5 Neb. 429 | Neb. | 1877
This is a foreclosure case. The note and mortgage were executed by plaintiff in error to Samuel Bennett, and became due and payable, March 10, 1872. On the loth day of May, 1874, Samuel Bennett assigned the note and mortgage to Daniel Bennett, and on the 10th day of November, 1874, Daniel Bennett assigned the same to the defendant in error. In his answer the plaintiff in error admits the execution of the note and the payment of a certain sum thereon, but denies each and every other allegation of the petition. He further pleads as an affirmative defense, that on the 3d day of July, 1874, the unpaid balance of said note was attached in his hands, upon a judgment recovered by one E. A. Holmes against the said Samuel Bennett, and that he was summoned to answer as garnishee his indebtedness on the said note; that on the 6th day of October, 1874, the district court found that he was indebted to said Samuel Bennett on said note, in an amount to exceed the amount due from said Samuel Bennett to said E. A. Holmes, and ordered and adjudged that as such garnishee he pay to said E. A. Holmes the sum of $945.50 within twenty days from that date, and in default thereof that execution issue against him for the collection of the same. He further avers that Samuel Bennett was then the owner of the note and mortgage, and that the pretended assignment of the same to Daniel Bennett was without consideration, procured by the collusion of defendant in error and said Samuel and Daniel Bennett, with intent and for the purpose of hindering, delaying, and defrauding the said F. A. Holmes, in the collection of her debt against said Samuel Bennett. For a further defense, he avers that the note and mortgage were given in payment of the balance of the purchase money of the same lands described in the petition, which the said
Notwithstanding the execution of the note and mortgage is admitted, yet the general denial of all other allegations of the petition, was sufficient to put the defendant in error upon proof of his ownership of the note and mortgage. But the demurrer admits the truth of all the new matter set up in the answer as a defense. It admits that Samuel Bennett was the real owner of the note and mortgage and that the pretended assignment of them was collusive, without consideration, and solely for the purpose of defrauding F. A. Holmes, a creditor of Samuel Bennett; and it further admits the tax incumbrance on the land at the time the plaintiff purchased it from Samuel Bennett. These allegations are material to the case, and if they are true (and under the pleadings they must be taken as true by the court) they will certainly constitute a good defense, at least pro tanto. The law is so well settled that a debt due upon a note or bill overdue, is subject to attachment, that it is unnecessary to refer to authority in support of it.
Again, as to the partial defense set up in the second count in the answer, it need only be observed, that in actions for breach of covenants against incumbrance, the ground of the action is not the debt or obligation to pay money, but the breach of the covenant is the ground of action and it will lie whether the incumbrance is or is not paid by the vendee; and if it is paid after the commencement of the action, the vendee may recover the full amount fairly and justly paid to remove such incum
As there is error in sustaining the demurrer, the decision of the court thereon and also the decree rendered in the case, in the court below, must be reversed and the cause remanded for trial.
Reversed and remanded.