63 Iowa 25 | Iowa | 1884
A mortgage, or several mortgages, may be taken with an assignment proper, as one transaction, and as constituting the assignment; Van Patten & Marks v. Burr, 52 Iowa, 521; or several mortgages may be taken together as one transaction, and as constituting an assignment. Burrows v. Lehndorff, 8 Iowa, 96. But, to justify a court in finding that a mortgage may be taken in connection with some other instrument as constituting an assignment, it should appear that the mortgagor, at the time he made the mortgage, had the intention to make an assignment. In the case at bar, the mortgage appears to have been made without such intention, and as a distinct and independent transaction. It is true, the instrument designed as an assignment was made on the same day, and only three hours later. Our attention is called by the plaintiffs to this fact. Under some circumstances, such fact might, perhaps, have some importance. But the question of intention
There is no pretense that a person who makes an assignment for the benefit of his creditors is not entitled to any exemptions. The appellant’s position, as we understand, is that the assignment, to be. valid, must purport to convey all the assignor’s property, exempt as well as non-exempt. The only authority cited to support the position is Johns v. Bolton, 12 Penn. St., 339. But, in that case, there was property reserved in addition to what was exempt by law. The case, we think, constitutes no authority for the appellants. In our opinion, no valid objection is shown to the assignment, and the judgment below must be
Affirmed.