Bates v. Kleve

280 N.W. 501, 225 Iowa 255
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 21, 1938
DocketNo. 44223.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 280 N.W. 501 (Bates v. Kleve) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bates v. Kleve, 280 N.W. 501, 225 Iowa 255 (iowa 1938).

Opinion

Hamilton, J.

— The defendants, B. J. Eleve and Thresia A. Eleve, were married about the year 1896. At about the same time, B. J. Eleve purchased of his mother a certain 240-acre farm which these parties occupied as their home and upon which they reared their nine children. In 1908 the deed in controversy was executed by the husband to the wife for the consideration of $1.00, love and affection; the $1.00 was paid and the deed was actually delivered and remained in the wife’s possession but was never placed of record until shortly after the bank was placed in the hands of a receiver in 1934. No reason or motive for the conveyance to the wife by the husband nor for withholding it from record is suggested by the testimony. These matters are left open to surmise and conjecture only. Of course, the motive *257 is immaterial, unless fraud be shown. The Eleves were of German descent and spoke Low German in the home. The wife testified that she attended Catholic school until she was thirteen where but little English was taught or spoken and she could not read or write English. For the greater part of the time, she managed the farm with the assistance of her boys and hired help, working in the fields and doing other farm labor. The husband worked away from home running a threshing machine, shredding fodder, filling silos, and doing carpenter work. From 1922 to 1935, he worked continuously for a produce company at Ossian. At the time they were married they owed on the farm about $11,000. The proceeds from the husband’s labor and the farm and about $500, which the wife received from her people, all went for the common purpose of the family expenses and paying off this debt. Accounts at -the bank were all carried in the name of the husband and father, B. J. Eleye. Apparently, although the record is not very clear -as to this, the banking business was mostly done, especially in recent years, by the son, Roy, who, for the past several years, has run the farm on a 50-50' basis. The plaintiff bank was not organized until 1918, ten years-after the deed in question was executed. B. J. Eleve became a. stockholder from the inception of its organization and from time to time added to his stock, the last purchase ,of stock being July 26, 1929, and at the time the bank closed owned' thirty-one shares. A portion of the time, he was a director. He, also-, signed as surety on two of the depository bonds given to the treasurer of the county; on one he qualified by '¡stating that he was worth $60,000 and on the other, $50,000; these bonds bear date of 1920 and 1922, respectively. The property was given.in to the assessor in the name of B. J. Eleve as owner. Much of this evidence went in over the objection that it was incompetent and not binding on the wife. She testified that she knew nothing concerning' her husband’s connection with the bank or of ,the banking transactions or the way and manner the property was listed with the assessor. The trial court made the following finding of facts:
‘ ‘ That the evidence does not show that at the time of execution and delivery of said deed that the defendant, B. J. Eleve, was insolvent or was being pressed by any creditors nor that aiiv then existing creditor was prejudiced by such transfer.
“That the Festina Savings Bank of which .the plaintiff is *258 receiver was not chartered until April 28, 1918, nearly ten years after the execution and delivery of the deed, and that B. J. Kleve first became a stockholder in said bank in December 1918.
“That said bank closed and went into receivership about June 22, 1934, and that on and prior to said date the defendant, B. J. Kleve, was a stockholder and director of said bank.
" That .on or about October 2, 1934, judgment was rendered against the said B. J. Kleve in favor of plaintiff in the amount of $3,100.00 on a stock assessment against him and the execution issued thereon and was returned unsatisfied.
“That there is no evidence which shows that either of the defendants ever affirmatively' did any act or said anything to any depositor of said bank regarding the ownership of the real estate in question and that the transactions of the depositors who testified in this cause were with the Festina Savings Bank as a corporation and not .with either of the defendants.
“That the evidence shows that none of the depositors who testified and who now claim they were injured by the transfer ever examined the records 'to ascertain in whose name the real estate in question appeared nor interviewed either of the defendants with the view of ascertaining who was the owner of the property.
“That on cross examination the three depositors who testified as witnesses stated, that the reason they transacted business with the bank was because they thought it was safe and that it was convenient and that they knew they were dealing with a corporation.
“That the evidence does not show that there was any conspiracy or collusion between the two defendants to withhold the deed from record and that there was no active conduct on the part of .either of them showing or indicating fraud.
“That the evidence shows that the defendant, Thresia A. Kleve, knew nothing about the business transactions of her husband, B. J. Kleve, and was not aware of who were depositors in said bank.
“That after the transfer of said real estate the farming operations were carried on for the greater part by the grantee and her children.
“That the charge of plaintiff that said transfer was made and the deed withheld from record for the purpose of defrauding the plaintiff or the depositors of said bank and the allega *259 tions of conspiracy, collusion and fraud charged against the defendants are not sustained by the evidence and the plaintiff has failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence the ’allegations of his petition and that the equities are with the defendants and that judgment and decree should render in their favor.”

We have carefully gone over the record in the light of the legal authorities cited and relied on by the opposing parties and are abidingly satisfied that the trial -court’s findings are supported by the evidence and his decision is well founded.

The appellant’s chief contentions are that the execution of the deed constituted a fraud against existing creditors and, under the rule of law announced in the case of Brundage v. Cheneworth, 101 Iowa 256, 70 N. W. 211, 63 Am. St. Rep. 382, was subject to attack by subsequent creditors, and on tbe theory that depositors in the bank, made ten years and more after the deed was executed, should he classified as creditors of B. J. Nieve, the stockholder, and as such subsequent creditors were entitled to have this deed set aside and that the wife is estopped by her conduct in withholding said deed from record.. In the Cheneworth case, supra, after reviewing all of the authorities up to that date, the following rule is announced as the correct rule (page 263):

” (1) A conveyance which is merely voluntary, and when the grantor had no fraudulent view or intent, cannot be impeached by a subsequent creditor.

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133 N.W.2d 124 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1965)
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Bluebook (online)
280 N.W. 501, 225 Iowa 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-kleve-iowa-1938.