Neubauer v. Cloutier

122 N.W.2d 623, 265 Minn. 539, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 697
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 14, 1963
Docket38,926
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 122 N.W.2d 623 (Neubauer v. Cloutier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neubauer v. Cloutier, 122 N.W.2d 623, 265 Minn. 539, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 697 (Mich. 1963).

Opinion

Sheran, Justice.

The appeal is by Lucile Neubauer, hereinafter called the creditor, from a judgment dismissing her cause of action against defendants Mildred R. Stasik and Emma Cloutier, hereinafter called the grantees, to have a deed by which certain real estate was conveyed to them declared fraudulent and void and the realty made subject to a lien for the enforcement of a judgment against defendant Conrad Cloutier, hereinafter called grantor.

The question for determination is whether the trial court correctly decided that the evidence introduced by the creditor was, as a matter of law, inadequate to establish fraud in a conveyance by a deed dated December 26, 1961, and recorded on the following day whereby grantor conveyed to his mother and' his sister his interest in a building located in Grand Rapids, Minnesota.

The complaint served on or about January 19, 1962, is based on a promissory note executed by the grantor and delivered to the creditor on January 2, 1958. The facts of the above-mentioned conveyance are alleged. Judgment is prayed against the grantor for the amount due by the terms of the note and against the grantees that the conveyance be declared void and subject to a lien to enforce payment. By joint answer interposed on behalf of all of the defendants, the conveyance was admitted; all other allegations of the complaint were denied. When the case was called for trial on April 24, 1962, and after a jury had been selected, the paragraphs of the complaint with respect to the grantor’s indebtedness to the creditor were admitted. After presentation of plaintiff’s case, an agreement was reached which resulted in the entry of judgment in the creditor’s favor against the grantor for $4,817.82, representing the unpaid principal of the note and interest thereon, together with an attorney’s fee for its collection.

*541 Liability on the note having been admitted, the issue remaining was whether the deed dated December 26, 1961, was fraudulent as to creditors. The only testimony introduced at trial was that presented by plaintiff 1 who, upon resting, was met with a motion made on behalf of the grantees that the jury be directed to return a verdict in their favor. The motion was granted. Plaintiff’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or a new trial was thereafter denied and the judgment from which this appeal is taken was entered.

The evidence by which the decision of the trial court must be judged, construed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, discloses the following essential facts:

(a) On December 8, 1961, a divorce decree in an action between the grantor and his former wife, entered May 19, 1960, was affirmed by this court. Cloutier v. Cloutier, 261 Minn. 324, 112 N. W. (2d) 347. By its terms, grantor was obligated to pay to his former wife alimony and attorneys’ fees, and the interest of the parties in the realty involved was divided between them in equal shares.

(b) Eighteen days later the grantor quitclaimed his interest in this realty to his mother, Emma Cloutier, and his sister, Mildred R. Stasik.

(c) The deed in question was prepared at Grand Rapids, Minnesota, in the office of the attorneys who represented the defendants jointly in the present action. When it was filed and recorded on the following day, all three of the defendants went to the office of the county treasurer, where state revenue stamps were obtained, and to the office of the register of deeds, where the instrument was filed. There one was heard to say in the presence of the others, “Now let them file their liens.”

(d) The quitclaim deed was filed without Federal revenue stamps but did carry state revenue stamps in the amount of $1.10. It was mailed by the register of deeds to Superior, Wisconsin, where the moth *542 er and sister then lived and where the grantor, a resident of Phoenix, Arizona, was temporarily visiting. Although there is some confusion on this point, it appears that the deed was in the possession of the grantor’s sister at the time of the trial.

(e) Following the inception of the divorce proceedings between the grantor and his wife, which came up for trial in February 1960, the grantor’s mother had taken care of his child. Both the mother and the sister had advanced money in an unspecified amount to the grantor over a period of years prior to' December 26, 1961, and he was then indebted to them. The amount of the indebtedness at the time of trial was not explained although the testimony indicated that it was at least $1,700. There was no written evidence to support the existence of this claimed obligation. There is no testimony as to whether interest on the obligation had ever been requested or paid.

(f) The parties to the conveyance testified that the consideration for the transfer was the preexisting indebtedness, the amount of which, except as stated, was never specified.

(g) The grantor was indebted to the plaintiff at the time of the conveyance on account of the promissory note of January 2, 1958, no payment on it having been made subsequent to December 24, 1959. The note was secured by a second mortgage on fixtures and equipment used in a restaurant business, the purchase of which gave rise to the debt. 2 The amount of the first mortgage does not appear in the record. The value, if any, of the security afforded by the second mortgage is unknown.

(h) Although the note involved was not offered or received in evidence, admissions made by the attorneys for the grantor at the inception of the trial (April 24, 1962) constituted an acknowledgment that it *543 was delinquent as of that date. Whether it was delinquent on December 26, 1961, when the conveyance involved was made, cannot be determined either from the record or from an examination of the chattel mortgage attached to the complaint. 3

(i) As of December 26, 1961, the grantor’s interest in the realty involved was subject to a lien to secure payment of fees he owed the attorney who had represented him in the divorce proceedings. By the terms of the divorce decree his wife had been granted a lien to secure a debt grantor owed her also, although the record does not establish whether that debt was still a lien at the time of the conveyance. He had additional debts, the amount and character of which does not appear in the evidence.

(j) There was no evidence as to the value of the grantor’s interest in the realty involved as of December 26, 1961. In the course of the divorce proceedings in February 1960 the grantor expressed the opinion that the realty was worth $75,000. Under cross-examination in this action he stated that it had been appraised at $50,000. However, the record is barren of evidence as to whether at the time the opinion was expressed the realty so valued was encumbered or subject to liens and there is nothing in the record showing the relationship, if any, between the opinion expressed as to the value of the realty in February 1960 and the value of the grantor’s interest therein on December 26, 1961.

Minn. St. 513.23 provides:

*544

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Bluebook (online)
122 N.W.2d 623, 265 Minn. 539, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neubauer-v-cloutier-minn-1963.