Osmond v. Osmond
Osmond v. Osmond
Opinion of the Court
This was a proceeding in garnishment, instituted by the plaintiff against Harry L. Osmond as defendant and the Oregon Short Line Railroad Company as garnishee, to re
The garnishee made response to the writ of garnishment by denying it was indebted to the defendant Osmond, and further alleged that prior to the service of the writ an assignment for the amount due defendant had been filed with the garnishee company, by which the said defendant had assigned the amount due and owing to him to Elizabeth Osmond. The answer of the garnishee was traversed by the plaintiff, and upon the hearing it developed that Elizabeth Osmond was a necessary party to the proceeding. An order was accordingly made making her a party and requiring her to answer and set forth her claim to the fund.
Her answer was seasonably filed, in which it was alleged that on the 9th day of March, 1922, the defendant, Harry L. Osmond, was indebted to her in the sum of $413 upon an account stated for money loaned and board furnished prior to said date; that for the purpose of securing payment of said indebtedness defendant executed and delivered to her an assignment of all moneys then due, or thereafter to become due from the garnishee company, not exceeding the said sum of $413; that said assignment was filed with and accepted by said garnishee company prior to the 28th day of Mareh, 1922, the date, when the writ of garnishment was served.
Plaintiff in reply denied the execution and delivery of the assignment, and also alleged that it was fraudulently made and without consideration. The amount of the fund in question is $99.99, (that being the amount of the wages earned by defendant at the time the writ was served.
The court to whom the case was tried without a jury found for the interpleader, Elizabeth Osmond, and from the judgment entered thereon plaintiff appeals.
The only errors assigned of sufficient merit to require consideration are finding No. 2, wherein the court found that the defendant, Harry L. Osmond, between the 1st day of September, 1921, and the 10th day of March, 1922, became
A considerable amount of superfluous matter for some reason or other was incorporated into the bill of exceptions, the only effect of which was to complicate the case and “add to the confusion.”
As we read the record the material facts seem to be that on December 11, 1920, appellant, Ruby Eleanor Osmond, procured a divorce from defendant, Harry L. Osmond, was awarded by the court the custody of their minor child and the sum of $40 per month for support of herself and said child. Some portions of the alimony appear to have been paid, but in September, 1921, it was ascertained by some proceeding in court that the sum of $105 of the alimony had not been paid. Garnishment proceedings were instituted by plaintiff, and the sum of $57.35 obtained thereby and credited upon the above indebtedness. That appears to have been the last payment of alimony received by the plaintiff.
Because of the garnishment proceeding, defendant was notified by the company that a third garnishment would result in his• dismissal from the railroad company’s employment, and he was advised to attend to the matter at once.
After the garnishment above referred to, the defendant, Harry L. Osmond, temporarily ceased working for the rail
While the testimony of his mother is vague and unsatisfactory as to what her son was doing and where he was during his absence from Salt Lake City, it is nevertheless deducible therefrom that he was unemployed, earning no money, and in need of assistance. During the same time her husband, defendant’s father, was ill, unable to work, from which illness he died in February, 1922. Because of her husband’s illness and inability to work as represented by her, she found it necessary to insist that the advances made to her son be treated as a loan to be paid by him as soon as he was able to earn the money. In March, 1922, he resumed work for the railroad company at Kemmerer, Wyo., and on March 9th, at the request of his mother, executed the assignment in question here. She testified it was done to secure his indebtedness to her, and that she had no intention of defrauding the plaintiff. It is possible to infer from her testimony that, if there had been no threat or fear of garnishment, she would not have required an assignment, but, as stated by her, in substance,.she thought she had as much right to secure the indebtedness of her son to her as plaintiff had to secure the obligation owing to her.
As far as concerns the alleged indebtedness of defendant to his mother, the evidence pertaining thereto is not contradicted by any evidence in the record. Neither can it be said that it is so unreasonable or improbable as to be wholly unbelievable. If her son was without work and needing
Appellant cites many authorities bearing upon the question of fraud, fraudulent conveyances, etc., all of which may be conceded as. apt and pertinent authority in cases to which they apply. Reference is made to the following: 12 R. C. L. 537, and 543 to 546, relating to fraudulent conveyances. The references relate mainly to cases where the debtor reserves a benefit to himself. It goes without saying that this cannot be done to the injury of creditors. As to them it is fraudulent and void; but we fail to see how such doctrine applies to the instant case. The assignment in question was to secure payment of obligations already incurred, if we are to believe the uncontradicted evidence in the case, and just how or wherein defendant reserved any benefit to himself does not appear from the record before us. In order to make it so appear we would have to inject into the record inferences and conclusions beyond the power of this court, whose functions in dealing with facts are limited and circumscribed.
Appellant also refers to Bump on Fraudulent Conveyances’ (3d Ed.) p. 200, which we cite without comment other than, to say that the authority referred to, as well as the others which appellant has cited, could have been applied and made use of in the court below, if it had believed the facts warranted their application. Appellant cites numerous other
As we are not so convinced, it is the opinion of the court that the judgment should be affirmed, and it is affirmed accordingly, at appellant’s costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- OSMOND v. OSMOND (OREGON SHORT LINE R. CO., Garnishee OSMOND, Interpleader)
- Status
- Published