44 P. 387 | Or. | 1896
Opinion by
It is contended by the plaintiffs that Hansen confessed the judgments and made the assignment in pursuance of an agreement entered into with his codefendants to hinder, delay, and defraud his creditors, and that the assignment and confessions, being parts of one transaction, necessarily rendered each void; while the defendants, denying the existence of such an agreement, admit, in the argument, that the executions issued upon these judgments were void, but maintain that in equity the court should treat the assignment as valid, and decree a ratable distri
Reversed.