136 Minn. 374 | Minn. | 1917
Plaintiff was formerly the wife of defendant Louis E. Malz; she is the sister of defendant Augusta Petersdorf, and defendant Henry Malz is the father of defendant Louis. In the statement of the ease defendant Louis will be referred to as defendant, and defendant Augusta Petersdorf, as Augusta. This will avoid repetition of their names in full, and leave the facts and the case just as clear. Prom the time of their marriage and until the commencement of the action for divorce, presently to be mentioned, plaintiff resided with her husband, defendant Louis, on a farm either owned or leased by him, and for some years and up to about the time of the divorce action Augusta resided with them. Her presence caused trouble between plaintiff and her husband, brought about by a belief on plaintiff’s part that the greater share of the husband’s affections were bestowed upon Augusta, to the neglect of plaintiff, the wife. It culminated in an action by plaintiff for divorce, which was commenced in October, 1913, and wherein claim was made for alimony and suit money and for the recovery of an amount of money contributed to the family affairs by plaintiff after the marriage. Prior to the action plaintiff
Soon after the commencement of that action, and on October 23, 1913, defendant Henry Malz brought suit against defendant Louis, his son, to recover upon two promissory notes, of the aggregate amount of $1,-300, alleged to have theretofore, for a valuable consideration, been made and delivered by defendant to plaintiff therein. No defense was interposed and default judgment was duly rendered on November 18, 1913, the docketing of which constituted a lien upon the land described in the complaint in this action, which was then and still is owned by defendant.
In March, 1914, Augusta commenced an action against defendant to recover for services alleged to have been performed by her while a member of defendant’s household, as heretofore stated, claiming in her complaint the sum of $3,577.87. No defense was interposed, and she too was awarded a judgment against defendant for the full amount of her claim, of date April 9, 1914, the docketing of which also constituted a lien upon the land described in the complaint in this action.
Neither judgment has ever been paid, and each now stands of record a lien against said land.
Thereafter the divorce action proceeded to trial, as the result of which plaintiff was awarded a divorce, and the sum of $3,048.35, alimony and suit money, including therein the sum of $970, theretofore loaned or advanced to defendant during the marriage relation. The judgment was declared a specific lien upon the land described in the complaint, against which by operation of law the other two judgments were on the face of the record paramount liens.
The land is a tract of about 37 acres and insufficient in value to satisfy all these judgments, and probably insufficient to satisfy the first two thereof. Defendant has no other property out of which plaintiff’s judgment may be satisfied, and she brought this action for a decree of the court declaring her judgment prior and paramount to those mentioned, on the ground, as alleged and charged in the complaint, that such judgments were obtained by the fraud and collusion of the parties; that neither represented or was founded upon any actual or Iona fide indebtedness, and were procured by plaintiffs therein and consented to by defendant for the sole purpose of defeating the collection of any judg
The action was tried by the court without a jury, and judgment was ordered for plaintiff substantially as demanded in the complaint, and to the effect that her judgment should take priority over those obtained by defendants Henry Malz and Augusta Petersdorf. Defendants joined in an appeal from an order denying a new trial.
The trial court found: (1) That the judgment recovered by defendant Henry Malz was not based upon a valid or Iona fide indebtedness, and was procured by collusion between the parties thereto,’ for the sole purpose of acquiring an apparent lien upon the land in question which would take priority over any judgment this plaintiff might recover in her divorce action, and to thereby defraud plaintiff, and prevent the enforcement of such judgment, should she recover one, against this land; (2) that the claim upon which the judgment in favor of Augusta was founded constituted a valid indebtedness and obligation on the part of defendant, but that the judgment was procured by collusion between the parties and for the purpose of defrauding plaintiff and obstructing the enforcement of any judgment she might obtain in her divorce action. As conclusions of law the court found and held that both judgments were fraudulent in law and should be declared siibordinalo to that of plaintiff, which was declared a paramount lien upon the land.
The assignments of error challenge the findings of fact as well as the conclusions of law, and therein are presented the principal questions in the case. Though the question of fraud and collusion is common to both judgments, there is a substantial difference in respect to the conclusion of law to be drawn from the findings that the judgment in favor of Augusta was founded upon a valid existing indebtedness. We shall therefore consider the judgments separately.
We are unable to concur in that conclusion. The most we can spell out of the evidence, as to the object and purpose of the parties, viewed in the light of the fact that the claim was a valid one and justly due to plaintiff in that action, is that the parties intended to secure a judgment that would be superior and paramount to any that plaintiff herein might subsequently recover in her divorce action. In other words, it is a case where a debtor gives a preference to a particular creditor, by facilitating the recovery of a judgment against him, which will, when docketed, constitute a lien upon land, which but for the judgment other creditors might cause to be taken in payment of their claims. The case is the same as though defendant had confessed judgment, or had given
It follows, since the trial court found the claim to be an actual in
We affirm the order appealed from as to defendant Henry Malz, but reverse and direct a new trial as to defendant Augusta.
It is so ordered.
Reported in 162 N. W. 474.