Stangler v. Kanan

220 N.W. 443, 57 N.D. 29, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 92
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 220 N.W. 443 (Stangler v. Kanan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stangler v. Kanan, 220 N.W. 443, 57 N.D. 29, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 92 (N.D. 1928).

Opinion

Bukke, J.

This is an appeal from two judgments in actions brought by the trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of Mary Kanan, to set aside *32 certain, transfers of real estate made by Mary Kanan to her two daughters, Margaret F. Nichols and Elizabeth E. Eisher, on the ground, that the transfers were fraudulent, and made for the purpose of hindering and delaying the creditors of Mary Kanan. By stipulation of counsel the two actions were argued and submitted to this court on the same briefs, the judgments to be the same in each case.

The trial judge made findings of fact and conclusions of law favorable to the defendants, and in a memorandum opinion states, that the evidence wholly fails to establish any conspiracy between the defendants to commit a fraud, and that the evidence falls far short of the degree of proof required to establish fraudulent transfers.

The plaintiff appeals from both judgments demanding a trial de novo in each case, and.states that the issues are, first, were the transfers in question fraudulent as to the creditors of Mary Kanan? Second, does a secret trust exist whereby the property so transferred was in fact, in equity the property of Mary Kanan when she was adjudged a bankrupt ?

' It is the contention of the plaintiff, that the defendants in pursuance of a fraudulent agreement to defraud the creditors of Mary Kanan, on the seventh day of June, 1921, caused to be recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Stutsman county a deed executed by Mary Kanan to Margaret F. Nichols to the N. W. of section 11, and the N. E. of the N. E. of section 10 in township 138 north of range 68; that on the 19th day of May 1926, the defendants caused to be recorded in the office of register of deeds of Stutsman county a deed issued by The Carlos N. Boynton Land Company conveying to the defendant, Margaret Nichols, the S. E. ■£ of section 15, township 139, range 68. That all of said transfers were made without consideration, and in pursuance of a conspiracy between the defendants to defraud the creditors of Mary Kanan.

It appears from the evidence, that on July ll, 1905, Ferris Nichols, who was then the husband of the defendant, Mary Kanan, entered into a contract with John B. Fried of Jamestown, for the purchase of the N. W. J of section 11, township 138, range 68. This contract Mr. Nichols later assigned to his wife, the defendant, now Mrs. Mary Kanan, on the sixth of August 1901; thereafter, John B. Fried deeded the said land to the defendant, who is now Mary Kanan, taking back a *33 mortgage on the land for one thousand dollars. He made advances to her from time to time for seed, and on June Y, 1921, when this real property was deeded by Mary Kanan to Margaret Nichols there was a mortgage against the said land for $2,000. Ferris Nichols had also filed a homestead on the N. E. of the N. E. -j- of section 10, a forty-acre tract which was proved up by the defendant, Mary Kanan, after the death of her husband who died in the fall of 190Y. These forty acres, together with the land purchased from John B. Fried, the N. W. i of sec. 11, twp. 138, range 66, is the land deeded by defendant, Mary Kanan, to the defendant, Margaret F. Nichols on the seventh day of June 1921.

After the death of her husband the defendant, Mary Kanan, married a man by the name of Kanan who later left his wife and the country. Mrs. Kanan is an elderly woman who does not write or read the English language. She made her living by selling laces and mending rugs, she claims on account of poor crops and the general depression in business she eonld not pay the taxes on her lands, the interest on the mortgages, and could not keep up the payments she was required to make on a land contract for a half section of land which she held under a purchase contract; that the mortgage had increased on the land purchased from John B. Fried from one thousand to two thousand dollar’s; that her first husband while living had told her that he intended the farm land for his daughter, Margaret, and some town lots which he held in the village of Medina for his daughter, Elizabeth, that in June, 1921, she went into the bank at Medina and asked Mr. Schroeder to make deeds of conveyance. Mr. Schroeder said, that he was too busy at the time, and that she later went to Jamestown, and had the deeds made by John B. Fried in accordance with her husband’s wish. Thereafter, Margaret Nichols paid the taxes, the interest on the mortgage, built a barn, moved a granary from the farm on to one of the lots in town, made a house of it, the rent of which was turned over in payment for building the house. Mrs. Kanan also held some stock in a Western Building Association, and about 1921, she claims, that she could no longer make the yearly payments, and that she was going to drop it, and Margaret, who was teaching school said, if she would let her have the stock she would pay the yearly assessment, which amounted to thirty-six dollars per annum; that she let Margaret have the stock, *34 and Margaret has paid the yearly installments since that time; that she could no longer pay the deferred payments on the land contract with the Boynton Land Company, and in May 1926, a Mr. Fox representing said land company, told her that she would have to pay the deferred payments or they would have to cancel her contract. She had no money to pay the deferred payments and when she told her daughter, Margaret, that they were going to cancel the contract, the daughter, Margaret, went with her brother-in-law, Gottlieb Fisher, to see Gottlieb’s father, Fredrick Fisher, from whom she borrowed $1,000. Margaret Nichols was teaching school at Cleveland at the time, and Fredrick Fisher did not have the thousand dollars ready for delivery; and on reporting to her mother what she had done, her mother and Fox went to see Fisher who had the money at that time, and gave them a check for the amount which was turned over to the Boynton Land Company, and a deed conveying one hundred and sixty acres of the land to Margaret F. Nichols was executed. There is some dispute over the delivery of the mortgage and the note to Mr. Fredrick Fisher, and as to whom the Fredrick Fisher check was made payable, but these questions we regard as entirely immaterial. It is undisputed that Mary Kanan could not make any payments on the land contract, that the land company through its agent, Mrs. Fox, had notified her that they could not carry the contract any longer, that they had to have the money or that they would cancel the contract. In this dilemma Margaret Nichols stepped in, borrowed the money which was the full consideration demanded by the land company for the conveyance of a quarter section of land. This money was accepted by the land company and a deed issued to Margaret F. Nichols. It makes no difference who delivered the note and mortgage to Fredrick Fisher, it was a note and mortgage executed by Margaret Nichols and she alone is liable. It makes no difference to whom the check issued by Fredrick Fisher was made payable. It was Margaret Nichols’ money accepted by the Boynton Land Company in payment for the land which they conveyed to her, and there is nothing fraudulent about it.

It is the contention of the plaintiff, that the real property involved was deeded back to Mary Kanan by her daughters, and that it was never the intention of the parties to convey the title to said land to the said daughters; that the transfer was made for the purpose of defrauding the

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Bluebook (online)
220 N.W. 443, 57 N.D. 29, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stangler-v-kanan-nd-1928.