Meyer v. Evans

23 N.W. 386, 66 Iowa 179
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 24, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 23 N.W. 386 (Meyer v. Evans) 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
Meyer v. Evans, 23 N.W. 386, 66 Iowa 179 (iowa 1885).

Opinion

Reed, J.

1. costs :seactiontortest claim against estate oí insolvent. I. At the first term after plaintiff’s petition was filed, defendant appeared and filed a motion for security for costs, which was supported by his own affidavit, stating that he had a good defense to plaintiff’s claim, and that plaintiff was a non-1 resident of this state. This motion was overruled, and the ruling thereon is assigned as error. The petition is in form a petition in equity, and the proceeding seems to have been regarded by the parties and the court as an action in equity. The court made an order that the parties take their evidence by deposition, and the evidence was so taken, and the cause was tried in the manner prescribed by statute for the trial of equitable causes. It was, however, properly the proceeding prescribed by section 2121 of the Code for the trial of exceptions by a party in interest to a claim or demand filed against the estate of an insolvent, and we are of the opinion that the plaintiff, in that character of proceedings, cannot be required to give security for costs. The statute under which a non-resident plaintiff may be required to give security for costs (chapter 15, tit. IT, Code) has relation to the ordinary forms of action, and has no application to a proceeding of this character, which is merely incidental to the main proceeding for the settlement of the estate of the insolvent, and the distribution of its assets.

2. chattel conquieradence. II. The first ground of exception against, said chattel mortgage is that it is without consideration. Plaintiff claims that Jones was not indebted to defendant in any amount whatever, and that the mortgage was given solely for the purpose of covering the prop[182]*182erty from Jones’ creditors. The evidence, we think, does not establish this claim. Jones established himself in business in Marshalltown a few months before the mortgage was given, and defendant was in his employ as a clerk or salesman. They had resided in the same county in Kansas, and were acquaintances, and they went to Marshalltown at about the same time. Jones went there for the purpose of establishing himself in business, and it was understood between him and defendant, before they went there, that the latter would enter Jones’ employment when the business should be opened.

Two of the notes which are secured by the chattel mortgage bear dates within a few days of the time when the store was opened. The aggregate- amount of these notes is $3,210.25, and defendant’s claim is that they were given for money loaned by him to Jones. The third note bears date on the day before the mortgage was given. It is for $275, and was given, as defendant claims, for money due him from Jones for his services in the business. Defendant’s salary was $75 per month, and plaintiff contends that the claim that he loaned to his employer the amount,-evidenced by the first two notes is incredible, and that it is not reasonable to suppose that a mere clerk, working on a salary which was barely sufficient to afford him a support, should have that amount of money to loan. Both Jones and defendant swear, however, that defendant had the amount, and that he loaned it to Jones at the dates when the notes were given, and they are not contradicted by any direct testimony. "Witnesses who were acquainted with defendant while he lived in Kansas swear, it is true, that he was not understood to be a man of means, and that he did not, to their knowledge, have any such amount of money. But defendant swears that he drew more than $2,100 from two banks in Kansas a short time before he went to Marshalltown. Also that he received $2,000 from a party at St. Paul, Minnesota, within less than two months before the loans to Jones are alleged to have been [183]*183made. He gave the names and locations of the Kansas banks; also the name of the St. Paul party from whom he claims ' to have received the money; and if his statements in this respect are not true, it would have been an easy matter to show that fact. But no attempt was made to contradict his statements, and we are not at liberty to disregard them. "We think, therefore, that the allegation that Jones was not indebted to defendant in the sum which the mortgage purports to secure, is not established by the evidence.

3.. — :——: ants after insolvency of mortgagor. III. The debt secured by the mortgage was contracted before the giving of the security. There was no agreement or understanding, when the debt was contracted, that it should be secured by mortgage. Nor was- , ,. ° 0 there an3r agreement at the time the mortgage was given for an extension of the time of payment. Plaintiff contends, therefore, that, as defendant parted with nothing of value in the transaction, the mortgage is without consideration. If the mortgage was given in good faith, neither the assignee nor the creditors can assert any matter in defense against it which Jones could not have asserted if the assignment had not been made. They had no rights or equities in the property anterior to the assignment, and whatever rights or interests they now have in it are conferred by the deed of assignment. That instrument operated to vest in the assignee only such interest in the property as Jones had in it when it was executed, and the creditors, for whose benefit the assignment was made, can have no higher interest than that. Story, Eq. Jur., § 1228. If, therefore, the mortgage is valid as against Jones, it is valid also as against the assignee and the creditors. It was held by this court, in Flannigan v. Althouse, 56 Iowa, 513, that a mortgage given to secure an antecedent debt did not give the mortgagee an equity in the property superior to that of a creditor of a party who had made a fraudulent conveyance of the property to the mortgagor, the creditor having seized the property on [184]*184execution against the fraudulent grantors; and there are many cases holding that the mortgagee in such cases is not to be regarded as a purchaser for value as against one who has an equitable interest or right in the property anterior to the mortgage. See Cary v. White, 52 N. Y., 142; Metropolitan Bank v. Godfrey, 23 Ill., 579; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur., § 746, and authorities cited in the note.

But, conceding that the rule is as held by these authorities, that the mortgagee in such case does not acquire an equity in the property which he can assert as against one who had an equitable interest or right thei’eiu when the mortgage was given, or as against a subsequent purchaser for value without notice, it does not follow, that the mortgage is invalid as between the parties to it, or as between the mortgagee and one who after its execution acquired from the mortgagor the interest in the property which then remained in him. As between the parties to the mortgage, the existence of the debt is sufficient consideration for the contract. If defendant and Jones had agreed upon a sale of the goods by the latter to the former in payment of the debt, it would hardly be contended that such agreement was not valid as between the parties. It would be supported, however, by no, other consideration than that upon which the mortgage rests. It would be an agreement for the appropriation of the goods to the payment of an antecedent debt, while the mortgage is an agreement for their appropriation as security for the same debt. We think, therefore, that the mortgage is not invalid on this ground, and our conclusion is supported by the following cases, heretofore decided by this court: Cooley v. Hobart, 8 Iowa, 358; Duncan v. Miller, 64 Id., 223. See, also,

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23 N.W. 386, 66 Iowa 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyer-v-evans-iowa-1885.