for this reason he is entitled to a reversal of the judgment. As this contention involves a construction of the so-
This is the only point made by appellant, and, as it is ■without merit, the judgment must be, and it is, affirmed.