138 Iowa 225 | Iowa | 1908
O. L. Wilson made a general assignment for the benefit of his creditors to the plaintiff herein. Thereafter claims were filed with the assignee aggregating a large amount, among which were the claims of the appealing creditors and a claim of the estate of E. H. McCutchen for over $4,000. The appellants and the assignee filed objections to the claim of the McCutchen estate, alleging that the chattel mortgage given to secure the same was fraudulently withheld from record, and was therefore void as to the creditors of said C. L. Wilson. Issue was joined on the objections, and a trial had in equity in which the assignee and the appellants participated. The case was taken under advisement hy the trial court, with the agreement among all parties that a judgment might be rendered in vacation. More than a year after the trial a decree was signed which adjudged the McCutchen mortgage to be invalid as to the appellants, because of its fraudulent character, and which established their claims in preference thereto and ordered them paid. The decree was silent as to the rights of the other general creditors which were represented by the assignee. This decree appears to have been prepared by the attorney for the appellants without consultation with or notice to the assignee or his counsel. Still later, but within a year, the assignee made application for a modification of the decree which would permit all the general creditors of C. L. Wilson to participate: pro rata in the final distribution of the funds in his hands. The application was contested by the appellants, but on final hearing the modification was made.
The judgment must be, and it is, affirmed.