72 Ind. 78 | Ind. | 1880
— This was a suit by the appellee against the appellants, to have a certain deed and mortgage, described in the complaint, declared null and void, and that the land therein mentioned might be subjected to the payment of a ■certain judgment in appellee’s favor. The joint demurrer -of all the appellants, and the separate demurrer of the appellant Joseph Hotap, to appellee?s complaint, for the alleged insufficiency of the facts theiein to constitute a cause of action, were severally overruled by the court, and their exceptions were duly saved to these decisions. The cause, having been put at issue, was tried by a jury, and a verdict was returned for the appellee; and the appellants’ motion for a new trial having been overruled, and their exceptions saved to this ruling, the court rendered judgment for the appellee, as prayed for in his complaint.
In this court the appellants have assigned, as errors, the following decisions of the circuit court:
1. In overruling their demurrer to appellee’s complaint;
2. In overruling the separate demurrer of appellant Hotap to the complaint;
4. In overruling their motion for a new trial.
1. The appellee’s complaint in this case appears to have been filed in the circuit court, on the 9th day of March, 1877. The object of the action was to procure a judgment of the court, declaring that a certain deed executed by one Adam Snyder, Sr., on the 10th day of March, 1877, and conveying to the appellant Theodore Pfeifer certain real estate in Jennings county, and a certain mortgage given by said Pfeifer and his wife to Joseph Hotap on the same land, on the 13th day of March, 1871, were fraudulent and void as against the appellee, as a creditor, and as against the other creditors of said Adam Snyder, Sr. It was alleged in appellee’s complaint, that, before and at the time of the execution of said deed, the said Adam Snyder, Sr., as the surety of his son, Adam Snyder, Jr., was indebted to the appellee in the amount due on a certain promissory note, dated January 1st, 1864 ; that on the 7th day of April, 1871, after the execution of said deed and mortgage, the appellee had recovered a judgment on said note, in the Jennings Circuit Court, against said Adam Snyder, Jr., as principal, and the said Adam Snyder, Sr., as surety, for the sum of $988.13; and that the said judgment was due and wholly unpaid. '
The appellee’s counsel has not favored this court with any brief of this cause, or any argument in support of any ■of the decisions of the trial court complained of as erroneous by the appellants. In his brief of this cause the appellants’ counsel insists that “the complaint is fatally defective in not alleging that at the time of the conveyance, and at the time of the bringing of this suit, the grantor had no other property subject to execution, out of which the appellee could have made his judgment.” It maybe regarded
On the point under consideration, the only allegation in the appellee’s complaint in this case is the following: “That, at the date of the execution of said note, and thereafter until his death, the said Adam Snyder, Sr., owned no property of any consequence, except the following real estate in Jennings county, Indiana, to wit,” and here follows a description of the real estate which he conveyed to the appellant Theodore Pfeifer, by the deed alleged to be fraudulent. So far as time is concerned, the allegation above quoted1 covers the time when the deed in question was executed, and might be deemed to be sufficient. But it can not be said, we think, with any degree of legal accuracy, that the allegation, that “the said Adam Snyder, Sr., owned no property of any consequence,” is fairly the equivalent of an allegation that he owned no other property subject to execution, sufficient for the payment of all his debts. The expression “of any consequence,” as qualifying property, has a relative, and of course an indefinite and uncertain, meaning. Property much more than sufficient to pay all the debts of Adam Snyder, Sr., would probably be regarded by the millionaire as “no property of any consequence,” while the same property might be regarded by persons of more limited means as constituting a fortune. The allegation above quoted, it seems to us, is entirely too vague and uncertain in its meaning to comply with the rules of good pleading or
This conclusion in regard to the insufficiency of the appellee’s complaint renders it unnecessary for us now to consider or decide any of the questions arising under the other errors assigned by the appellants. These other errors, conceding them to be errors, may not occur again in the progress of this cause.
The judgment is reversed, at the appellee’s costs, and the cause is remanded, with instructions to sustain the demurrer to the complaint, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.