Redden v. Potter

16 Ill. App. 265, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 6
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 6, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 16 Ill. App. 265 (Redden v. Potter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redden v. Potter, 16 Ill. App. 265, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 6 (Ill. Ct. App. 1885).

Opinion

Wall, J.

This was a bill in equity filed by appellees against appellants and other defendants in the Circuit Court of Gallatin county.

The bill charged that appellees were judgment creditors of Fannie J. Biblett; that for the fraudulent purpose of hindering and delaying the collection of the debts due to appellees, and before the rendition of their judgments, the said Fannie J. Biblett conveyed all her interest in the real estate of her deceased father to her sisters, Emma L. Bedden and Hattie S. Bo wan, who, with their respective husbands, were made, parties defendant; that there was no consideration for said conveyance and that the sole object of it was to defraud the appellees and delay them in the collection of their said debts. The bill further alleged that said Fannie J. Biblett purchased from defendants, Emma L. Bedden and Joseph W. Bedden, lots 1161 and 1162 in the city of Shawneetown, but for the purpose of defrauding the appellees, the deed was made to Frank Biblett, the minor child of said Fannie J. Biblett. The hill prayed that these lots and the lands first mentioned should be declared subject to the payment of the judgments aforesaid and that the conveyances referred to should be held null and void as against the appellees.

Answers were filed denying the allegations of fraud; averring that the conveyance from Mrs. Riblett was upon a valuable consideration and in good faith; that as to the city lots in Shawneetown, the purchase was made by Mrs. Riblett at the price of 84,000, of which sum there was a cash payment of $3,000, and that the balance remains unpaid; that the cash payment was made with the money of Mrs. Riblett, and that the deed was given to the minor son at the instance of the husband of Mrs. Riblett. The defendant EmmaL. Redden, alleged that there was no fraudulent intent upon her partin the transaction with reference to these city lots, and asked that her lien for the balance of purchase money be preserved in the decree, and filed her cross-bill asking for affirm-' ative relief in this respect.

Mrs. Riblett also interposed a claim of homestead, as to these lots, and asked that the same should be preserved, subject only to the rights of Mrs. Redden.

The cause was heard by the court, and a final decree was entered according to the prayer of the bill, annulling the conveyance of the interest of Mrs. Riblett in her father’s estate, and directing that the lands which are situate in the counties of Gallatin, White and Hamilton, be sold, upon executions to be issued to the respective sheriffs of these counties, and that the proceeds should be applied to the payment of the said judgments; that the city lots in Shawneetown should be solds and out of the proceeds should be paid first, to Mrs. Redden, $1,745.77, the amount due on her note for purchase money and for taxes paid by her upon the property; secondly, to Mrs. Riblett, $1,000 for her homestead exemption estate in said property, and that the residue should be applied on the said judgments, and that the costs, should be paid by Emma L. Redden and Hattie S. Rowan. From this decree an appeal has been prosecuted by J. W. and E. L. Redden and by L„ and H. S. Rowan. Errors and cross-errors have been assigned, and although elaborate arguments have been presented upon various points, we will confine our attention to such only as seem necessary to be considered at this time.

It is urged by appellants that the evidence fails to sustain the allegations of fraud and that for this reason the decree should be reversed. We have examined the record with care and we are not prepared to say that the finding of the circuit court was erroneous in this respect.

Conceding all that is to be said in favor of the appellants, and applying the rules of presumption and construction, as they are stated by counsel, we are inclined to believe that the transaction, with reference to the interest of Mrs. Biblett in her father’s estate, was contrived for the purpose of hindering and delaying the collection of the debts in question, and that while the title to the pro] erty was transferred from her, it was understood that she retained a secret interest in the property and its proceeds; that this was understood by all concerned, and that, as against the complainant in the bill, the whole transaction was null and void. Moore v. Wood, 100 Ill. 454; Bump on Fraudulent Conveyances, 470, 471.

Appellants also object that the judgments in question, having been rendered in Gallatin county, were not liens upon the lands in White and Hamilton, until the levy of executions in those counties; that, as shown by the record, levies were made in the counties in the order named, and that it was,erroneous to provide in the decree that executions might issue to all the counties simultaneously, and that it would result that sales might be made in all the counties at once, thus producing much confusion and injustice to the rights of the parties. We do not understand the decree to be subject to the objection urged. The effect of the decree is simply to remove the incumbrance out of the way of the executions, and to authorize such proceedings under the executions as would have been justified by law had the incumbrance never existed.

It appears from the record that the executions of Hamilton county were issued by the sheriff before the filing of the bill but were not levied until one day after the bill was filed. It is therefore insisted that the judgments were not liens upon the lands in Hamilton county when the bill was filed, and that it was error to subject those lands to the operation of the judgments under this decree» In support of this view we are referred by counsel to Newman v. Willitts, 52 Ill. 98, and Weis v. Tiernan, 91 Ill. 27.

It is true that in these cases the Supreme Court say, that the complainant must have a lien upon the land, otherwise the fraudulent conveyance has done him no harm, and there is nothing of which he can reasonably complain; but this expression must be considered with reference to the peculiar state of facts then before the court. In each of those cases the judgment was inoperative because no execution had been issued within a year from its date, and, as was said in the case of Hewman v. Willetts, supra, the presumption of law was that the judgment was paid, and that to enable the complainant to issue an execution the judgment would necessarily have to be revived by scire facias. In the same opinion the court refers approvingly to Weightman v. Hatch, 17 Ill. 281, and quote somewhat at length the doctrine as there laid down. In the latter case the court say, that where a creditor seeks to satisfy his debt out of some equitable estate of the defendant which is not liable to levy and sale under execution at law, he must exhaust his legal remedy bjr judgment and execution returned nulla bona before he can ask the aid of chancery to reach the equitable estate of the defendant; that such a proceeding may be strictly termed a creditor’s bill, but that there is another sort of creditor’s bill very nearly allied to it where the complainant need not go so far before coming into chancery, and that is where he seeks to remove a fraudulent incumbrance out of the way of his execution. There he may file his bill as soon as he obtains judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ill. App. 265, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redden-v-potter-illappct-1885.