The co-partnership of J. W. Wells & Co., consisting of J. W. Wells and N. Wells, commenced doing a general mercantile business at Decatur City, Iowa, in the year 1894. The business was continued until July, 1895, when J. W. Wells disposed of the stock of merchandise to one E. W. Townsend. In February, 1895, the plaintiff sold and delivered to J. W. Wells & Co. merchandise to the amount of six hundred and eighty-four dollars. Judgment for that amount and costs was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, and against J. W. Wells & Co. and the members of that firm, in Novemher, 1895, and is wholly unpaid. The firm and its members are now, and were when they closed business insolvent. In exchange for the merchandise, Townsend executed to the defendant, who is the wife of J. W. Wells, a deed for one hundred and ninety acres of land, subject to mortgages thereon to the amount of one thousand and three hundred dollars. At the same time, the defendant received from her husband a certificate of deposit for nine hundred and seventy-one dollars. The plaintiff claims that the conveyance of the land and the delivery of the certificate of deposit to Mrs. Wells were fraudulent, and by this action seeks to subject the land and the money represented by the certificate to the payment of the judgment. Mrs. Wells claims they were transferred to her without fraud, in payment of a debt which her husband was owing to her.
2 The notes for one thousand and eight hundred dollars, which formed a part of the consideration for the sale of the land in 1894, were taken in the name of J. W. Wells, for convenience in disposing of them; but the plaintiff was not in any manner misled by that fact. Other facts are relied upon as tending to show that the land sold really'belonged to the husband, but the evidence satisfies us that the two hundred acres in question were owned by the wife, and that his creditors had no rights which they could have enforced against it.
3 Nothing is claimed in appellant’s argument in chief on account of the forty-eight-acre tract conveyed, which was owned by her husband and Pray; and, although it is referred to in the reply, the plaintiff is not entitled to have any special consideration given it. The evidence does not show, and we do not understand the plaintiff to contend, that the interest claimed by the defendant in the two hundred acres was not worth what she received for it. It is insisted, however, that the land conveyed to her by Townsend in July, 1895, and the certificate of deposit, were worth more than the amount of the note made to her by her husband. The certificate of deposit was used in paying the debts of her husband. The testimony as to the value of the land is conflicting; but we- are satisfied that its value, after deducting therefrom the mortgages upon it, was much less than two
4 II. The claim of the plaintiff is based upon a debt contracted by the firm of J. W. Wells & .Co., and it is claimed that the note of Wells to his wife was paid with the proceeds of partnership property, upon which the creditors of the partnership had claims paramount to the right of the wife to receive the proceeds in payment of the note, and that the consent of the retiring partner to the payment of the note with the proceeds of the sale has not been shown. It appears from the evidence that, before the stock of merchandise was traded to Townsend, the partnership was dissolved, and thereafter the stock was owned, and the business was conducted, by J. W. Wells. ITe had the right to prefer his wife to other creditors, and therefore the transfer of the land and certificate to her in payment of the note was in fact valid. But it is insisted that the petition alleges, and the answer admits, that the firm of J". W. Wells & Co. continued in business until July, 1895, and traded the stock to Townsend. That is true, but the answer also alleges that the stock was sold by J. W. Wells. Under ordinary circumstances, this conflict in the averments of the answer would be resolved in favor of the plaintiff; but a careful examination of the entire record satisfies us that the plaintiff did not in any manner assail in the district court the transfer of the property in question, on the ground that it was the proceeds of partnership property, and could not be used to pay the debt of one of the partners without the consent of the other. There is not the slightest indication that any claim of that kind was made in the district court. On the contrary, the plaintiff presented its case upon the theory that the transaction was fraudulent, because made without a legal consideration, and to defraud the creditors of J. W. Wells & Co. That a ground for relief cannot be urged for the first time in this court is well settled. It is also settled in this state thaf partnership property may he used, with the