19 Iowa 114 | Iowa | 1865
Upon these facts the court held, and so instructed the jury, that if plaintiff received the piano as a present from her father before the debt was contracted, to satisfy which it was levied upon by the sheriff, the father had a right to make such a gift, and it would not be liable.
Defendant asked several instructions upon the subject of the effect of possession by the father, and the necessity of executing and having filed for record some evidence of ownership before subsequent creditors would be barred by an attempted gift by the father to the child, all of which were refused.
Under the circumstances, we think the instructions were properly refused. There is no suggestion that the gift was made in contemplation of insolvency. It is not pretended
In this casé there is no evidence that the father ever had any possession of this instrument to- deliver to the child. She took it from the shop. It is not as though it had been at his house, or under his control, and afterwards presented to her. True it was in his house, but it was under her control, if the testimony is to be believed, and of this the jury were the proper judges. The possession of the daughter would not be that of the father, and hence the case of Odell and Updegraff v. Lee and Kinnard, 14 Iowa, 411, is not applicable. There the property was claimed by the wife, and the case turned upon the failure to ñle for record notice of the ownership as prescribed by § 2502 of the Revision. The questions made in that case and the facts are entirely different from those made in this, and the same is true of Smith v. Hewett, 13 Id., 94.
Affirmed.