Union National Bank v. Harrison

16 Neb. 635
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 16 Neb. 635 (Union National Bank v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union National Bank v. Harrison, 16 Neb. 635 (Neb. 1884).

Opinion

Cobb, Ch. J.

This is an action in equity in the nature of a creditor’s bill, brought by the plaintiff to compel the application of certain real property alleged to be the property of the defendant Thomas H. Harrison, but the legal title of which is in the defendant Matilda E. Harrison, to the payment of the plaintiff’s judgment against the defendant Thomas H. Harrison. The plaintiff by its petition set out the recovery of its judgment in the district court of Gage county, its recording therein, its non-payment, etc., the issuance of an execution thereon, and its return wholly unsatisfied, the insolvency of the defendant Thomas H. Harrison, and that after incurring the liability upon which said judgment was obtained, etc., “to-wit, on the 24th day of December, 1877, the said Thomas H. Harrison, then being the owner of and having the title deed in himself of the following described lots of land (here follows desci’iption), did for,the purpose and with a fraudulent intent to hinder', delay, and defraud creditors, * * * and particularly to hinder, [637]*637delay, and prevent the collection of plaintiff’s said claim, upon which said judgment was rendered, convey by warranty deed, executed by himself and wife, the said defendant Matilda E. Harrison, all of the above described lots of land, to the defendant Samuel C. Smith, * * * that the naked title in and to said premises, so conveyed as aforesaid, remained in said Samuel C. Smith until the 11th day of June, 1880, when, at the request of the defendant Thomas H. Harrison, the defendants Samuel C. Smith and Hattie M. Smith, by quit-claim deed reconveyed said premises * * * to the said defendant Matilda E. Harrison, and for the fraudulent purpose of cheat-' ing, defrauding * * * the creditors of said Thomas H. Harrison,” etc.

The defendants by their answer admit the making and delivery of the several deeds, but deny that it was for the fraudulent purpose of hindering, delaying, or defrauding creditors out of their lawful right, but that the conveyance to Samuel C. Smith was made as a security to him, the same being for a good and valid consideration. That afterwards, on the 11th day of June, 1880, upon the full satisfaction and full release of said Samuel C. Smith as such security by and with money belonging to the defendant, Matilda E. Harrison, the said Samuel C.-Smith, and Netta M. Smith, his wife, conveyed by their deed all their right, title,' and interest in and to said lands to the defendant, Matilda E. Harrison, which transaction was bona fide, and not made for the fraudulent purpose of hindering or delaying the creditors of the defendant, Thomas H. Harrison.

That the defendant, Matilda E. Harrison, is the wife of the defendant, Thomas H. Harrison. That she had at di'vers times before said transactions loaned to the defendant, Thomas H. Harrison, large sums of money which was used by him in and about his business, and that the money used in and about the transaction complained of, was the property of the defendant, Matilda E. Harrison, and was [638]*638by her inherited from other sources than that of her husband, Thomas H. Harrison. Also that the lands men-toned in the plaintiff’s petition are six one-half lots situated in the city of Beatrice, and that the defendants, Thomas H. Harrison and Matilda E. Harrison, husband and wife, reside upon and occupy the land, said premises, as a homestead under the laws of this state, and that they occupied said property as a homestead at the time of the conveyance compained of.

There was a trial to the court, a general finding and judgment for the defendants, and the cause brought to this court on error.

The first point made by plaintiff in his petition in error,, and under which head he assigns three errors, is, substantially, that the court refused to receive evidence of the present value of the six lots in question, but confined all testimony as to their value to the date of their purchase and first occupancy as a homestead by the defendants, the Harrisons.

Before discussing this point further I will dispose of the matter of the reply. There appears among the papers in the case a copy of a reply to the defendants’ amended answer. This reply seems to have been filed by virtue of a. stipulation signed by one of defendants’ counsel, months after the trial and judgment, and made to supply the place of one alleged to have been lost at the time of the trial. This reply defendants’ counsel in this court moved to have stricken out. Without passing upon the questions raised by counsel as to whether the counsel signing the stipulation had or had not ceased to be counsel in the case at the-time of signing it, or whether any original reply had ever-been filed, to be lost, and its place to be supplied by stipulation of otherwise, the motion must be denied. It makes no difference with the question presented whether the reply be considered on or off the files of the case. To make that part of the amended answer which purports to [639]*639set up a homestead as a defense sufficient for that purpose, requires quite a stretch of liberality in applying the principles of pleading. The allegation in that respect is confined to the use to which the premises were and had been applied by 'the defendants. To lay a proper foundation for the reception of evidence to establish the defendants right to hold the premises as a homestead, exempt from levy or sale on execution, something more was necessary. The premises must have been claimed in the pleading, and shown in the proofs as “ not exceeding in value two thousand dollars,” and not exceeding two lots ” in quantity of contiguous land, it being within an incorporated city. This value of the lots claimed as a homestead of course refers to their present value, at the time of the claim and assertion of the claim of right to homestead exemption, and had the question been properly presented in the pleadings, evidence of their then present value alone would have been admissible, and the sustaining of the objection thereto referred to in the petition in error would have been error. But it is manifest that no claim, of homestead exemption, is made by the pleadings which would sustain a special finding for the defendants. Therefore, while it was inconsistent on the part of the court to sustain the objections to the testimony of present value as made, the defendants having taken testimony as to the value of the lots when purchased by them, yet as the evidence was not applicable to any issue properly pleaded, if error at all, it was error, without prejudice.

The next point made by plaintiff is, that the court erred in overruling plaintiff’s objections to certain interrogatories (designating them by number) in the deposition of Thomas H. Harrison, and in allowing the answers thereto to be read in evidence.

The first interrogatory embraced in this objection is as follows:

“15. State the facts and circumstances relative to the [640]*640conveyance of those lots by yourself and wife on December 24, 1877, to the defendant Samuel C. Smith.”

In the plaintiff’s own view of the case the facts and circumstances connected with the giving of the deed here under consideration was the very keystone of the case. If it was made and executed bona fide, and for a good consideration, then the plaintiff’s case must fail.

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

Related

Hews v. Kenney
62 N.W. 204 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1895)
Casebeer v. Rice
18 Neb. 203 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Neb. 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-national-bank-v-harrison-neb-1884.