97 Iowa 637 | Iowa | 1896
III. The controlling question in the case is, was the conveyance to Arent fraudulent, as to the plaintiff? The evidence on this question, as is usual in such cases, is quite voluminous. The defendant, K. 0. Bjelland, the principal party to the alleged fraud, was examined as a witness in plaintiff’s behalf at great length, and much of his testimony is set out in the abstract by question and answer. This appears to have been done to show that he was an untruthful witness. And in the argument of counsel for appellant, both this witness and Arent are denounced as untruthful, and the claim is made that their testimony discloses unmistakable badges of fraud. We will not review the evidence. It is sufficient to say that there is no question in our minds that Arent paid full consideration for the land, and that, after deducting the value of the homestead, every dollar of the purchase money was honestly applied in the payment of Bj elland’s debts and other disbursements, which were perfectly legal and proper. The negotiations leading up to the sale were conducted openly, and in the usual manner, without haste or secrecy, and for a full consideration, and the evidence does not show that Arent had any reason to believe that there was any fraudulent purpose on the part of Bjelland in selling his land; and there is no question that Danielson purchased