Stricker v. Trullinger

1 Reported in 216 N.W. 231. An attachment was issued in this case on an affidavit, alleging as grounds therefor that the defendants "have assigned, secreted and disposed of their property and are about to do so with intent to delay and defraud their creditors." Defendants moved to vacate the attachment on the ground that the affidavit was untrue, and by proper affidavits denied any fraud or fraudulent intent.

Plaintiff, in support of the attachment, presented an affidavit by the original debtor, stating that the defendants were in the act of moving upon the tract of land in Cottonwood county owned by them for the purpose of making said land their statutory homestead and exempt from the claim of creditors, and stating in general terms that this was being done for the purpose of defrauding creditors. The affidavit further states that something over a year before the action was commenced the defendants attempted to reconvey the land in Pine county, for the purchase price of which the note in suit was given, for the purpose of merging and satisfying the debt, and that this was done with fraudulent intent.

The suit is brought upon a promissory note which was given for part of the purchase price of a tract of land in Pine county and is secured by a second mortgage upon that land. The record does not show any extrinsic facts or circumstances indicating fraudulent intent on the part of the defendants. The district court granted the motion to vacate the attachment.

The fact that defendants were about to move on a tract of land owned by them, for the purpose of claiming and holding the same as their statutory homestead, was an entirely lawful undertaking on their part and, where no further facts are shown tending to establish actual fraud, it cannot be held to be a fraudulent disposition of property under our attachment law. See cases of Jacoby v. *Page 549 Parkland Distilling Co. 41 Minn. 227, 43 N.W. 52, and Forsberg v. Security State Bank (C.C.A.) 15 F.2d 499, 49 A.L.R. 913, and note to Ferguson v. Little Rock Tr. Co. Ann. Cas. 1913A, 960, 964. Neither can we hold that the act of defendants in attempting to induce the creditor to accept a reconveyance of the Pine county land in satisfaction of the debt, the creditor having refused to accept such reconveyance, constitutes a fraudulent disposition of property.

Order affirmed.