Iowa Methodist Hospital v. Long

12 N.W.2d 171, 234 Iowa 843, 150 A.L.R. 440, 1943 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 14, 1943
DocketNo. 46383.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 12 N.W.2d 171 (Iowa Methodist Hospital v. Long) 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
Iowa Methodist Hospital v. Long, 12 N.W.2d 171, 234 Iowa 843, 150 A.L.R. 440, 1943 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 79 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

Mantz, J.

On April 15, 1942, in the municipal court of the city of Des Moines, Iowa, plaintiff obtained a judgment against the defendant Homer R. Adcock for the sum of $228.50 with five per cent interest from date, and costs. On April 15, 1943, an execution was issued on said judgment and on April 24, 1943, pursuant to court order, defendant was examined before a referee concerning his property and particularly with'regard to certain United Státes savings bonds. This hearing was, by agreement of the parties, continued until June 15, 1943, when the defendant was further examined upon said matters. Thereafter, the matter was submitted to the lower court and on July 25, 1943, that court entered an order holding that the defendant was the owner of the bonds involved and that all bonds purchased by him out of his wages ninety days prior to June 15th were exempt to him as the head of a family, and that the balance of the bonds not declared exempt be sold by the defendant and that he pay into the office of the clerk of the municipal court the proceeds thereof on or before noon of the 30th day of July 1943.

Both parties have appealed, the defendant from the action *845 of the court finding- him to be the owner of all of the bonds and ordering him to sell certain of them and turn over to 1he clerk the proceeds of such sale, and the plaintiff from the order of the court finding- that certain bonds were exempt to defendant as the head of a family. The defendant having- first perfected his appeal will be referred to herein as appellant and plaintiff as appellee.

The abstracts do not set forth the entire proceedings had in the municipal court prior to the examination of the appellant before the referee on April 24, 1943. The application to the municipal court asking for examination of the debtor (appellant) and order of the court granting such application are not shown; neither is there shown the execution which had been issued prior to that time. There is some statement in argument that the execution had been issued but that same had been returned “unused.”

Appellant claims that the appellee did not follow the proper statutory method herein in that he proceeded under the terms of section 11805, chapter 502, Code of 1939, instead of section 11648, chapter 498 of such Code, and claims that section 11805 proceeded under cannot be properly used in the case and therefore the court was in error in making the order and judgment. There is no showing in the record that such contention of the appellant was ever called to the attention of the lower court or that he made any objections to the proceedings at any time prior to the appeal. Boiled down, it is the claim of appellant that before appellee could properly proceed under chapter 502 of the Code there must have been a showing that an execution was issued and that the same was returned unsatisfied. According to the arguments of both parties an execution was issued but such instrument is nowhere set out in the record; neither is the return tliereon set out. Appellant has made no showing that an execution was not issued and does not dispute the argument of appellee that one did issue; therefore, we hold that a presumption arises that there was a legal regularity in that respect. However, the record does show that when appellant was being examined by the referee on April 24, 194-3, he stated on cross-examination:

*846 “Q. Do you have.all of these bonds in some place where they are obtainable so we can get them? A. Yes. Q. Are you willing to bring these bonds to the office of the bailiff of this court and turn them over to him to be levied on in this case or to turn them over to the bailiff if he calls at your home ? A. No. ’ ’

He was then asked the following question:

“Are you ready and willing and have you always been ready and willing to hold these bonds to be subject to any proper orders or proper levies or anything else that is proper and legal? A. Yes.”

It is quite evident from these statements of appellant that even had an execution on the judgment been presented to him he would not have turned over to the officer the bonds involved.

This proceeding was brought under chapter 502, Code of 1939, designated as “Proceedings Auxiliary to Execution.” Section 11805 of said chapter is as follows:

“Disposition of property. If any property, rights, or credits subject to execution are thus ascertained, an execution may be issued and the same levied upon. The court or judge may order any property of the judgment debtor not exempt, in the hands of himself or others, or due him, to be delivered up, or in any other mode applied towards the satisfaction of the judgment. ’ ’

It will be noticed that such section is in two parts and it provides two methods for the disposition of property. According to its terms, when property, rights, or credits subject to execution are by examination ascertained, an execution may be issued and the same levied upon. It then provides that the court or judge may- order any property of the debtor, not exempt, in the hands of himself or others, or due him, to be delivered up or in any other'mode applied toward the satisfaction of the judgment. It will be observed that this section contemplates that, following the hearing wherein the debtor is examined and property is revealed, the court, in its discretion, may order such property not exempt from execution to be delivered up or in any other modé applied toward the satis *847 faction of the judgment. Upon the examination of the judgment debtor, if it appeared therefrom that the debtor had property rights or credits subject to execution, the court could then proceed (1) order an execution to issue and a levy made or (2) make an appropriate order dealing with such property, such as ordering it delivered up, if in the hands of the debtor, or in any other mode apply same toward the satisfaction of the j udgment.

The examination revealed that the appellant was the owner of certain bonds, fourteen in number, and thereafter the court made an order under the second alternative as set out above. We think that in so doing the court followed the plain intent of the statute.

II. The principal dispute as set out in argument relates to the ownership of the fourteen defense bonds held by appellant at the time the case was tried in the lower court. That court, in its judgment and decree on the question of the ownership of said bonds, used the following language:

1 ‘ The Court finds that all bonds that were purchased [with wages earned within] ninety days prior to the 15th of June [1948] are exempt to the defendant as head of a family, on the same basis that money in the hank would be exempt, for the reason that these bonds are peculiar in that they are cashable in sixty days after their purchase. This provision in the bonds is new and probably never used in the United States before, therefore being liquid, could be treated as cash earned within the ninety days last past. The balance of the bonds, all of which are payable to the defendant or his wife, the Court finds are .the property of the defendant; that a person must be just before he is generous; that these bonds cannot be cashed except upon the request or signature of the defendant or his wife.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.W.2d 171, 234 Iowa 843, 150 A.L.R. 440, 1943 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-methodist-hospital-v-long-iowa-1943.