132 Iowa 609 | Iowa | 1906
J. M. Hayes was the owner of one hundred and twenty acres of land. As a condition to signing the contract of sale and deed thereof to a purchaser, his wife, Jane, Hayes, exacted the payment to her of one-third of the price received. • With part of this she purchased the east forty-four feet of lots 11 and 12 in Aurora, used as a livery barn. Though other property is mentioned in the petition no claim thereto is made in argument, and it is not essential to. an understanding of the case that other transactions be recited. The evidence does not bear out the suggestion of appellee that the farm was. occupied as a homestead, and, even though it supported an estoppel, which it does not, this was not pleaded. The evidence though not direct was such as to warrant a finding that Hayes was insolvent at the time of the several transactions referred to. The sole question raised by the record is whether the wife of an insolvent husband may acquire and retain, as against his creditors, a part of his property in consideration of joining him in the conveyance of his real estate. But for such transfer, her interest might be divested by judicial sale. Section 3366, Code. The marital interest of one spouse in the property of the other, however, cannot be the subject of contract between them. While either may own property in his own right section 3154 of the Code expressly provides that, “ when property is owned by the husband or wife, the other has no interest therein which can be the subject of contract between