Court Opinion

ID: 4011404
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 11:14:29.610148+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:44:45.243942
License: Public Domain

Garnishment action begun February 6, 1939, by Louise Neumeyer against Leonard Weinberger, Rose Weinberger, and Robert Bonack, principal defendants, and John A. Thiel and Lloyd Allan, garnishee defendants.  John Ertl was interpleaded as a party defendant.  From a judgment in favor of defendants, plaintiff appeals.
This action is by a creditor.  The validity of an assignment, described later, is brought in question.  It is claimed to be fraudulent as to creditors of defendant under ch. 242, Stats., and therefore not to prevent granting of the remedy sought by the plaintiff.  The complaint is the usual pleading in garnishment actions, setting forth the cause relied upon in the principal action and alleging that the garnishee defendants have in their possession money and property belonging to the defendant Rose Weinberger, and demanding judgment *Page 535 
against the garnishees in the sum of $1,000 and interest. The defendant John Ertl who claimed a right to this same property by virtue of an alleged assignment, was interpleaded. The answer of Rose Weinberger alleges the assignment of the fund in the hands of the garnishee defendants to John Ertl and asks that the complaint be dismissed and that the interpleaded defendant Ertl be adjudged to be the owner of such funds.  The case was tried to the court and findings of fact were made in which many incidents were referred to. So far as material to this appeal, they were in substance:  That Rose Weinberger was the owner of the fund in the hands of the garnishee defendants on February 3, 1939; that she then assigned such funds to the interpleaded defendant John Ertl; that John Ertl gave to said Rose Weinberger a fair and sufficient consideration for the execution and delivery to him of a note for $1,045 and the said assignment; that, —
"Following the execution of such note and assignment, the said note and assignment were delivered by said Rose Weinberger to the said John Ertl, and he at the same time paid to her the sum of one dollar as part consideration therefor. The balance of the consideration therefor consisted of a previous valid and enforceable liability to said John Ertl by and from the defendant, Leonard Weinberger, in the form of a note, executed to the Knowles State Bank, Knowles, Wisconsin, by said Leonard Weinberger and indorsed by said John Ertl, in the sum of $940.  The difference between the amount due upon said bank note and the sum of $1,045 constituted a legal and enforceable liability from the defendants, Leonard Weinberger and Rose Weinberger, who are husband and wife, to the defendant, John Ertl, for moneys advanced by said Ertl to them and used by said Leonard and Rose Weinberger in the operation of a farm which they were then working."
Further findings were: That by the execution and delivery of the said note and assignment there was no intent or attempt by Rose Weinberger to defeat or defraud her creditors; that no fraud was present in the execution and delivery of said *Page 536 
note and assignment; that the garnishee defendants have paid to the clerk of the court the sum of $1,045, representing the amount in their hands; and that the garnishment action was begun February 6, 1939.  As conclusions of law, the court determined that the assignment was valid and effective; that Ertl was entitled to judgment directing payment to him of the amount due him on the note; and that if any balance remained it was to be paid to the plaintiff.  Judgment was accordingly entered.
The evidence does not sustain the findings of fact that the respondent Rose Weinberger was discharging a lawful obligation existing against her in transferring this money to the respondent Ertl.  She was the wife of Leonard Weinberger who was indebted to Ertl for services rendered and because of the liability of Ertl upon a note which he had signed with Leonard Weinberger.  These obligations were separate from the estate belonging to Rose Weinberger.  Ertl testified in part as follows:
"Q.  February 3, 1939, how much was Leonard A. Weinberger owing you?  A. That is $300 some, I got to advance this note, and an old threshing bill."
Rose Weinberger's testimony upon this point is that Ertl never demanded payment of her individually, but that he came, as a matter of fact, to ask her husband to pay up. Respondent insists that "at and just prior to the execution of the assignment Mrs. Weinberger and her husband executed to Ertl her demand note for $1,045 bearing four per cent *Page 537 
interest.  She thereby became absolutely liable to him in that sum, and this liability will of necessity persist until fully paid."  But at the time she attempted to transfer this money to Ertl to discharge her husband's indebtedness, she had creditors of her own and she was not indebted to Ertl.  She was in no way liable for the indebtedness to him, and her separate creditors had the first claim upon her assets.
While we believe the evidence set out above shows the true state of affairs as existing between Rose Weinberger and Ertl, we do not overlook her testimony in the nature of a conclusion that she and her husband were indebted to Ertl in the sum of $300.  That indebtedness arose out of her husband's business, and no legal obligation existed at any time on her part to pay her husband's debt of $300 to Ertl.
After the assignment, the administrator of the estate of defendant Rose Weinberger's father made two payments totaling $150.44 on account of the defendant's share in the estate. Neither she nor Ertl seemed to know who got the money or where it is, although each signed a receipt for it.
Under the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act as adopted in Wisconsin by ch. 242, Stats., the discharge of a debt of another does not constitute a fair consideration for a conveyance by one who is not responsible therefor, and "every conveyance made and every obligation incurred by a person who is or will be thereby rendered insolvent is fraudulent as to creditors" of the one making the assignment or transfer "without regard to his actual intent if the conveyance is made or the obligation is incurred without a fair consideration." Sec. 242.04, Stats.
We do not see on what theory Ertl's claim can be allowed in arriving at the consideration for the assignment by Mrs. Weinberger.  As said by Mr. Justice JONES in Share v.Trickle, 183 Wis. 1, 9, 197 N.W. 329, 34 A.L.R. 1016, "it would be in effect holding that in transactions of this kind between husband and wife, one spouse may pay the debts of *Page 538 
the other to the detriment of creditors of the former."  The evidence shows that after the giving of the assignment to Ertl she did not own any property and that all her husband had any claim to was incumbered in some way.  She testified that the assignment conveyed all the property she had at that time. In addition to what she owed appellant she was liable on other notes which she had signed with her husband.  It thus becomes apparent that she was insolvent within the meaning of sec. 242.02 (1), Stats., which defines an insolvent person as one whose estate is such that the "present fair salable value of his assets is less than the amount that will be required to pay his probable liability on his existing debts as they become absolute and matured."
It being considered that this voluntary conveyance of all the assets of Rose Weinberger is void as to her creditors, a decision upon other questions raised, such as intentional fraud, seems unnecessary to the disposition of this case.  SeeShare v. Trickle, supra; Merchants' Bank v. Page,147 Md. 607, 128 A. 272; Davis v. Hudson Trust Co. (3d Cir.)28 F.2d 740 (certiorari denied, 278 U.S. 655,49 Sup. Ct. 179, 73 L. Ed. 565).
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions to enter judgment in accordance with the prayer of plaintiff's complaint. *Page 539