Stock Growers & Ranchers Bank v. Milisich

233 P. 41, 48 Nev. 373, 1925 Nev. LEXIS 20
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1925
Docket2607
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 233 P. 41 (Stock Growers & Ranchers Bank v. Milisich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stock Growers & Ranchers Bank v. Milisich, 233 P. 41, 48 Nev. 373, 1925 Nev. LEXIS 20 (Neb. 1925).

Opinions

*378 OPINION

By the Court,

Ducker, J.:

This is a suit in equity, instituted by the plaintiff to have declared void an assignment of two promissory notes and the real estate mortgages securing them, the notes and mortgages decreed to be community property, and subjected to the lien of an attachment issued in another action brought by the plaintiff against the defendant, Steve B. Milisich, on his promissory note. For convenience the parties will be referred to as in the pleadings, or by their proper names.

A demurrer to the complaint was overruled. Separate answers were filed, to one of which a reply was made. A decree was rendered in accordance with the prayer of the complaint. The appeal is taken from the decree and an order overruling a motion for a new trial.

The defendants, Steve B. Milisich and Thora Milisich, are husband and wife. The main facts out of which the controversy arose are as follows: On August 18, 1920, Milisich made and delivered to the plaintiff his promissory note for the sum of $7,800. He paid $500 on the principal of the note and paid the interest to December 18, 1920. On May 10, 1918, the defendants loaned to Dennis O’Sullivan and his wife, Johanna Jane O’Sullivan, the sum of $14,000, taking their promissory note therefor payable to the former. This note *379 was secured by a real estate mortgage executed in favor of the defendants. On February 8, 1919, the O’Sullivans borrowed $5,000, for which they gave their promissory note payable to the defendants, and secured by a real estate mortgage executed in their favor. On July 13, ■1920, Steve Milisich assigned said notes, and the mortgages securing them, to his wife, Thora Milisich.

These facts are alleged in the complaint, and, in connection therewith, it is alleged that the respective sums of $14,000 and $5,000 loaned to the O’Sullivans were community property of the defendants, and, as a result, the notes and mortgages assigned, and the moneys so secured, were and now are community property and subject to the control of Steve Milisich, and subject to the payment of community debts, and that the sum sued upon is a community debt; that the assignment of the notes and mortgages was made without consideration and with the intent to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of the defendant Steve B. Milisich, including this plaintiff, and that the said defendant Thora Milisich accepted and received said assignment, and the promissory notes and mortgages therein mentioned, with knowledge of the said fraudulent intent on the part of said defendant Steve B. Milisich and with intent on her part to assist the defendant Steve B. Milisich in his said fraudulent purposes.

It is also alleged that at the time the respondent accepted the promissory note of Milisich for the sum of $7,800, he fraudulently represented to plaintiff that he was the owner and holder of the O’Sullivan notes and mortgages, and that if plaintiff would advance and loan to him said sum and take and receive his promissory note therefor, he would repay the same out of the moneys represented by the notes of O’Sullivan and his wife, and thereby induced the plaintiff to loan to him said sum of $7,800, as evidenced by his promissory note. It is further alleged that plaintiff is unable to discover any other property within this state owned by said defendant Steve B. Milisich, and is informed and believes that said defendant has no other property *380 within this state out of which it can realize and satisfy its claim. Other facts alleged in the complaint can be more conveniently stated during the course of the opinion.

It is contended that the complaint does not state a cause of action for three reasons: (1) Because it does not show that the defendant Steve B. Milisich was indebted either to the plaintiff or to any other person, or at all, at the time when he assigned the O’Sullivan notes and mortgages to his wife, Thora Milisich; (2) because it does not show that Steve Milisich was insolvent at the time he made the assignment to Thora Milisich; and (3) because it does not allege that the plaintiff’s claim has been reduced to judgment.

We will discuss only the last objection because, in our opinion, the point raised is decisive of the insufficiency of the complaint. In support of the sufficiency of the complaint, as against the objection that a creditor must first reduce his claim to a judgment before he can invoke the aid of equity to set aside a fraudulent conveyance, it was insisted by plaintiff, when this case was first •argued in this court, that the facts stated brought the case within an exception to the general rule. The facts relied upon were that the complaint charges that, in the other action on the promissory notes, summons had been issued, but not served upon Milisich; that he was residing in the city of Juarez, Mexico; that he had no property in this state other than the O’Sullivan notes and mortgages; that a specific lien on said property had been acquired in the action at law; that Milisich and his wife would, unless restrained, transfer the notes and mortgages to third parties. None of the cases presented by plaintiff, to the effect that an exception exists to the general rule requiring a creditor to first reduce his claim to a judgment where the debtor is a nonresident and has no property within the state, are in point. These cases present a situation where suit was commenced to reach equitable assets, or to set aside a fraudulent conveyance of property impressed with lien or interest of the plaintiff in the property created in some *381 way, and to subject the property to the payment of the debt in one suit. None- of them were suits ancillary to an action at law, as is the case at bar. The prayer of the complaint in this case demands, inter alia, that the promissory notes and each of them, and the mortgages given as security therefor, be decreed to be subject to the lien acquired by this plaintiff under and by virtue of the writ of attachment issued in the action aforesaid by plaintiff against defendant Steve Milisich. On the former hearing of the case in this court, plaintiff presented authorities holding that a lien by attachment constituted an exception to the general rule, requiring a creditor to reduce his claim to a judgment before equity would interpose to set aside a fraudulent conveyance. This exception is established in many jurisdictions. 27 C. J. pp. 725, 726, 733. Counsel for defendants conceded an exception where a specific lien by attachment had been acquired, but insisted that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to show that any such lien has been acquired upon the notes and mortgages in question, and therefore the complaint fails to state facts sufficient to give a court of equity jurisdiction to set aside the assignment. The complaint, in respect to the lien alleged to have been acquired reads:

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Related

Meinhold v. CLARK COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT, ETC.
506 P.2d 420 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1973)
Garcia v. People
295 P. 491 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1931)
Stockgrowers & Ranchers Bank v. Milisich
283 P. 913 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 P. 41, 48 Nev. 373, 1925 Nev. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stock-growers-ranchers-bank-v-milisich-nev-1925.