Carbiener v. Montgomery

66 N.W. 900, 97 Iowa 659
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 11, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 66 N.W. 900 (Carbiener v. Montgomery) 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
Carbiener v. Montgomery, 66 N.W. 900, 97 Iowa 659 (iowa 1896).

Opinion

Deemer, J.

On the twenty:seventh day of February, 1894, the plaintiff recovered a judgment agains't the defendant, Henry Montgomery, in the sum of two thousand and one dollars, for alienating the affections of, and seducing his (plaintiff’s) wife. It is alleged that plaintiff’s cause of action on which the judgment-was rendered, accrued prior to December 28* 1892. On the twenty-ninth day of December, 1892, the defendant, Henry Montgomery, conveyed certain real estate, consisting of about two hundred and sixty acres, to his wife, the defendant, Annie Montgomery. It is alleged that this conveyance was without consideration; that it was made with intent to cheat, hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of Henry Montgomery, [661]*661and particularly the plaintiff herein; that defendant, Henry Montgomery, has no other property in his own name subject to execution, and that he is insolvent. It is further alleged that at the time the conveyance was made, defendant, Henry Montgomery, was under guardianship; that one E. W. Soesbe, was at that time guardian of his property, both real and personal, and that by reason of said guardianship, and of the further fact that he had theretofore been adjudged to be a drunkard and spendthrift, he was incapacitated from making the deed to his wife. The defendants, in answer, admit that plaintiff recovered a judgment against Henry Montgomery as stated; admit that Henry Montgomery conveyed the land referred to in the petition to Annie Montgomery, on December 28, 1892; but deny that plaintiff was a creditor of Henry Montgomery at the time the conveyance was made, and deny that the conveyance was without consideration, or was fraudulent and void, as claimed. They further aver that at the time the conveyance was made, Henry Montgomery was solvent, and possessed of sufficient property other than the real estate in question, to pay all his then-existing debts. They further aver, that the conveyance attacked by plaintiff was made in good faith, and for valuable consideration. They admit that one Soesbe was, on the application of Annie Montgomery, appointed temporary guardian of the property of Henry Montgomery, on the sixteenth day of December, 1892, and that he continued so to act until April 25, 1898, but they allege that he did not take possession of, or assume control of the real estate in controversy. They further allege,- that the application for guardianship was for the protection of Annie Montgomery and her children; that at the time of the conveyance of the real estate the legal title thereto was in Henry Montgomery, but that his wife, Annie [662]*662Montgomery, the defendant, was the equitable owner thereof; that Annie Montgomery had at the time good cause for divorce against her husband, on the ground of adultery and habitual drunkenness, and that the conveyance was made in consideration of an agreement, on the part of Annie Montgomery, not to prosecute her action for divorce and alimony against her husband, and a further agreement on her part to assume and pay the mortgage then existing upon the land, and certain other unsecured debts for materials used in the construction of improvements, and of her agreement to dismiss her action for the appointment of a permanent guardian; that on March 3, 1893, pursuant to said agreement, the action for the appointment of a guardian was dismissed, and the temporary guardian was ordered to file a report, which he did in April of 1893, and said report was approved, and the guardian discharged, and it was adjudged that there was no necessity for the continuance of the guardianship; that by reason of such adjudication plaintiff is estopped from asserting any rights adverse to defendant under the guardianship. Upon the issues thus formed the case was submitted to the court with the result above stated.

1 [663]*6632 [662]*662The first inquiry in the case is, was the plaintiff a creditor of Henry Montgomery at the time of the conveyance to the wife, and, if not, did he occupy such position as that he may attack the conveyance? In his petition which he filed in the case in which he obtained judgment against defendant Henry Montgomery, he stated that about the month of April, 1892, the said defendant began attempting to alienate and destroy the affections of plaintiff’s wife, and by systematic course of wrong conduct from said time until December 27, 1892, he succeeded in wholly alienating and destroying her affections; and that during the time from April, 1892, to June, 1893, defendant [663]*663seduced, debauched, and carnally knew plaintiff’s wife frequently and at divers times during said time. It also appears from the petition that plaintiff claimed damages for an assault made upon him by the defendant on the twenty-seventh day of December, 1892. A special verdict was returned by the jury in this case, however, which shows that the jury allowed plaintiff two thousand dollars for the alienation of his wife’s affections and one dollar for the assault. It also appears that plaintiff herein commenced another action against defendant, Henry Montgomery, based upon the alienation of his wife’s affections, and that notice of this action was served upon said defendant on December 29,1892. This action was settled and compromised by the parties, but it was claimed in the trial of the second action, that this settlement was procured by fraud, and the jury evidently found for the plaintiff on this issue. On trial of this case Annie Montgomery testified: “I did not pay him anything for the land at the time the deed was made. He made the deed because he was going away. He was going away because he' had quarreled with George Carbiener. He said he was going to leave the country, because he had quarreled with George Carbiener, because he thought Carbiener was going to sue him. That is what he told me. I asked him to deed the property, if he was going to, leave the country, because it was more mine than his. He made the deed. I did not give him anything; did not pay him anything; did not give him any notes or mortgages; did not give him any consideration of any kind at that time, and have not given him anything since in consideration for the land. He did not have any other property at the time he made the deed. He conveyed everything to me; all that he had. This land, and the house and lot in town, and the note and the mortgage for one thousand five [664]*664hundred dollars, was all that he had. He had given me the note and mortgage before that.” On cross-examination, she testified: “I was to have support for myself and children. That he would deed me the land. I would raise and support the children, and assume all debts against the property." “I told him, as he was going away, he had a right to deed all the property to me, as more of it was mine than his. He said that he would. That is so. He said he wanted me not to sue for divorce, and he wanted the guardianship to be off him, and if I would assume and pay all debts and mortgages I was to pay, he would do so. I told him I would. He said that as long as he was quarreling with me and fighting with Carbiener, it was better for him to go away awhile, and that I was to live with, him after he came back. I told him that I would live with him after he came back. I wanted him to deed it to me so I could have it, because I wanted it. I wanted it because it belonged to me. When he was not doing what was. right, I wanted my share. I wanted him to deed it to me because the property was more mine than his. I wanted it to raise the children. I wanted my own share.” She further testified as follows: “Question. Then that was, you wanted to raise your children with it? Answer.

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.W. 900, 97 Iowa 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carbiener-v-montgomery-iowa-1896.