Court Opinion

ID: 7110291
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:25:35.033705+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:43.086402
License: Public Domain

Weaver, J.
It will be observed that plaintiff’s claim against the garnishee is based upon two propositions: (1) That the agreement of defendant to pay forty per cent, of the amount recovered from the railroad company operated as an equitable assignment of that proportion of the fund afterward deposited with the garnishee, and that the latter received the deposit with notice thereof; and (2) that, if no equitable assignment be found, there is nevertheless such a showing of fraud in the transaction between defendant and the garnishee as will enable the plaintiff to subject the money in his hands to the payment of the judgment. These propositions will be considered in the order stated.
i garnishmeut I. Counsel have favored the court with an exhaustive and learned discussion of the doctrine of equitable assignments generally, and the extent to which they have been recognized in this state. Our view of the record in the case before us renders a minute examination of these questions unnecessary. Ihis is a garnishment proceeding, — a proceeding the purpose of which is to discover in the hands of the garnishee property or money belonging to the defendant. If plaintiff by his contract obtained an equitable assignment of a portion o£ the moneys to be paid by the railroad company, then when the money was thereafter paid, the equitable title of plaintiff was converted or enlarged into a legal title, and the money, to the extent of forty per cent, of the amount paid, became his property, as against defendant. See Fairbanks v. Sargent 117 N. Y. 820 (22 N. E. Rep. 1039, 6 L. R. A. 475). And if Edgington received such moneys, knowing the facts, the forty per cent, remained the property of plaintiff in his hands, and not the property (f defendant. In such case it seems clear that garnishment proceedings would afford plaintiff no relief as a remedy or the recovery of his own property. We are therefore *243constrained, to hold the claim of plaintiff, so far as it' rests upon an alleged equitable assignment, is without merit, and, having elected to reach the fund by garnishment proceedings, the moneys, when placed in the hands of the garnishee, must be treated as the property of the defendant. It is not claimed that plaintiff had taken the necessary steps to be entitled to an attorney’s lien under the statute of this state providing therefor, and it is well settled that, failing to take advantage of the statutory method, an attorney has no commonlaw lien on moneys due his client. Keehn v. Keehn, 115 Iowa 467. It follows that plaintiff must recover, if at all, on the claim that ’the garnishee is liable to be charged as the trustee of the' defendant.
2. intent: to dence of. II. We inquire, therefore, if the record presents a case to justify the conclusion that the deposit of the money in the hands of the garnishee was made in fraud of creditors. We think no candid and im partial person can read the record without being firmly convinced that, in placing the money in the hands of Edgington, the defendant and his wife were actuated by the intent and purpose to defeat plaintiff in the collection of his claim. Defendant, aided by his wife, settled with the railroad company, and received the money without giving-notice to plaintiff, his attorney, residing in the same county. In making the settlement, it was insisted by him that the actual cash should be paid over, instead of payment by voucher, check, or draft. The money, being received, was not deposited in any bank, but was concealed for several weeks in his house. He then sought to settle with plaintiff for $200, although, according to his own version of the contract, he owed him $500. Failing to force this compromise, and having been or being about to be sued upon the claim, the brother-in-law was called in, and $1,800 of the money placed in his custody. Defendant says that after making the contract with plaintiff he *244became' dissatisfied, and from- that time forward he-“kicked,” and that the transfer of. the fund to Edgington was “a part of the kick, ” and that he “did not intend Kerr should get the best of him in the deal.” -The wife" also swears that they were ready and willing to pay plaintiff out of the money in Edgington’s hands, providing he would settle for'the amount offered. Defendant had no other property liable to execution, and significantly testifies concerning the attempted settlement with plaintiff,. “I felt I had the money, and Kerr would have to come tome.”' He insists that he had no intent to defraud bis. creditors, but we think his sincerity in this declaration, can be vindicated only upon the theory that in defeating.. the collection of a judgment for lawyer’s fees, the end justifies the means employed to effect it. Upon this branch of the case, the only question upon , which there-seems room for argument is whether the garnishee- participated in the fraudulent purposes of the defendant. He shows quite clearly that at the date of this transaction defendant was indebted to him in some amount, but the exact sum is not easy of ascertainment. Several items of such indebtedness were barred by the statute of limita-' tions, and another item which he seeks to establish was' the debt of the wife, incurred in building a house upon property owned by her in her own right. In his original answers to the garnishment he professed to give all which was said 'by his sister when she placed the money in his hands, but did not disclose that she said anything abo-ut paying the .indebtedness to him. On the contrary, he then sought to justify such payment by the statement, in substance, that to deduct his own, claim from the amount to-be accounted for would be in accordance with his ordinary methods of business. Upon the trial, however, he swears that in giving him the money his sister told him first to pay himself what they owed him, and to hold the balance to he paid out as she should call for it.
*245It is an elementary principle that the presumption of good faith attaches to all ordinary business transactions, and that the burden of establishing fraud is upon the party alleging it. There is nothing inherently improbable in the claim that in receiving this money it should have been stipulated that the garnishee be paid the debts justly his •due. If so, then in accepting this money' he cannot be •charged with fraud, even though he knew or had reason to believe that defendant intended thereby to defeat plaintiff’s judgment, providing only he did not himse.x participate in such purpose.'- Kohn v. Clement, 58 Iowa, 589. We are therefore disposed to hold that, so far as the personal indebtedness of the defendant to the garnishee is concerned, the delivery of the money operated as ■a payment, but that such effeet cannot be given to the item of $540 owed by the wife, as hereinbefore indicated. In other w'ords, while defendant may lawfully, hinder one •creditor by a goodfaith payment to another, he cannot be permitted to hinder his own creditor by placing his funds at the disposal of the creditor of his wife. Giving the garnishee credit, therefore, for the amount which, according to his own answers, the defendant and his wife had drawn from him before the garnishment, $569.60, and the several items of defendant’s indebtedness, aggregating $689*28, there is left in his hands, subject to plaintiff’s claim, a balance of $541.12. In this estimate we have made no computation for interest, and in view of the fact that in his answers the garnishee makes no claim for interest, and the further fact that he says he had abandoned .all hope of collecting his claims, and had lost or destroyed some' of the. written evidence thereof, we think none should be allowed. . ,
III. There is no -evidence tending to sustain the allegation that plaintiff’s judgment was obtained by fraud, it is easily possible that the amount for which judgment was obtained was greater than in should have been, had *246defendant seen fit to- make a defense. It would seem, however, that his feeling of security against- a collection by execution was such that he made no defense, and he is not now in position to complain. Nor is there anything of merit in the claim that the contract between plaintiff and defendant was void for champerty, and, even if the claim were well founded, it would not affect the validity of the judgment, or plaintiff’s right to enforce the same. It is unnecessary to consider the objection raised by defendant and garnishee to the competency of the defendant’s wife as a witness for the plaintiff. Even were her testimony eliminated from the record, the result and conclusion we have reached would remain unchanged.
As the case was tried in equity, it is unnecessary to remand it for further proceedings. It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the district court be modified by reducing the amount of plaintiff’s recovery against the garnishee to $541.12, with interest at six per cent, from the date of the garnishee’s answers, September 18, 1896, with costs of this court taxed one-third to the appellants and two-thirds to the appellee; and as thus modified the judgment is AEEIRMED.