14 Iowa 8 | Iowa | 1862
: Appellants insist that the following propositions are well established, and exactly applicable to the case at bar:
1. A voluntary conveyance of property by a father to his children, the donor being at the time largely indebted, is prima facie fraudulent, as to existing creditors.
3. When the grantor remains in possession of the whole or any part of the land conveyed, such possession is prima facie evidence of fraud, against creditors, unless the possession is satisfactorily explained.
4. Great inadequacy of price is strong evidence of fraud, when coupled with other circumstances of a suspicious character.
5. A jearty setting up a voluntary conveyance, executed under suspicious circumstances, is bound to show that the transaction was fair and honest.
6. A conveyance, to be valid, must not only be founded on a valuable consideration, but must also be bona fide.
7. Where a vendee claims to have taken land in payment of an antecedent debt of the vendor, he must prove, as against existing creditors of the vendor, the existence of the debt.
8. That if the respondent, in his answer, admits facts which render the transaction legally or constructively fraudulent, a general denial of fraud is unavailing.
Granting that these propositions are well established, the argument would not be advanced unless they are applicable to the facts developed in this case. And it seems to us that appellants commit the cardinal error of assuming as true the very issue made by respondents, and the one essential to the applicability of most of the principles stated, to wit: that the conveyances from Thomas Wheeler to Johns, from Johns to E. E. Wheeler, the mortgage from Johns to Thomas Wheeler, and the assignment by the mortgagee to E. E. Wheeler, were voluntary. The bill charges fraud, and that these conveyances were voluntary. Answers are
It has been held that where a sale by a debtor is attacked by a creditor,.upon the ground that it was made without consideration, and for tbe purpose of defrauding creditors, which allegations are positively denied by tbe answer, and especially that portion of the bill which alleges that the conveyance was voluntary, the burden of proof is on complainant, and unless the answer is overcome by tbe requisite proof, tbe bill should be dismissed. (Johnson v. McGrew et al., 11 Iowa, 151.) And, indeed, it may be remarked that the facts in the case at bar, and that just cited are very similar, and following tbe rules there recognized we have no difficulty in saying that this decree should be affirmed. (And see Fifield v. Gaston, 12 Iowa, 218; Hill on Trustees, 94, et seq.)
Affirmed.