Quealy Land & Live Stock Co. v. George

254 P. 130, 36 Wyo. 268, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 30
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1927
Docket1294, 1298
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 254 P. 130 (Quealy Land & Live Stock Co. v. George) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quealy Land & Live Stock Co. v. George, 254 P. 130, 36 Wyo. 268, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 30 (Wyo. 1927).

Opinion

*272 BROWN, District Judge.

The defendant below, Herman George, is the son of Henrietta George. Amy C. George is his wife. As early as 1914, Herman George made arrangements with his mother to finance him in the taking and developing of a tract of government land. Under this arrangement she furnished him with the necessary money for buildings, fencing, ditching, plowing, and doing everything necessary to develop raw government land into a farm. In all she furnished $11,000. that went into improving the land. Then she furnished money to buy horses, harness and farm machinery, and to stock the place with cattle and sheep.

Henrietta George for a number of years owned and operated a dairy near Laramie, and was in the habit of keeping large sums of money concealed about her house. In making these loans to Herman George, she usually1 gave him the money in cash. November 23, 1917, he gave his mother a note and mortgage on the land for $11,000. During the years of 1920, and 1921, he had borrowed an additional $7,000 from his mother, which money was used in buying sheep and for running expenses. This sum was evidenced by a note secured by a mortgage on his sheep. On April 10, 1922, he gave his mother a new mortgage for $11,000 on his land and a note and mortgage on his sheep and wool for $7,000. On April 12, 1922, he borrowed an additional $3,000 from his mother. This money, after paying an $800 debt at the First State Bank of Laramie, was used largely in defraying the expenses connected with the defense of a criminal charge against him. On August 8th of the same year, he borrowed $3873.57, which was used in paying his ordinary running expenses in connection with the sheep and farm. In November of *273 the same year he sold his lamb and wool crop for the sum of $10,411.49, and deposited this money to his mother’s credit. At this time he made arrangements with his mother to use some of this money for running expenses, and later he checked out all but $3350 of it.

To secure the payment of the last two loans, on September 25, 1923, he gave his note and a second mortgage on his sheep and wool for the sum of $6873.57.

Plaintiff obtained a judgment against defendants Herman George and Amy C. George on October 5, 1923, for the sum of $3100.34, and costs-.--’ On November 5, 1923, execution was issued on said judgment. Some hay belonging to defendant Herman George was levied upon, together with some hay belonging to third parties, but none of this property seems to have been sold under the execution, and the execution was finally returned unsatisfied.

On December 12, 1925, defendants Herman George and Amy C. George gave a deed to the land in question here and a bill of sale of the sheep and wool, being all or practically all of the property owned by them subject to execution. This deed and bill of sale were filed for record in the office of the County Clerk and ex-officio Register of Deeds of Albany County, on the 26th day of December, 1923. The defendant Henrietta George took possession of the property covered by the above deed and bill of sale at the time of, or just before the execution of these doeu-iments.

The deed recited a consideration of $12,103.66, the amount due on the $11,000 promissory note of April 10, 1922. The bill of sale recited a consideration of $6961.78, being the amount due on the note and mortgage of September 25, 1923; and also recited as consideration the chattel mortgage of April 10, 1922, originally for $7,000, but without giving the amount then claimed to be due. It also recited the inability of the maker to pay the principal and interest on these mortgages, and that the bill of sale was given to save the expense of foreclosure.

*274 This action was brought December 29,1923, for the purpose of haying the above mentioned deed, mortgages and bill of sale set aside and declared fraudulent and void because given with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the plaintiff herein and other creditors. The defendants severally answered, admitting the execution .and delivery of the several instruments, but denied that they were given for the purpose of hindering, delaying or defrauding plaintiff and other creditors, but alleged that each was given in good faith and for a bona fide debt from defendant Herman George to his mother Henrietta George, larger than the value of the property conveyed in the several instruments.

At the conclusion of the ease, the trial court found that the real estate mortgage for $11,000, dated April 10, 1922, was valid; also that the deed given in consideration of this mortgage was valid; that the chattel mortgage of April 10, for $7,000, had been paid by the deposit of the $10,411.49 to the credit of Henrietta George in the fall of 1922 — being the proceeds from the sale of the wool and lambs covered by this mortgage; that the mortgage of September 25, 1923, for $6,873.57, and the hill of sale of December 12, 1923, covering the sheep and wool, were given with the intent to hinder, delay and defraud, and that such intent was participated in by defendant Henrietta George. Each party appealed from that portion of the judgment of the court adverse to it. One opinion will dispose of both appeals.

The defendants contend that there is no evidence whatever in the record to support the judgment of the trial court finding that the chattel mortgage of September 25, 1923, and the bill of sale of December 12, 1923, were given for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding the plaintiff. It is well established in this jurisdiction that this court will not disturb the findings and judgment of the trial court, when the evidence is conflicting, or, *275 when tbe record contains substantial evidence to support the findings and judgment.

We have been unable to find any evidence that Henrietta George participated in an intent to hinder, delay and defraud plaintiff and other creditors. She seems to us to be an indulgent mother, ready to continue loaning money to the son after the other members of the family were refusing. The total debt to the mother when the last mortgage was given amounted to $24,873.57. No interest had been paid from 1914, except in 1917 and 1918, when two payments were made of $440 each. There remained from the proceeds of the wool and lamb crop in 1922, a balance of $3350 to apply on the principal debt. At this time she asked that $5,000 be applied on the debt, and consented to his using the balance for current expenses. He cheeked out all but $3350.

It is contended by plaintiff that the sum claimed to have been used for current expenses during the year 1922, is so large as to brand the testimony as unreliable. We are not concerned so much with the question of what was done with the money as we are with the question of whether or not the money was actually obtained from the mother. The fact that the money was actually borrowed is amply corroborated. It, the money claimed to have been used for expenses in 1922, came from two sources, (a) $3873.57 from the sale of some city property by a sister, (b) from the money deposited to the mother’s credit in the First State Bank of Laramie. If the money was not so obtained, this fact should be easily ascertainable from the bank records and other.sources.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Matter of Estate of Reed
566 P.2d 587 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1977)
Consolidated Placers, Inc. v. Grant
151 P.2d 48 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1944)
Dinkelspeel v. Lewis
62 P.2d 294 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1936)
Smith v. Jackson State Bank
63 F.2d 934 (Tenth Circuit, 1933)
Quealy Land & Livestock Co. v. George
18 P.2d 253 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1933)
State Bank of Wheatland v. Bagley Bros.
11 P.2d 592 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
254 P. 130, 36 Wyo. 268, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quealy-land-live-stock-co-v-george-wyo-1927.