Brown v. Edmonds
Brown v. Edmonds
Opinion of the Court
This is an action in equity to subject certain realty, record title to which is in defendant JennieS. Edmonds, to the payment of a judgment recovered in the territorial district court within and for Lawrence county, against defendant J. Frank Edmonds, her husband, and one Pinney, co-partners as Edmonds & Pinney. The court, in its decision,' finds that after the rendition of such judgment, and before the commencement of this action, an execution in due form was issued upon
More than ten years elapsed between the rendition of the judgment and the issuance of execution. The judgment had ceased to be a lien upon realty, but had not itself ceased to exist, and was still unsatisfied. Nothing prevented issuance of an execution by leave of court, and we must presume such leave was obtained. Concerning actions in equity in aid of executions, there is endless confusion among the authorities. The underlying principle seems to be this: The judgment creditor must exhaust his legal remedies before resorting to equity. The best evidence of his having done so is an attempt and failure to collect by the use of ordinary legal means. In the case at bar the plaintiffs had an unsatisfied judgment, upon which they caused execution to issue, which was returned unsatisfied. This established the fact that the debtors had no property liable to levy and sale thereunder, and the plaintiffs were without any legal means of collecting their claim. Were they bound to go further, and establish a lien upon the property, title to which was in the wife of the judgment debtor? We think not. The authorities uniformly hold that property thus situated need not be first sold on execution, because the creditor is entitled to have a sale under circumstances which will insure the realization of an adequate price. Record title to this realty was ip,
Two parcels of realty are involved. Defendants admit in their answer that both were purchased with funds and from the earnings of defendant J. Frank Edmonds, but allege that such funds were exempt from execution, and they deny that title thereto was taken in the wife’s name in order to hinder and delay or defraud creditors. They also allege that one parcel was purchased for the purpose of using the same as a homestead; that defendants are husband and wife, and constitute and are a family, residing in the city of Deadwood; that they own no other homestead to which they make or assert such claim. ' The court below found that the premises claimed to be a homestead were conveyed to a trustee about November 11, 1891; that shortly thereafter the trustee conveyed to defendant Jennie S. Edmonds; that there was a habitable dwelling on the premises which was occupied by a tenant under a lease from month to month; that J. Frank Edmonds paid the purchase price of said property with funds belonging to him; that the wife paid nothing for said property to any one; that the premises continued to be occupied by a tenant from the time of purchase until September, 1894; and that defendants never occupied the same until after the commencement of this action; but the court failed to find whether or not such premises were purchased for the purpose of using the same as a homestead. This issue was clearly raised by the allegations of the answer. It was a ma
With respect to the lots not claimed as a homestead, the answer admits they were purchased with the funds of the husband. The trial court finds that the husband was insolvent when the wife acquired title thereto; that she had notice of such insolvency; and that she paid no consideration whatever therefor. It also finds that the conveyance thereof to her was made with the intent to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of defendant J. Prank Edmonds, among whom were the plaintiffs in this action, and that such conveyance was taken by the defendant Jennie S. Edmonds with notice of the said intent on the part of her husband to hinder, delay, and defraud his creditors. The trial took place September 14, 1894. October 8th, before the filing of the court’s decision, counsel for defendants noticed an application to amend their answer, which was heard and denied October 15th. This application was based upon the affidavits of defendant J. Prank Edmonds and his attorney, and a proposed answer, verified by said defendant October 6th. In this amended answer it is alleged, among other things, that the lots we are now considering were not purchased with funds belonging to defendant J. P. Edmonds, but that they were purchased by one Phoebe Edmonds, the mother of said defendant; that they were conveyed by the mother to the wile; and that after the making of the original answer, to-wit, on September 14, 1894 (the day of the trial), she sold and conveyed the same to one McPherson, in pursuance of a contract to convey the same, made prior to the issuance of execution upon plaintiff’s judgment. The refusal of the court to allow this amendment is assigned as error. Counsel’s excuse for not alleging the manner in which title to these lots was acquired in the original answer is that he had but a
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- Syllabus
- 1. To enable a judgment creditor to maintain an action to subject land standing in the name of a third person, it is not necessary that he should first have made a levy on the land. 2. Where an answer to a creditors’ bill against a husband and wife to subject realty standing in the name of the wife to a judgment against the husband alleges that the property -was purchased for the purpose of using the same as a homestead, and there is evidence tending to support the allegation, the defendants are entitled to a finding thereon, 3. It is not an'abuse of discretion for a court to refuse to permit the filing of an amended pleading, tendering new issues, a month after the trial of the action, when the facts pleaded were known to the party and his counsel during the trial.