54 Neb. 514 | Neb. | 1898
Joseph S. Schott recovered two judgments against Thomas J. Machamer in the county court of Hamilton county. Transcripts of these judgments were filed in the office of the clerk of the district court of said county
The indebtedness evidenced' by the above two judgments was incurred by Thomas J. Machamer purchasing from Joseph S. Schott certain merchandise for the retail trade which Mr. Machamer was carrying on in Aurora. A portion of these goods, and such others as composed his stock in trade, were, by Thomas J. Machamer, exchanged for the forty-acre tract above desciibed. The deed which vested the title to this land in Thomas J. Machamer was dated September 4, 1893. Thomas J. Machamer and his wife, Mary E. Machamer, by deed of date September 21, 1893, conveyed said land to Aaron E. Machamer, brother of Thomas, by whom and his wife there was executed a deed by which the title was vested in the aforesaid Mary E. Machamer, September 28, 1893. On the trial the efforts of Mrs. Machamer 'were directed to endeavoring to prove that the intention of herself and her husband was to have the deed in the first instance made directly to her and that when the failure to do so was realized she and her husband, as they both testified, conveyed to Aaron E. Machamer, for the purpose of having the title afterward vested in Mary E. Machamer. There was evidence of herself and her husband that while the marriage relation existed between them she h(ad conducted a hotel and a restaurant business and so .had acquired considerable means, which were invested in real property in the joint names of Thomas J. and Mary E. Machamer and that, Avlien this Avas sold a part of the proceeds, in the form of cash, was received by Mr.
In this state the question of fraudulent intent is always a question of fact and not of law. (Compiled Statutes, ch. 32, sec. 20; Campbell v. Bank, 49 Neb. 143; Goldsmith v. Erickson, 48 Neb. 48.) A married woman is entitled to receive payment in property, or otherwise, of a debt due her from her husband. While this is true, it is just as true that the burden is on the wife to establish the Iona fides of a transfer of property from her husband to herself, when, in a suit with one of her husband’s creditors, the matter litigated is the respective rights of the litigants with respect to such property. (Melick v. Varney, 41 Neb. 105; Brownell v. Stoddard, 42 Neb. 177.) In Steinkraus v. Korth, 44 Neb. 777, it was'held that where property is conveyed from one relative to another as a payment of a past due indebtedness and thereby creditors of the party making the conveyance are deprived of their just dues and claims the transaction will be scrutinized very closely and its lona fides must be clearly established. This proposition was likewise enforced. in Plummer v. Rummel, 26 Neb. 147. It would subserve no useful purpose to recapitulate the evidence in this case. The circumstances, above recited were such that under the rules stated the burden of the proof was on the wife to establish the Iona fides of the transfers under which she claimed title, and we cannot say that the district court erred in its conclusion that the proofs failed to meet this requirement.
The sale of the property was made by the sheriff! under the decree which was herein entered. In this decree there were general findings in favor of plaintiff and that the deeds whereby the title to the property in controversy was vested in Mary E. Machamer were executed with intent to defraud, hinder, and delay the creditors of Thomas J. Machamer. There was also a finding of how much
Affirmed.