22 Iowa 171 | Iowa | 1867
There was some attempt to show that the six hundred dollars even, belonged to the son in such a sense as that the creditor could not reach any part of the land. The testimony, we may concede, tends to establish that he did let the father have about this amount, sometime before the purchase, and that there was an indefinite understanding that the father was, with this and other funds, to procure a home for the mother. The weight of the testimony, however, is that the father obtained this money (the son being then a minor) for his own purposes, to use in his own business; that he used it, lost it, and actually invested his own means, to this amount, in the property. There was no investment of a trust fund. The father did not hold any such fund. The balance of the purchase-money, however, was furnished by the son, and invested by him directly in this land.
It is, however, claimed that $éOO more were furnished by the son while a minor; that the father was entitled to his services, and, hence, to this money, and that the
The decree below will be reversed so far as to allow the plaintiff to subject the property to the payment of six hundred dollars, with interest from the date of the final decree. In default of the payment of this sum lie will be entitled to execution against the property. The decree will be so framed as to protect the twenty acres, upon which the dwelling-house is situated, from sale until the other is exhausted. Reversed, and remanded with instructions to enter a decree in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed.