Virgil State Bank v. Wahl

Citation228 N.W. 392,56 S.D. 318
Decision Date13 January 1930
Docket NumberNo. 6075.,6075.
PartiesVIRGIL STATE BANK v. WAHL et ux.
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from Circuit Court, Bon Homme County; R. B. Tripp, Judge.

Action by the Virgil State Bank against Fredrich Wahl and Mary Wahl. From a judgment for plaintiff and an order denying a new trial, defendant Mary Wahl appeals. Affirmed.H. G. Giddings, of Mitchell, for appellant.

Wicks & Quinn, of Scotland, S. D., for respondent.

BROWN, J.

Defendant Fredrich Wahl, a farmer, and his wife, Mary, occupied as their home a section of land in Beadle county, title to which was in Fredrich, subject to a mortgage on which about $19,000 was due, when foreclosure proceedings were commenced. They then deeded the land to the mortgagee, who gave Fredrich an option to buy it back within two years on payment of the amount against it. Seeing no prospect of being able to avail himself of the option, Fredrich traded it for a half section of land in Hutchinson county which was also heavily mortgaged, and in less than a month found that he could not make the agreed cash payment on the Hutchinson county land, and traded it for a quarter section in Bon Homme county, which was fenced, had 90 acres broken, and a well, but no buildings on it, and is the land in controversy in this action. In his effort to hold the option on the Beadle county land he tried to borrow $1,265 from his sister to pay on it, but she refused to loan it to him unless his wife would agree to repay it, which the wife did, and the money was loaned and paid on the Beadle county land. Fredrich never got title to the Hutchinson county land, as he had traded that off before conveyances were made. He got deed to the Bon Homme county land on January 21, 1923, and immediately mortgaged it for $4,500 and paid all of that on what was due from him under the trades he had made, partly on the Hutchinson county and partly on Beadle county land. On April 21, 1923, he conveyed the land to his wife; the consideration being her assumption of the mortgage, her agreement to pay the $1,265 to his sister, and the sum of about $1,300 in money and property which he had received from his wife at different times since their marriage, and which she had got from her parents. On May 1, 1922, he had given the plaintiff his note for $2,000, due November 1, 1922, with interest at 10 per cent. per annum to maturity and at 12 per cent. per annum thereafter. This action is upon the note, and plaintiff also asks that the conveyance from Fredrich to his wife be set aside as fraudulent as to creditors. The court gave judgment against Fredrich for the amount due on the note, and adjudged that the conveyance from him to his wife of the land in controversy, the N. W. 1/4 of section 31-96-60 was made with intent to defraud his creditors and was void as to plaintiff. From this judgment and an order denying a new trial the defendant Mary Wahl appeals.

[1] Appellant contends that an action to set aside an alleged fraudulent conveyance cannot be maintained until the plaintiff has first secured a specific lien on the land, and that therefore her objection to the introduction of any evidence on that branch of the case should have been sustained. It is unnecessary to inquire whether that was the law in this state prior to the adoption of the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act. Under section 9 of that act (chapter 209, Laws of 1919) a creditor whose claim has matured, who establishes that a conveyance was fraudulent as to him, may have the conveyance set aside to the extent necessary to satisfy his claim. We think under this provision, in an action brought upon matured obligation, upon proper pleading and proof, relief may be obtained by the setting aside of a conveyance fraudulent as to the plaintiff, without the necessity of first securing a specific lien upon the property alleged to have been fraudulently conveyed. Morse v. Roach, 229 Mich. 538, 201 N. W. 471.

Appellant contends that the undisputed evidence shows that, when she and her husband left the farm in Beadle county, it was their intention to continue farming and to make their home on the land in Hutchinson county, that, when they traded it, they intended to make their home on the land in controversy and continue farming there, and that the only thing that prevented their taking up residence on the land in dispute was their inability to procure the necessary funds to erect a dwelling house on it, and she claims that it is exempt as a homestead. From the time they left the farm in Beadle county to the time of the trial they lived in a rented home in the town of Tripp, in which neighborhood Fredrich worked as a common laborer on a farm.

The record does not show whether the $19,000 incumbrance on the Beadle county land was a single mortgage on the whole section, or separate mortgages on separate parts of the section. We cannot say from the record that there would be any equity in any 160 acres, including the dwelling house, that could be carved out of the section. Should it be granted for the sake of the argument that in this state the proceeds of the sale of a homestead are exempt for a reasonable time, pending the selection of another homestead and investment of such proceeds therein, we are confronted with the fact that no exemption from the Beadle county land is traced into the Bon Homme county land.

[2][3] Defendant further contends that she gave a valid and sufficient consideration for the land, and that therefore the conveyance to her could not be held to be in fraud of creditors,and that in any event the conveyance is valid as to the consideration given. It is argued in her behalf that the land is worth not to exceed $10,750; that she took it subject to a mortgage of $4,500, which she orally agreed to assume; that her husband owed his sister $1,250, which appellant orally agreed to pay; and that she herself had borrowed from her father $465, which...

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