Ferrell v. Elling

276 P. 432, 84 Mont. 384, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 141
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1929
DocketNo. 6,405.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 276 P. 432 (Ferrell v. Elling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferrell v. Elling, 276 P. 432, 84 Mont. 384, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 141 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

*386 MR. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

Joseph Ferrell and Alice Ferrell are husband and wife, and plaintiff, Lewis J. Ferrell, is their son. G. W. Ferrell is a brother of Joseph Ferrell.

In 1917 Joseph Ferrell bought a house and lot in Bozeman. On February 5, 1921, he transferred the property without consideration to his wife, Alice Ferrell. On January 19, 1924, Joseph Ferrell and Alice Ferrell transferred it to plaintiff without consideration, the deed being placed of record, on January 22, 1925. The property was used ever since its purchase in 1917 as the family home, until in April, 1924, when it was leased to W. J. Duncan. On April 2, 1926, a'writ of attachment, issued in an action wherein Harrison 0. Elling was plaintiff and Joseph Ferrell and 0. W. Ferrell, copartners, were defendants, was levied on said property. Another attachment was levied on the same property in October, 1926, in an action brought by Harrison C. Elling against Joseph Ferrell, Alice Ferrell, and 0. W. Ferrell. These attachments furnish the cause for this action, which was commenced by plaintiff to quiet title to the property.

The complaint alleges that plaintiff is the owner and in possession of the property and that defendant Harrison C. Elling claims and asserts some interest therein by virtue of a certain levy of attachment issued in an action brought by him in Madison county against Joseph Ferrell and 0. W. Ferrell, copartners. It is alleged that at the time of the levy of the attachment, Joseph Ferrell had no right, title, or interest in the property in question and that the purported levy was and is void.

The defendant Harrison C. Elling filed an amended answer and cross-complaint against Joseph Ferrell, Alice Ferrell, and G. W. Ferrell, in which he denied plaintiff’s ownership and possession of the property involved, and alleged that Joseph Ferrell was the legal and equitable owner thereof, and that *387 his attempted conveyances were voluntary and without consideration and in fraud of the rights of defendant Elling. By way of cross-complaint the answer alleged that on May 28, 1920, Joseph and C. W. Ferrell executed and delivered to the Morris State Bank of Pony a note in the sum of $2,000, bearing eight per cent interest, and on December 23', 1920, another note for $2,000; that on the date of execution of the notes, respectively, one was sold to the defendant Harrison C. E'lling and the other to Mrs. M. M. Duncan. Later Mrs. Duncan sold hers to the defendant Harrison C. Elling. These notes were merged in judgment in the district court of Madison county in the action out of which one of the writs of attachment in question issued. It is further alleged: That on April 1, 1922, Joseph Ferrell, Alice Ferrell, and C. W. Ferrell made and delivered to the Morris State Bank of Pony their promissory notes, one for $10,000 and the other for $5,000, both bearing eight per cent interest. The $10,000 note was sold to defendant Elling, and the $5,000 note to Mrs. M. M. Duncan. That later Mrs. Duncan sold the $5,000 note to the defendant Elling. That the notes were subsequently and on November 17, 1926, merged in judgment in the district court of Madison county. Attachment was issued in that action and levied upon the Bozeman property here involved on October 23, 1926. Certified transcripts of the docket of the judgments were filed with the clerk of the district court in Gallatin county. ' It is alleged that the attempted transfers of the property in question by Joseph Ferrell to his wife, Alice Ferrell, and by Joseph and Alice Ferrell to plaintiff, were fraudulent and made for the purpose of hindering, delaying, and defrauding the defendant Elling and the other creditors of Joseph Ferrell and Alice Ferrell. The cross-complaint alleges also that after the judgments were filed and docketed in Gallatin county, executions thereon were issued and returned wholly unsatisfied, and that Joseph Ferrell and Alice Ferrell at all times since the making of the deeds in question, and prior thereto, were insolvent and without money or property suffi *388 cient to pay their debts without the property fraudulently attempted to be conveyed by them.

The reply of Lewis J. Ferrell and his' answer to the cross-complaint admit the making of the.notes referred to in the answer and cross-complaint, the issuance and levy of the attachments in question, the entry of judgments in the actions in Madison county, the filing of the certified transcripts thereof in Gallatin county, the making of the deed by Joseph Ferrell to Alice Ferrell and by Joseph and Alice Ferrell to plaintiff, that plaintiff asserts title to the property by virtue of the latter deed, that the cross-defendants are without sufficient money or property to pay their debts, and deny the remaining allegations of the answer and cross-complaint.

Alice Ferrell filed separate answer, and Joseph and G. W. Ferrell joined in a separate answer, containing substantially the same admissions and denials as that of Lewis J. Ferrell.

The cause was tried to the court sitting without a jury. Findings and judgment went in favor of plaintiff, and this appeal'was taken by the defendant Elling.

A number of the assignments of error raise the question of the correctness of the court’s findings that the deed of February 5, 1921, from husband to wife, and the deed of January 19, 1924, from the father and mother to the son, were not void as in fraud of creditors.

The evidence shows, and the court found, that the deeds were without any money consideration, but “were made for good consideration of love and affection.” A conveyance in consideration of love and affection only is to be treated merely as voluntary. (Hale v. Belgrade Co., 75 Mont. 99, 242 Pac. 425.) A transfer, however, may not be adjudged fraudulent “solely on the ground that it was not made for a valuable consideration.” (Sec. 8606, Rev. Codes 1921.) Transfers between near relatives are to be rigidly scrutinized (Eden field v. C. V. Seal Co., 83 Mont. 49, 270 Pac. 642), but in addition to a lack of consideration, before they may be adjudged in fraud of creditors, there must be a showing that *389 the indebtedness to the complaining creditor was in existence at the time of the transfer complained of, and that the grantor was insolvent at the time of the transfer or did not reserve sufficient property subject to immediate seizure to satisfy his then existing debts (Dick v. King, 80 Mont. 40, 257 Pac. 1022; Security State Bank v. McIntyre, 71 Mont. 186, 228 Pac. 618; National Bank of Anaconda v. Yegen, 83 Mont. 265, 271 Pac. 612).

The court found that on February 5, 1921, when the deed from -husband to wife was made, the husband was the owner and holder of property of a value in excess of any indebtedness owing by him at that time. Accepting this as true, the property passed to Alice Ferrell at that time by virtue of that deed, and this was the view entertained by the lower court. No finding was made by the court as to whether Joseph Ferrell retained sufficient property at the time of mailing the transfer on January 19, 1924, to satisfy his existing debts.

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Bluebook (online)
276 P. 432, 84 Mont. 384, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferrell-v-elling-mont-1929.