Keithley v. Southworth
Keithley v. Southworth
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff begun his suit by an attachment against L. C. Southworth on an account of $66.96, before a justice of the peace. A writ of attach
The evidence on the part of the interpleader was, in substance, that he had been on a trade for the property attached for some time and got possession of it by a trade the evening of the day on which it was attached. It further appears from the evidence that the inter-pleader is the son of the defendant. On the fifth day of August, 1893, the interpleader being then'but twenty years of age, entered into a written contract with his father, by which his father emancipated him and sold him four head of horses, some cattle, hogs, farm machinery and utensils, for $402.25, subject to a chattel mortgáge of $75; by the same written instrument his his father leased his farm to the interpleader at a rental of one third of the crops to be grown upon the farm, and it was stipulated that the son should pay the $402.25 for the personal property in work in clearing new land and otherwise improving the farm, for which work he was to be credited at $1 per day for his labor, and $2 per day for himself -and team, when team work was necessary in making improvements. The son’s testimony tended to prove that at the date of the levy of the attachment he had about paid the $402.25 by work on the farm and by paying debts for his father. It further appears that the property attached had been
The instructions given by the court were not objected to, and in our view of the case fully cover all the issues raised by the pleadings and the evidence. The interpleader asked instructions to the effect that if the property was in fact the defendant’s and was in fact transferred by him to the interpleader for the purpose of hindering and delaying the creditors of the defendant, yet if the property was exempt from the levy of the attachment, the issues should be found for the interpleader; the court refused so to instruct, the inter-pleader saved his exceptions, and has assigned this adverse ruling of the court as error. If the property at the time it was transferred from the father to the son had the status of exempt property — that is if it had been such property as was at the time specifically exempt by statute, or if it had been specifically set off to the father as exempt by some officer under a valid process in his hands commanding him to levy, then there could not have been a conveyance of it in fraud of
Perceiving no reversible error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- G. L. Keithley v. L. C. Southworth, Defendant J. E. Southworth, Interpleader
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published