Hoskins v. Johnston

219 N.W. 541, 205 Iowa 1333
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 15, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 219 N.W. 541 (Hoskins v. Johnston) 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
Hoskins v. Johnston, 219 N.W. 541, 205 Iowa 1333 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

De Graff, J.

— This action was commenced by the duly appointed and qualified trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of Joseph Elmer Johnston, bankrupt. The prayer of the petition is that the title to the real estate in question be transferred to said plaintiff-trustee for the benefit of the creditors of Joseph Elmer Johnston, husband of the grantee I. M. Johnston. The trial court granted the relief prayed by plaintiff, and vested the absolute fee-simple title to the real estate in the trustee. In passing, it may be said that the lights and claims of the inter-veners, 0. Holmes and Chester J. Eller, were determined adversely to the plaintiff-trustee, and, although an appeal was taken by the plaintiff, it has not been prosecuted in this court. The rights asserted by the interveners stand adjudicated.

Two questions are presented for decision on this appeal. *1335 Tbe primary question is whether, as between the bankrupt’s creditors and the bankrupt’s wife, the bankrupt should be held, upon the evidence adduced, to have been the owner of the property. In other words, does the evidence sustain the finding that the conveyance from a third person to the wife of the bankrupt was fraudulent? This is a question of fact. The secondary question is: Was the trial court justified, as a matter of law, in vesting the absolute title in the trustee? Should the trial court simply have established the lien of the plaintiff against the real estate as prior and superior to the claimed rights of the grantee? This presents a question of law.

I. The real estate in controversy was owned by the Liberty Investment Company, and conveyed by it directly to the defendant I. M. Johnston, the bankrupt’s wife, by deed dated March 12, 1925, and filed for record March 26, 1925. The consideration recited is one dollar and other valuable consideration. On the face of this deed, the defendant-wife is the owner of the legal and equitable estate. At that time, the bankrupt, Joseph Elmer Johnston, was indebted on a promissory note to the Citizens State Bank of Earlham for $6,300, dated May 21, 1924. Voluntary petition -in bankruptcy was filed October 20, 1925, which scheduled, in addition to the debt owed to the bank, nine other claims, amounting to some six or seven hundred dollars, the dates of contracting of which do not appear. The record shows the existence of the indebtedness to the bank, as represented by the note.

It appears that the Primghar property (the real estate involved) was paid for by means of a conveyance of 240 acres of Cerro Gordo County land by the bankrupt to the Liberty Investment Company, in which conveyance the wife joined.' This deed is dated and acknowledged on the same day as the deed by the Liberty Investment Company to I. M. Johnston, wife of the bankrupt. The title to the Cerro Gordo County land was in the name of the bankrupt, under deed dated and acknowledged January 27, 1924, and was paid for by a deed dated and acknowledged February 3, 1924, whereby the bankrupt and his vafe, I. M. Johnston, conveyed a garage property in Stuart, Iowa, to the grantors of the Cerro Gordo County land. To this point, the evidence shows that the bankrupt paid for the property in controversy with property of which the bankrupt was the *1336 owner and legal title holder. It is the elaim, however, of the defendant-wife- that the Stuart garage property was, in fact, her property, by virtue of a deed from the bankrupt to her of date August 18, 1920. This deed was never recorded, and the legal title stood, at all times, on the public records in the name of the bankrupt, Joseph Elmer Johnston.

The trial court entertained the view that, although a deed to the Stuart garage property was duly executed and acknowledged by the husband (bankrupt) to his wife, the deed was, in fact, never delivered. This is a pertinent question. Although the evidence gives rise to conflicting inferences and implications, we discover no sufficient reason for disturbing the finding of the court on the factual side.

It is the claim of the defendant-wife that the failure to record the deed was due to oversight. The bankrupt was not a witness upon this trial. He was examined before the referee in bankruptcy, and the clerk in the bankruptcy court was called as a witness on behalf of plaintiff. On cross-examination, he testified as to examination of the bankrupt, and identified the transcript thereof, from which the defendant-wife read certain matters into the record on this trial, including the following:

“The consideration that passed from my wife to me for the conveyance of the Stuart property was that we had always worked hard together, and I had quite a little at that time that was clear, and I just thought I would give her that to keep and enjoy the rents from. Mrs. Johnston had helped work in the field with me and milk cows the entire nine years we were on the farm. At the time the deed was executed, she furnished me with some money, and before that. She rented the property, and has possession of it, and received the rent. She has been the owner of that property ever since, — supposed to be, — she always called it hers.”

Further quotation from the transcript is as follows:

“When I gave the $6,300 note to the bank, in 1924,1 did not inform the bank that I had given all my property to my wife. There was nothing said about it at all. In 1920, we traded the Stuart garage for another farm, located south of Mason City. There was $5,000 against the garage at that time. There was $20,000 against the Cerro Gordo County farm. We traded the Cerro Gordo County farm to the Liberty Investment Company *1337 of Des Moines for the property in Primghar, last March. Title to the garage in Stuart was taken in my name. The title to the Cerro Gordo County farm was taken in my name. The title to the Primghar property was taken in my wife’s name. The contract for the trade for the Primghar property was made in my nhme.”

The testimony of the defendant-wife upon this trial is to the effect that she and the bankrupt had been married for 31 years, and that they started working together, “to acquire what property we later acquired. I picked corn, and helped in the hay-fields. Then ire moved into Earlham. I continued to help him there. I helped in the field until we left the farm and moved to Earlham, in 1914. About 1920, Mr. Johnston and I had an arrangement whereby we divided up our property. A good many years ago, it wras understood that I was to have something, because I turned back all the money I didn’t use to Mr. Johnston; and I also received money from home, and I turned that over to him. All of that was prior to 1920. At the time we left the farm, we had that kind of talk: that he was to turn over some pi'operty to me, in payment of the money he had gotten from my folks. In 1920, he turned over the Stuart garage to me. I asked Mr. Johnston to have it put on record, and he put it with his papers, and neglected having it done. I supposed it was made of record. I didn’t find out it was not of record until we traded the garage off. Mr. Johnston acted as my agent in trading the garage. I took possession of the garage, after the deed was executed. I collected the rents under the lease. ’ ’

Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
219 N.W. 541, 205 Iowa 1333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoskins-v-johnston-iowa-1928.