Connolly v. Dillrance
This text of 50 Iowa 92 (Connolly v. Dillrance) 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.
Opinion
The first question to be determined is whether there is any evidence that the sale to the garnishee was fraudulent. It is undisputed that the garnishee held an unsecured note against [93]*93Earrar for seventy-two dollars, and that he gave for the horse and wagon the note and twenty-five dollars in cash. It is also undisputed that Earrar was insolvent; that the plaintiff had a claim against him of about one hundred and thirty-five dollars; that the garnishee was informed by plaintiff that he had such claim, and that the garnishee immediately made the purchase in question. It is not shown that the garnishee knew that Earrar was insolvent, or that the plaintiff was about to bring an action to enforce his claim. If there was evidence of fraud, it is to be gathered from the foregoing facts. Eraud may, of course, be inferred from circumstances; but it is not to be inferred from very slight circumstances, which are entirely consistent with honesty. The circumstance relied upon in this case is that the garnishee purchased the property of Earrar, knowing that Earrar owed the plaintiff one hundred and thirty-five dollars. But, certainly, persons who are in debt must be allowed to sell property as well as others. Persons even who are insolvent must be allowed to sell property. It is their duty, by sales, to meet their obligations as far as possible. If they sell for full value for cash, or for cash and a pre-existing indebtedness, there is nothing in such transaction alone to indicate fraud.
The plaintiff’s theory seems to be that the garnishee could [94]*94not make a valid purchase of the horse and wagon, so as to ■cast the entire burden of his mortgage upon the buggy and sleigh, upon which alone the plaintiff’s security rested. But we know of no rule of law which makes such a purchase void. It was Farrar’s right to sell the horse and wagon subject to the mortgage, with the mortgagee’s consent, to any person he pleased. Whether in such case the property after the sale would have been held to bear the burden of the mortgage as the primary fund, or to bear merely a proportionate share according to value, the sale would be valid in either ease. So where, as in this case, the purchaser of the part not covered by the junior lien is the holder of the senior lien, the sale is not invalid. The most that the junior lien holder could claim would be that the mortgage constituting the senior lien should, notwithstanding the sale, be enforced primarily against that property. If a proper proceeding in equity had been commenced, before the sale, by the junior lien holder, to cast the burden of the senior lien primarily upon the property not covered by the junior lien, the proceeding, we think, could not be defeated by a subsequent sale. Whether such proceeding would be effectual if not commenced before the sale, we need not determine. Such relief is not sought. The plaintiff must be regarded as predicating his claim to hold the garnishee for the horse and wagon upon the theory that the title did not pass. We think it did pass.
Reversed.
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50 Iowa 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connolly-v-dillrance-iowa-1878.