DocketNumber: No. 13682
Citation Numbers: 94 Wash. 250, 161 P. 1189
Judges: Morris, Mount
Filed Date: 1/11/1917
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This action was brought to subject certain real estate, held in the name of Alaska & Yakima Investment Company, in the county of Yakima, to the satisfaction of a judgment obtained by the plaintiffs against Belinda A. Carbonneau. Upon issues joined, the case was tried to the court without a jury. At the conclusion of a lengthy trial, the court decided that the property in question was not the property of Belinda A. Carbonneau, and that she had no interest therein, but was the property of the Alaska & Yakima Investment Company, a corporation, and that the money which purchased the real property belonged to immediate relatives of Mrs. Carbonneau, and for that reason dismissed the action. The plaintiffs have appealed from the order of dismissal.
The controlling question in the case is whether the property is really the property of Mrs. Carbonneau, and was by her put into the name of the corporation, of which her immediate relatives were the stockholders, for the purpose of defrauding her creditors. This, of course, is purely a question of fact, and the burden of proof rests upon the appellants. The writer of this opinion has, with care, read the lengthy abstract of the evidence, and is not satisfied therefrom that the trial court was wrong in his conclusions.
We shall not discuss the evidence. To do so would necessitate a lengthy and involved opinion, and, as said by the trial court, such opinion “could be, at most ... an argument in vindication of the views entertained,” and would not declare or define any rule of law. The appellants argue that, because of the many improbabilities, misstatements, and contradictions of the witnesses who testified in behalf of the respondents, the trial court was not justified in basing a conclusion upon their testimony. An examination of the record shows that there were many contradictions, many improbable statements, and many imperfections in the testimony of respondents’ witnesses, but it also shows that the occurrences about which they testified had taken place from eight to ten
“It must be borne in mind that there is a presumption of honesty and good faith that prevails in favor of all ordinary business transactions; that fraud is never presumed, but must be established by the party alleging it. Where the good faith of a conveyance is assailed, it is not enough that the evidence may cause a suspicion as to its good faith. The evidence must be clear and satisfactory, and such as convinces the mind that the conveyance is in reality fraudulent.”
Upon the record in this case, we are not satisfied that the trial court was wrong in his conclusions, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.
Parker, Holcomb, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.