Barrett v. Failing

8 Or. 152
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 8 Or. 152 (Barrett v. Failing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barrett v. Failing, 8 Or. 152 (Or. 1879).

Opinion

By the Court,

Kelly, C. J.:

On the eighteenth day of February, 1871, Mary E. Barrett, the above-named appellant, recovered a judgment against Charles Barrett in the circuit court of the state, for the county of Multnomah, in the sum of five thousand nine hundred and twenty-one dollars and thirty-two cents and forty-six dollars and thirty cents costs. The foundation of the action was a decree for alimony in a divorce case prosecuted in the state of California wherein the said Mary E. obtained a divorce from the said Charles Barrett.

On the first of November, 1873, Charles Barrett died, leaving the judgment entirely unsatisfied, but at the time of his death there was pending against him and Xarifa J. Failing, then Barrett, a suit in equity to set aside as fraudulent a certain conveyance of real property and a sale of personal property—the same that is in question in this proceeding. The result of that suit was the securing of a payment on the judgment of three thousand and sixty-four dollars and forty-seven cents on the first day of May, 1876. On the tenth of August, 1878, the appellant obtained leave to issue an execution on the judgment for seven thousand three hundred and thirty-five dollars and sixty-seven cents, that being the [153]*153amount then due. Execution was issued on the judgment against Charles Barrett, who was then dead; upon which a garnishee process was served on X. J. Failing, the respondent, on the thirteenth of August, 1878, in accordance with the provisions of sections 308 and 309 of the civil code. Written allegations and interrogatories were filed by the plaintiff, which the garnishee was required to answer by an order of the judge of the circuit court. Among these allegations, the principal one charged that on or about the - day of November, 1870, the said Charles Barrett, with the intent to delay, cheat, and defraud his creditors, particularly the plaintiff, and to prevent her from collecting her said judgment, transferred and delivered to the said Xarifa J. Failing, at the city of Portland, all his property, to wit, the said goods and chattels, fixtures, etc., known as the Barrett bookstore, worth fifteen thousand dollars, and that she received the possession thereof with full knowledge of all the facts herein stated.

On the fifth day of December, 1878, the garnishee, X. J. Failing, filed her answer denying all the allegations of fraud, and averring that the property so received by her from Charles Barrett was of no greater value than three thousand dollars, and that she received and paid for the same in good faith. She then, for a further answer, alleged that on the second day of June, 1871, the said plaintiff commenced a suit in the circuit court for Multnomah county against the said Charles Barrett and this garnishee, in which suit the plaintiff sought to set aside the same sale and transfer of personal property which is set forth in the plaintiff’s allegations in these proceedings; that she asked in substance and effect that the sale and transfer of the personal property known as the Barrett bookstore, etc., from the said Charles Barrett to this garnishee, on the fourteenth day of September, 1870 (described herein as of about the - day of November, 1870), might be declared fraudulent and void as against her, and that the garnishee be decreed to account for all the said property; that she, the said garnishee, answered the said complaint, and it was made one of the issues in the said suit in equity, whether or not the said transfer [154]*154of personal property to this garnishee was fraudulent and void, and whether or not the said plaintiff was entitled to have the said property or its proceeds applied to the payment of the said judgment against Charles Barrett.

The .garnishee then alleges that the said suit was referred by the circuit court to E. C. Bronaugh, who was appointed a referee to take testimony; that the referee took the testimony upon all the issues in said suit in relation to the sale and transfer of the said Barrett bookstore, and on the twenty-second of September, 1873, made his report thereon to the effect that the sale and delivery of the said personal property to this garnishee, on the fourteenth of September, 1870, was not fraudulent and void, and that this report, so far as it relates to the personal property, was not excepted to, and on the eighth day of June, 1874, the said circuit court adjudged and decreed that the findings of said referee, in reference to the said personal property, should in all things be confirmed.

The plaintiff (appellant), on December 17, 1878, filed a reply, and on January 25, 1879, an amended reply, in which, among other things, she makes a denial substantially as follows: “And in reply to the further and separate answer of the said Xarifa J. Failing, to wit, the allegations of a former adjudication of the subject-matter of this proceeding, this plaintiff alleges that it is not true that the subject-matter of this proceeding was, in the suit commenced on the second day of June, 1871, or at any other time, adjudicated in any manner, and that there was not, at any time during the pendency of said suit, any evidence offered or taken by said referee, or introduced by either party to said suit, of the subject-matter in this proceeding, to wit, the said bookstore; denies that any evidence was introduced before or received by said referee, at any time, relating to the transfer, sale, or delivery of the subject-matter of this proceeding, to wit, the bookstore in controversy, or the rights of the garnishee; denies that the referee passed on the same, and alleges that, long before the finding of said referee therein, and before any trial thereof, this plaintiff, by her attorney, expressly and without objection [155]*155from either of the defendants therein, and with the consent of said Xarifa J. Bailing and her attorney, abandoned and withdrew from said suit all claim to personal property, which is the subject-matter of,these proceedings, and no objection was made to the withdrawal by said Xarifa J. Bailing (the garnishee herein) or her attorneys; denies that the referee passed upon or found any fact or law upon the matter herein sought to be litigated in said suit, or in any suit; denies that on the twenty-second of September, 1873, or at any time, the said referee made or filed any finding of fact or conclusion of law to the effect that said sale of personal property was not fraudulent and void; and denies that the circuit court at any time rendered any decree that the finding of the referee in reference to the personal property described herein should be or was confirmed, adjudged, or passed upon.”

There are other defenses interposed by the garnishee, but it is unnecessary to present or consider them, as the view we take of the defense of a former adjudication disposes of this proceeding.

Upon filing the reply, the respondent, by her counsel, moved the court for judgment and decree upon the pleadings, and that the proceedings against the garnishee be dismissed; which motion was sustained by the court, and a decree entered accordingly.

From the answer filed in this case, it appears that on the fourteenth day of September, 1870, a suit in equity was commenced by the appellant, Mary B. Barrett, against Charles Barrett, and Xarifa J. Bailing, the respondent herein, to set aside the sale of certain property, including the Barrett bookstore, made by Charles Barrett to the respondent, because the same was made to defraud the creditors of said Charles Barrett. An answer was made in that suit by the respondent, denying the fraudulent sale.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Or. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrett-v-failing-or-1879.