Palo Alto Banking & Investment Co. v. Mahar

21 N.W. 187, 65 Iowa 74
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 24, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 21 N.W. 187 (Palo Alto Banking & Investment Co. v. Mahar) 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
Palo Alto Banking & Investment Co. v. Mahar, 21 N.W. 187, 65 Iowa 74 (iowa 1884).

Opinion

Beck, J.

I. The petition, which is duly verified, alleges that defendant Mahar, who was the owner of the lands in question, conveyed them in 1861 to one Griffin by a valid deed of warranty, acknowledged and recorded as required by law; that Austin Corbin and John Lawler acquired title to the lands under Griffin, and in 1874 caused the lands, or a large portion thereof, to be laid off and platted as village lots, and the whole of the premises was made an addition to and became a part of the town of Emmetsburg; that Corbin and Lawler conveyed the lots to plaintiffs named in the petition, and to others, for whose benefit, the action is prosecuted, who have made thereon permanent improvements of great value; that in the deed executed by Mahar to Griffin certain errors and irregularities appear, which render it technically defective; and that Mahar claims that the deed was not executed by him, and is a forgery. The petitioner further alleges that the deed was executed and delivered by Maljar for a sufficient consideration; that Mahar has all the time been a resident of the county, and has not heretofore made any claim that his deed is invalid, or that he holds any title or interest in the property; that the defendants, conspiring together, are fraudulently attempting to deprive plaintiff of the property by means of a conveyance by Mahar to defendants, Jenswold & Taylor, who discovered the irregularities in the deed to Griffin, and that conveyances of the property are about to be made by defendants to innocent parties. The recorder of deeds [76]*76of the county, Walsh, is made a defendant, but no charge of fraud, or anything illegal or improper, is made against him. The defendants answered the petition, denying its allegations, and thereupon moved, at chambers, to dissolve the injunction. The jilaintiff, at the hearing of the motion, filed affidavits in support of the allegations of its petition. We will proceed to the consideration of the objections urged by defendants to the rulings of the circuit judge upon the motion, as well as his order overruling it.

1. iiíjuncSce?motion to dissolve: affidavits. II. It is first insisted that the circuit judge erroneously permitted plaintiffs to present affidavits in support of its petition, and erroneously considered the proof produced in that manner. The statute provides that ..... where a temporary injunction has been allowed, without an opportunity to defendants to show cause against it, an application may be made, to the judge allowing the injunction, to vacate it. Code, § 3399. “ Such application must be with notice to the plaintiff, and may rest upon the ground that the order was improperly granted, or it may be founded upon the answer of defendants and affidavits. In the latter case, the plaintiff may fortify his application by counter-affidavits, and have reasonable time therefor.” Section 3400. This section provides that the motion may be based upon two grounds: First, the improper granting of the injunction, which would occur if, upon the face of the petition, it shows that the plaintiff is entitled to no relief, or if the writ was issued irregularly, or in proceedings wherein it is not authorized by law; Second, the answer of defendants and affidavits, denying the allegations of the petition, and contradicting the facts therein set out as grounds of relief. When the motion is based upon the grounds last specified, i. <?., the denial of the allegations of the petition by answer and affidavits, the plaintiff may file ccwtóer-affidavits; that is, affidavits which are contrary to or against the matters set up by defendant. This the circuit judge permitted in this case. Counsel for defendants insist that counter-affidavits [77]*77cannot be filed by a plaintiff to support his petition, unless both an answer and affidavits are filed by the defendant. If this be so, then a defendant cannot base a motion to dissolve upon an answer alone, for it is plain that counter-affidavits, in all cases wherein the motion is based upon the denial of the facts alleged by the petition, may be filed. This conclusion, if correct, would defeat defendants’ motion, for they filed no affidavits. But it cannot be doubted that the defendant may base his motion on the answer alone, and in that case the petition may be supported by affidavits.

2. equity: Iraíid andn' conspiracy: injunction. III. It is urged that equity will not interfere to enjoin a party from conveying any interest he may hold in land, and will not permit the writ of injunction to be used as a remedy to settle titles. These principles, •' . .. . * J and others stated m connection with them, may be admitted. But they, leave out of view the doctrine that equity will use all of its powers to circumvent fraud, and will delight to use the writ of injunction to defeat conspiracy. This is not a simple case of conflicting titles and claims to land, as presented by the petition, but is a case of fraudulent conspiracy, wherein a deed is sought to be defeated on the false claim that it was forged, and is therefore void. The defendants, other than the recorder, are charged with a corrupt confederation to make and accept deeds with the intention of transferring their title to innocent purchasers. The prejudice resulting to plaintiff is alleged in the petition, and, indeed, would be presumed, in the absence of allegations thereof. Equity will not, in such cases, be particular to inquire into the precise effect of the fraud, or whether there may not be some other remedy than by injunction which will defeat it. The fraudulent confederation being shown, equity will lay its hand heavily upon the conspirators, and arrest their efforts to wrong their intended victims. The familiar doctrines upon which these conclusions are based need no support by citations from adjudged cases.

[78]*783 parties • terest?su«" benefitofaii: Code, § 2549. IV. Counsfel for defendants contend that plaintiff is not authorized to prosecute this action, for the benefit of other persons for whom they sue, and that these persons and plaintiff cannot be joined in the action. Code, 8 2549, provides that, “ when the question • j? , , , is one oí a common or general interest to many persons, or when the parties are very numerous, and it is impracticable to bring them all before the court, one or more may sue or defend for the whole.” The petition avers the existence of facts which bring the case within this provision. It shows that the parties interested are numerous; that they have a common interest in the subject of the litigation, arising from the fact that they all hold land under the conveyance which defendants seek fraudulently to defeat. Counsel cite Fleming v. Mershon, 36 Iowa, 413, in support of their position, upon the supposition that it decides that several tax-payers cannot unite in the prosecution of an action to enjoin the collection of an illegal tax. The question upon which the case is cited was not decided by a majority of the court, two justices only concurring therein. Another justice dissented, and a fourth withheld his concurrence upon the point, expressing no opinion thereon. The case was decided upon another point. In Brandirff v. Harrison County, 50 Iowa, 164, in an opinion concurred in by-all the justices, this court announced the contrary doctrine, holding that an action to restrain the collection of a tax could be jointly prosecuted by several tax-payers. It cannot be denied that, in a case wherein parties may jointly sue, one may prosecute an action for the benefit of others having a common interest, as contemplated by Code, § 2549.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.W. 187, 65 Iowa 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palo-alto-banking-investment-co-v-mahar-iowa-1884.