16 Neb. 463 | Neb. | 1884
This was an action in the nature of a creditor’s bill, brought in the district court of Thayer county, by F. I. Switz, plaintiff, against G. C. Bruce and Laura Rawson, defendants, for the purpose of setting aside a deed of conveyance of certain real estate in said county, from the said G. C. Bruce to the said Laura Rawson. The plaintiff recovered a judgment in an action at law against the said G. C. Bruce in the district court- of said Thayer county, issued an execution thereon, which was returned unsatisfied for want of goods, chattels, lands, or tenements whereon to
■ It appears from the bill of exceptions that the defendants are brother and sister, and that the female defendant, who is a widow, is the mother-in-law of the plaintiff. The male defendant, who is an unmarried man, has long resided with his sister, and had the general management of her farm together with his own, which was joining hers. It also appears that Bruce became indebted to his sister, Mrs. Rawson, for various sums of money loaned by her to him at sundry times from 1870 to 1874, both inclusive, amounting in the aggregate to five hundred dollars. It appears, also, that Bruce had placed a mortgage on his land to some money lender for five hundred dollars. Bruce conveyed the land to Mrs. Rawson in consideration of this money, which he owed her, and she assuming the above mortgage, which she afterwards paid off. It further appears, that on the same day of the above transaction between the defendants, there was a further one by which Bruce transferred to his sister and co-defendant the whole of his personal property, consisting of live stock, farming implements, etc., of the estimated value of seven or eight hundred dollars. The following is the testimony of the defendant Bruce drawn out on cross-examination as to this part of the transaction, he having been introduced ■ and examined in chief by the plaintiff.
A. In the first place, after this land transaction, she claimed that there should be interest due her, for that money that I had borrowed, and it seemed right, and we called it that, that would give her $250. And some time in the fall or the latter part of the summer of 1880, I got $200 more of her, and she had a draft from an insurance company, and she gave me'that.
Q,. Did you borrow that of her?
A. Yes, sir, I owed a note in Lincoln.
Q. Was that drawn upon this property ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q,. Aud $250 on that before ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. What else did you get for this property ?
A. Three hundred dollars in money.
Q. When.
A. When I left in * * *
Q. What else did she pay ?
A. She paid some old obligations.
Q. State what they were.
A. A machine note.
Q. Was she to pay off these obligations as a part of the purchase price of the property ?
■ A. Yes, sir. One note to Clemmons and McKinney, and one note to Dawson.
Q. State if you can think of any more.
A. There was a young man by the name of John Sis-nor that I owed some $60.
Q,. Who was to pay that?
A. She paid him she said.
Q,. How much in all did she pay you for that personal property ?
A. Somewhere between seven and eight hundred dollars, I should think. We considered it about equivalent
Q,. You say that there was $200 in the fall of 1880, and $300 that you got before you went away, in cash, and $250 in interest; now in addition to that, about how much were these claims that she assumed of yours and paid?
A. These transactions were some time ago, and I never expected it to come up again.
Q. State to the court whether or not the amount received by you from Mrs. Rawson was about what it was reasonably worth.
A. That was what we considered.
It is apparent from the above, that while there was an attempt on the part of the defense to establish two separate and distinct transactions between the defendants, the one relating to the land, and the other relating exclusively to the personal property, that there is a failure to do so, sufficiently to purge any part of the entire transaction from such fraud, technical or otherwise, as may be found to attach to any other part of it. And I think it satisfactorily appears that Mrs. Rawson had sufficient knowledge of the facts upon which the plaintiff had sued her co-defendant, and almost immediately thereafter recovered judgment against him, to make it technically fraudulent on her part, to become the purchaser of all of his personal property, after having taken a conveyance of all his realty, and thereby enable him to leave the state without paying the plaintiff, or leaving any effects behind to respond to his judgment. I do not attach much weight to the evidence of the admission by Mrs. Rawson, that she took the property of her co-defendant “ to beat” the plaintiff She had the lawful right to beat him to the extent of getting her own pay; and had she stopped there, her position would have been unassailable. But unfortunately for her, she did not, but proceeded to assist her co-defendant to con
I fail to find any error in the record, and the judgment of the district court is therefore affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.