Pike v. Coon

252 N.W. 888, 217 Iowa 1068
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 13, 1934
DocketNo. 42312.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 252 N.W. 888 (Pike v. Coon) 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
Pike v. Coon, 252 N.W. 888, 217 Iowa 1068 (iowa 1934).

Opinion

Kintzinger, J.

In April, 1931, the defendant Lillie Coon, for the alleged consideration of $500, conveyed to defendant Gladys Hennings, her daughter, 80 acres of rough, unimproved, uncultivated, unbroken, and partly timber land in Woodbury county, Iowa. At that time defendant Mrs. Lillie Coon and her husband owed the Mapleton Trust & Savings Bank of Mapleton, Iowa, about $650 of which $617 was still due in December, 1931. Mrs. Coon and her husband were, during all that time, working and living on another 80-acre farm. Being unable to pay the note and being pressed by the bank, Mrs. Coon and her husband, in January, 1932, commenced voluntary bankruptcy proceedings. The vice president of the bank was appointed trustee in bankruptcy, and, as such, brought this action to cancel the deed referred to, on the ground of fraud and want of consideration. The deed was executed and duly recorded in April, 1931, and the bankruptcy proceedings were not commenced until January, 1932. The allegations of the petition with reference to the fraud and want of consideration were denied in the answer filed by both defendants.

At the time the deed was executed, the defendant Gladys Hennings and her family lived on another farm about 20 miles away from her parents. Mr. Hennings was getting $60 a month and free rent for running the farm on which they lived, and both Mr. and Mrs. Hennings also earned money in other work; Mrs. Hennings earned some additional money by raising and selling chickens and other small farm products. M|'rs. Hennings had been married several years before she purchased the land from her mother. During that time, through their joint efforts, she claims they saved something over $500, out of which she paid her mother $500 in cash for the real estate in question.

In July, 1930, the defendant Lillie Coon and her husband made an application to the Mapleton Trust & Savings Bank for a loan of *1070 $700. At that time they submitted a credit statement showing a net worth of $10,000 in real and personal property. The real estate in question was then listed at $6,000. In asking a renewal, they filed a second credit statement in July, 1931, showing a net worth of $8,948. The 80-acre tract in question was then listed at $2,400. In December, 1931, on requesting a further renewal, they filed a third credit statement showing a net worth of $7,508. In this statement the value of the real estate in question was again listed at $6,000. In all three statements the only liability listed outside of a real estate mortgage upon an 80 acres not in question was the obligation to the bank upon the note in question. Although the real estate in question was listed in all three statements, it was sold to her daughter and the deed recorded in April, 1931. The valuation of the nonexempt personal property listed in all three statements was more than double the amount of Mrs. Coon’s liability to the bank, and the record shows that the hank, in making the loan, relied mainly upon the personal property listed. The vice president of the bank said: “I didn’t notice the big discrepancy in the value of the land at that time. I was more interested in the personal property at that time.”

In filing their petition in voluntary bankruptcy, Lillie Coon and her husband listed about $1,300 as debts owing creditors which included the note of $617 due the bank, but the bank’s claim was the only one allowed in the bankruptcy proceedings. The purpose of making these credit statements to the bank was to enable Mr. and Mrs. Coon to receive a loan from the hank. If these statements were in fact not true, they might establish fraud in obtaining the loan. The record, however, does not show that the statements, so far as they related to the personal property listed, were not true in January and July, 1931. Neither is there any testimony tending to show that Lillie Coon was insolvent at those times, or that Mrs. Hennings knew anything about her parents’ financial condition at that time. The deed to Gladys Hennings for the land in question was executed and duly recorded in April, 1931. In order to prove the deed invalid, it was necessary for the plaintiff to show that Mrs. Coon was insolvent at that time; that Mrs. Hennings had knowledge thereof; and that the deed was executed in contemplation of insolvency. No such facts have been shown by the evidence.

The rule in transactions of this nature between members of the same family, one of whom is claimed to he insolvent, or in failing *1071 circumstances, will be closely scrutinized, and, if the taint of fraud be found or is fairly to be inferred, they will not be upheld. The grantee under such circumstances is not entitled to be considered a bona fide purchaser. Ransom v. Lochmiller, 207 Iowa 1315, 224 N. W. 469; Lietz v. Grieme, 212 Iowa 1305, 236 N. W. 395; Webber v. King, 205 Iowa 612, 218 N. W. 282; Howell v. Howell, 211 Iowa 70, 232 N. W. 816.

It is also the rule that if, as a matter of fact, the conveyance was a mere voluntary gift and made aU a time when the grantor was insolvent, it should be set aside in a court of equity in an action therefor by creditors. Erusha v. Wisnewski, 207 Iowa 1187, 224 N. W. 517; Lietz v. Grieme, 212 Iowa 1305, 236 N. W. 395.

It is also the rule of law that “to amount to such fraud as would justify the court in setting aside a conveyance on account thereof both the grantor and grantee must either have participated therein or the grantee must have possessed such notice as would have put him upon inquiry as to grantor’s intention.” Ford v. Ott, 182 Iowa 671, 164 N. W. 629; Tenold v. Klimesh, 160 Iowa 410, 141 N. W. 1046; Atkinson v. McNider, 130 Iowa 281, 105 N. W. 504; Witham v. Blood, 124 Iowa 695, 100 N. W. 558; Erusha v. Wisnewski, 207 Iowa 1187, 224 N. W. 517; Thompson v. Zuckmayer, 94 N. W. 476.

Although the family relationship between the grantor and the grantee requires close scrutiny on the evidence of fraud, the relationship does not in itself establish fraud. In the case of Erusha v. Wisnewski, 207 Iowa 1187, loc. cit. 1189, 224 N. W. 517, we said: “In arriving at this conclusion it was not done merely because the parties were related. Consideration, however, must be given to such relationship. * * * The relationship is merely a circumstance to be considered with other facts and instances.” So while the relationship may be closely scrutinized and although it may be considered as a circumstance tending to establish fraud, nevertheless, other evidence of the fraud must be introduced before such relationship in and of itself can be considered as establishing fraud. It is the rule that transactions between relatives made in good faith and without any actual or constructive fraud on the part of the grantee are allowed to stand. Thompson v. Zuckmayer, 94 N. W. 476; Clark v. Clark, 209 Iowa 1179, 229 N. W. 816; Grant v. Cherry, 199 Iowa 164, 201 N. W. 588; Carlisle v. Milliman, 199 Iowa 949, 203 N. W. 268; Cover v. Wyland, 205 Iowa 915, 218 N. W. 915; Aldrich v. Van Hemert, 205 Iowa 460, 218 N. W. 311; Crenshaw v. Halvorson, 183 *1072 Iowa 148, 165 N. W. 360; Keosauqua State Bank v. Hartman, 184 Iowa 961, 169 N. W. 339; State Bank v. Wolford, 178 Iowa 89, 159 N. W. 572. In Thompson v. Zuckmayer, 94 N. W. 476, 477, we said:

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252 N.W. 888, 217 Iowa 1068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pike-v-coon-iowa-1934.