Bank of Dallas v. Peterson

260 N.W. 240, 218 Wis. 41, 1935 Wisc. LEXIS 144
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1935
StatusPublished

This text of 260 N.W. 240 (Bank of Dallas v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Dallas v. Peterson, 260 N.W. 240, 218 Wis. 41, 1935 Wisc. LEXIS 144 (Wis. 1935).

Opinion

Martin, J.

On and for some years prior to May 8, 1920, Henry Peterson, husband of the defendant Ethel C. Peterson, was the cashier of the Almena State Bank and was in[43]*43debted to said bank on his note for $3,000. Some objection was made by the then commissioner of banking to said loan. On May 8, 1920, Mr. Peterson arranged to have his wife execute a note to said bank for the sum of $3,000, which he indorsed and put in the bank, replacing his former individual note for a like amount. This note of May 8, 1920, was renewed from time to time. On different occasions additional amounts were added until on or about December 29, 1927, the total amount due was $3,650. During all of this time the executive officers of the bank regarded the indebtedness evidenced by said notes as the indebtedness of Mr. Peterson to said bank; that the defendant, Ethel C. Peterson, received no consideration in connection with the notes which she signed. On December 29, 1927, Henry Peterson borrowed from the plaintiff bank $3,500. This loan was evidenced by the note of defendant, Ethel C. Peterson, indorsed by Mr. Peterson. The proceeds of the loan from plaintiff bank were used to pay the $3,650 note held by the Almena State Bank.

The defendant, Ethel C. Peterson, in 1901 inherited from her mother the west one-half of the northeast quarter and the east one-half of the northwest quarter of section 21, township 34, range 11, in Barron county, Wisconsin, subject to use by her father, Gunder G. Wold, until she should marry and become of age. On May 6, 1902, she conveyed to her father the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter and the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of said section. On February 1, 1924, her father executed and delivered to her a lease and contract leasing to said defendant for a term ending January 1, 1934, the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter and the south half of the northwest quarter, excepting a railroad right of way, and that part of the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter lying west of said right of way, all in said section 21, and providing that as rent said defendant pay the taxes for the year 1924 and subsequent years, and pay to her father the sum of $150 in cash each year, also that the father have his home and [44]*44board with said defendant. The lease and contract further provided that upon the father’s death Mrs. Peterson became the sole owner of said premises without further payment.

It appears that on and prior to April 2, 1927, the defendant, Ethel C. Peterson, was afflicted with cancer of the stomach, had been advised to and was contemplating going to the Mayo Clinic for treatment. Within a couple of days thereafter she went to the Mayo Clinic and was there operated upon. On April 2, 1927, said defendant conveyed to her daughter, the defendant, Gladys H. Peterson, the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter and the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of said section 21, and assigned to her said daughter the lease and contract conveying all of her right, title, and interest in and to the land described in said lease and contract, being the lease and contract of February 1, 1924. This deed and assignment of the lease and contract were prepared by the assistant cashier of the Almena State Bank, who also acted as the notary public. The deed and assignment were thereafter delivered to the daughter, Gladys H. Peterson. She retained them in her possession without recording them in the office of the register of deeds until June 14, 1928.

On June 13, 1928, Ethel C. Peterson and Gladys H. Peterson executed and delivered to Gunder G. Wold a quitclaim deed of all of the lands described in the.lease and contract hereinbefore mentioned, bearing date February 1, 1924, and on the same date it appears that Mr. Wold executed his last will and testament devising all of said lands in equal shares to his grandchildren, the defendants Gladys H. Peterson, Ralph E. Peterson, and Charles E. Peterson. Mr. Wold died in December of 1928. His will was admitted to probate and said lands were thereunder assigned to the defendants Gladys H. Peterson, Ralph E. Peterson, and Charles E. Peterson, and said defendants are still the owners of said land.

[45]*45After the death of her husband, the defendant, Ethel C. Peterson, paid the plaintiff $2,000 from the proceeds of her husband’s life insurance. Other small payments were made by her to said bank from what she received as a widow’s allowance during the administration of her husband’s estate. The plaintiff bank filed its claim on the note in question against the husband’s estate, and received some small amount from that source. The evidence shows that on April 2, 1927, the date on which the defendant, Ethel C. Peterson, made the conveyance to her daughter and codefendant, Gladys H. Peterson, the mother had approximately $400 on deposit in the bank, and that at said time she owned a home consisting of about twenty acres in the village of Almena and approximately one hundred and sixty acres of land in section 21, township 34, range 11, in Barron county. The village of Almena is not an incorporated village. The president of the bank testified that in making the loan in question .for the bank he relied upon Ethel C. Peterson owning the land in section 21 and in part upon the indorsement of said note by Henry Peterson.

The trial court has found that the deed and assignment of lease and contract made and executed by the defendant, Ethel C. Peterson, to her daughter Gladys H. Peterson on April 2, 1927, were not made, executed, or delivered with any intention on the part of either of the parties thereto to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor of the defendant Ethel C. Peterson; also that the failure to have said instruments recorded in the office of the register of deeds, of Barron county until June 14, 1928, was due to no intention on the part of any of the defendants to conceal the fact of such conveyance and assignment or to keep the same or either of them secret. The trial court made the further finding: “That none of said conveyances or said assignment was fraudulent or void as to the plaintiff or any creditor of any of the defendants or made with any intent, fraudulent or otherwise, to hinder, delay or [46]*46defraud the plaintiff or any creditor of any of said defendants.”

At the conclusion of the trial, in announcing its decision, the trial court said :

“Well it seems very clear to me that there was no intent on the part of either Mrs. Peterson or her daughter to defraud anybody. The conveyance was made before the debt here was incurred and this plaintiff is a subsequent creditor. Without going any further I think that is sufficient to' determine the case in favor of the defendant. There were many things done that completely negative the idea that Mrs. Ethel Peterson was thinking of defrauding anybody. If we were to consider what was probably the mental attitude she probably thought that she didn’t in reality owe this note to the Almena State Bank and the Bank I think thought the same thing. They had a note signed by her because they couldn’t have one signed by Henry but it was Henry’s debt just the same but there isn’t the slightest evidence that her daughter Gladys knew what her mother’s obligations were or that she had any idea that the creditors of her mother were going to be hampered in any way by this transaction.”

The conveyance referred to in sec. 242.04, which thereby renders the person making such conveyance insolvent, is deemed fraudulent as to the then existing creditors of such person.

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Related

Kinnie v. Kinnie
199 N.W. 145 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
260 N.W. 240, 218 Wis. 41, 1935 Wisc. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-dallas-v-peterson-wis-1935.