Citizens Bank of Milo v. Frank

235 N.W. 30, 212 Iowa 707
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 17, 1931
DocketNo. 40717.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 235 N.W. 30 (Citizens Bank of Milo v. Frank) 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
Citizens Bank of Milo v. Frank, 235 N.W. 30, 212 Iowa 707 (iowa 1931).

Opinion

Faville, C. J.

The appellant Albert A. Frank had been indebted to the appellee bank for some time, and on November 13, 1928, the claim of said bank against said appellant was reduced to judgment in the sum of $19,559.82. On May 30, 1928, the appellant Albert A. Frank conveyed to his co-appellant Nellie O. Frank the real estate in controversy in this action, and also transferred to her certain personal property. The indebtedness out of which the appellee’s judgment arose was incurred prior to said conveyance. On or about May 25, 1929, an execution issued on said judgment and was_ returned nulla bona. This action was "commenced in June, 1929, to vacate and set aside said transfer, of said premises and to subject the same to the payment- of appellee’s judgment. The lands in question consist of four tracts, a farm of 200 acres, a tract of 80 . acres, a tract of 54 (52).acres, and a.timber lot or tract of 28 acres.

I. We first consider the question of .the claimed indebtedness of the- appellant Albert A. Frank to his wife, which was the consideration in part for the conveyance. These parties were married in 1890. .The evidence tends to show that the wife received $1000 and a cow-from her'father’s estate in 1894, and that at or about said time she loaned this money to her *709 husband. About 1900 she received $1000 from her mother’s estate, which she likewise loaned to her husband. It is the contention of the parties that the husband gave his wife notes representing these loans, bearing 6 per cent, interest, and that these notes Avere renewed approximately every ten years. On the said 30th day of May, 1928, the appellants visited the office of their attorney and at said time the deed in controversy was executed, and the husband at said time transferred to his wife personal property of the value of $4000. We are satisfied- from the evidence that the wife loaned to her husband the money which she received from the estates of her parents. It is the contention of these parties that the wife held the notes of her husband, bearing 6 per cent, interest, and that' same had been renewed from time to time, and that at the time of the transfer of the real estate and personal property from the husband to his wife, the latter surrendered the notes which she held against' her husband and that he cancelled and destroyed the same. The trial court refused to accept the contention of the appellants with regard to the execution of said notes and their subsequent destruction at the time of the transfer in question. About the time of said transfer, and for some time prior thereto, the appellee bank had been pressing the appellant Albert for payment of its claim. Both of the appellants previously knew of this situation, and yet it is their contention that the notes, which would be of incalculable value in establishing the wife’s claim of the husband’s indebtedness to her, were intentionally destroyed.- The court in its decree established the amount of the indebtedness from the husband to the wife on the basis of the original loan of $2000 and computed interest thereon at 6 per cent, simple interest, and fixed and determined the amount owing from Albert to his wife at the date of the transfer of said property at $5900. In this conclusion of the court we are disposed to concur.

II. A large amount of testimony was taken in regard to the value of the real estate in controversy. The trial court fixed the value of the entire real estate at $45800. In doing so, the court fixed the value of the 200-acre farm at $150 an acre, or $30,000;-of the 80 acres at $4000; the 54 (52) acres at $10800; and the 28-acre tract at $1000. There appears tó be no dispute with regard to the value of the personal property that was *710 transferred to the wife at the time of said conveyance being in the amount of $4000. The court fixed the total valuation of the real and personal property therefore at $49800. This valuation is criticized by the appellants. There was a sharp conflict in the testimony between the witnesses for the appellants and those for the appellee. Expert witnesses on values were offered by both parties, and, as is not unusual'in such cases, there is a considerable variation in the testimony of the witnesses. We have examined all of this evidence with care. One witness for the appellee places the value of the 200-acre farm at $200, another at $155, another at $165, and another at $250. A witness for the appellants place's the 200-acre farm at $150, another at $175, another at $160, and another at $145. On the whole we are impressed with the fact that in the main the witnesses for the appellee were in a better position to testify in respect to the land values than were some of the witnesses for the appellants. It is obvious that disinterested parties who have lived for a long time in the vicinity of the real estate and have been familiar with it and with land values in that locality for many years are more competent to testify as to the values of real estate than are witnesses from an adjoining county, who have only seen the tract in question at or about the time of the trial. Taking all the facts and circumstances into consideration, as shown by the record, we are disposed to acquiesce in the value of the several tracts of real estate as fixed by the trial court.

III. The undisputed evidence shows that the value of-the personal property received by the wife from her husband at the time of the transfer in question was $4000, and that approximately one half of said property was exempt to the husband at said time. The court found the amount due from the husband to his wife, and also the amount of certain liabilities which the wife assumed and agreed to pay at the time of the conveyance, and the outstanding mortgages on the real estate, together with a mortgage executed the day of the transfer upon the real estate to counsel for said parties to secure attorney’s fees. The court found that the total amount due to the wife, and the amount she assumed over and above the outstanding mortgages on the real estate, aggregated $12650. The trial court found-that the wife had been paid $4000 of this total amount by reason of the transfer of-the personal property to her, *711 leaving a balance of $8650, and the court held that the transfer of the real estate should be hCd to be a conveyance to the wife to secure said sum and that ppellee’s judgment should be established as a lien against sa ■ Í premises subject to said amount in favor of the wife. Appellants complain of the disposition made of the $4000 in this manner, it being contended that half of the $4000 of personal property was exempt to the husband at the time he transferred it to the wife, and hence should not be included. The question as to whether the personal property that was transferred to the v.'ife was or was not exempt is not important at this point. The appellee is not seeking to set aside the transfer of the personal property, nor to subject any of the personal property in the hands of the wife to the satisfaction of its debt. The undisputed evidence shows that the wife received $4000 in value of the personal property. Whether it was exempt property or not is immaterial to the question at this point. The $4000 was value which she received on the indebtedness of her husband to her and for which she must give credit whether the property was exempt or not. The trial court properly charged her with the receipt of $4000 of property, and this was a proper charge in the accounting. There was no error at this point.

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Bluebook (online)
235 N.W. 30, 212 Iowa 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-bank-of-milo-v-frank-iowa-1931.