Baldwin v. Heil

58 N.E. 200, 155 Ind. 682, 1900 Ind. LEXIS 188
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1900
DocketNo. 18,918
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 58 N.E. 200 (Baldwin v. Heil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. Heil, 58 N.E. 200, 155 Ind. 682, 1900 Ind. LEXIS 188 (Ind. 1900).

Opinion

Dowling, J.

— Action by appellant upon two promissory notes executed by appellee Daniel Heil, and to set aside as fraudulent a conveyance of land made to the wife of said appellee. Trial by the court; special finding of facts, with conclusions of law thereon; and, after divers motions by appellant, judgment against Daniel Heil on one of the notes, and in favor of Elizabeth Heil upon .the issue as to the liability of the land to the judgment recovered by the appellant. No question upon the pleadings is presented. The [684]*684object of the various motions of appellant was to increase the amount of his judgment, and to have the land held by Elizabeth Heil, or some part of it, subjected to the payment of appellant’s claim. These motions were overruled. On the return of the special finding, the appellant excepted “to the conclusions of facts and law as rendered by the court.” A motion for a new trial was made by appellant, but the ruling of the court on that motion is not assigned for error.

The first error attempted to be assigned is in these words: “The court below erred in inserting in its first conclusion of fact, the following conclusion of law, viz.: ‘that the amount due Baldwin at that time, with ten per cent, interest and attorney’s fees was $500.’ ” This specification of error, presents no question for review. If a conclusion of law is erroneously included in a special finding of facts, it will be disregarded on appeal. Old Nat. Bank v. Heckman, 148 Ind. 490, 512; Craig v. Bennett, 146 Ind. 574; Stalcup v. Dixon, 136 Ind. 9.

But if the objectionable statement is really a conclusion of fact not warranted by the evidence, the objection thereto should be first presented by a motion for a new trial. Matters which constitute grounds or reasons for a new trial, as a general rule, cannot be independently assigned as error. Tarkington v. Purvis, 128 Ind. 182, 9 L. R. A. 607; Elliott’s App. Proc. §347; Ewbank’s Manual, §134.

The finding complained of must be regarded as a finding of fact, and not a conclusion of law. The' balance due on the notes at a given date was a fact depending upon the original amount of the notes, the rate of interest, and the sum of the payments. Whether the appellee, Daniel Heil, was liable to pay the amount found due was a conclusion of law. Braden, Adm., v. Lemmon, 127 Ind. 9; Biddle v. Pierce, 13 Ind. App. 239.

The second, third, fourth, and fifth errors assigned call in question the correctness of the four conclusions of law upon the special finding of facts. The exception to these [685]*685conclusions was taken in gross, so that the conclusions cannot be assailed in detail. If any one of them is correct, the exception must fail as to all. We are of the opinion, however, that all the conclusions were correct.

The facts found by the court were as follows: August 29, 1876, Daniel TIeil and Henry Bartlett executed to the appellant a note for $73.75, due in sixty days, bearing interest at the rate of ten per cent., and providing for the payment of attorney’s fees; January 30, 1877, the same parties executed to the appellant another note for $200, bearing interest at the rate of ten per cent., and containing an agreement for the payment of attorney’s fees; in February, 1887, Bartlett having before that died insolvent, appellant threatened to sue Heil, and put the two notes in the hands of an attorney for collection; Heil thereupon executed to appellant, in settlement of his claim, three notes, amounting together to $600, payable at one, two, and three years, bearing eight per cent, interest; at the time these three notes for $600 were given to appellant, the true amount due to him on account of the original notes, including interest and attorney’s fees, was $500 only; Heil, thereafter, that is, from February, 1887, paid to the appellant interest at the rate of eight per cent, on $600, the face of said three notes, until February 15, 1896; at the date last named Heil took up the three notes, and executed to the appellant the note for $600 described in the complaint. Heil paid the interest on this note at the rate of eight per cent, up to March 12, 1897. He afterwards executed to appellant the note for $50, set out in the complaint, in consideration of the unpaid interest on the $600 note, and the grant of additional time to pay the same; the two notes have never been paid, excepting $18 per year thereon for the period of eight years; the sum of $65 is a reasonable attorney’s fee for collecting the notes sued on; in October, 1897, the appellee Daniel Heil owned 233 acres of land in Oass county, Indiana, subject to a mortgage for $1,500, [686]*686executed, by him and his wife, and co-appellee, Elizabeth Ileil, to the Aetna Life Insurance Company, bearing date about December 25, 1896; one Charles D. Wilson, being the owner of the two pieces of real estate in Kentland, Indiana, described in the complaint, an exchange of property was agreed upon between him and Daniel Heil; in the exchange, Heil’s land in Cass county was valued by both parties at $44 per acre, but its real value, as shown by the proof, was $40 per acre, or $9,320; the Kentland property was, likewise, valued at $4,750, but its real value was $2,400,.and no more; Wilson agreed to assume the payment of the mortgage debt of $4,500, and the accrued interest, on the Cass county land, and, after deducting the amount thereof from its agreed value of $44 per acre, he was to pay the difference, about $1,000, to Heil in money; at the time of this transaction, the appellee Daniel Heil owed $3,500 in addition to the $4,500 due upon the mortgage debt, and he had not then, nor did he at any time after-wards, have sufficient property, real or personal, to pay his debts; at the time of the commencement of this suit he had no property in his own name subject to execution; when the exchange of property took place, the appellees, Heil and wife, caused the deed of conveyance for the Kentland real estate to be made by Wilson to the appellee Elizabeth Heil, to avoid the payment of a claim of $4 per acre, held by one Winslow for his services in effecting the exchange of said lands, and to protect the appellee Elizabeth Heil in the enjoyment of the Kentland property; the appellee Elizabeth Heil had two children by her co-appellee, Daniel Heil; she received the conveyance of the Kentland real estate for the purpose of defeating the claim of Winslow, to secure her rights as the wife of her co-appellee, and to save it from the creditors of her husband; at the time the appellee Elizabeth Heil received the deed for the Kentland property, she released her inchoate rights as the wife of Daniel Heil in the Cass county land; the value of the Cass county land [687]*687was $40 per acre; the value of the Kentland property was $2,400, one parcel ’thereof, called the dairy, being worth $1,200, and the other, called the store, $1,200; after the exchange of the Cass county lands for the Kentland property the appellee Daniel Heil owned personal property of the value of about $2,000; at the request of her husband, Elizabeth Heil executed a deed for the property in Kent-land, called the store, to one Peter Heil to secure an alléged debt of her husband but the deed was void because Daniel Heil did not join in it; after the exchange of lands with Wilson, Daniel Heil mortgaged all of his personal property to his brother to secure a pretended debt of $1,500, for the purpose of hindering and delaying his, Daniel Heil’s, creditors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 N.E. 200, 155 Ind. 682, 1900 Ind. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-heil-ind-1900.