153 F. 74 | 6th Cir. | 1907
after making the foregoing statement of the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
1. There was no evidence tending to support the alleged preference by the mortgage to the Citizens’ Savings Bank. That mortgage was made for. a present consideration and in good faith, and no question has been made by counsel here as to that transaction.
2. Neither is it insisted that the conveyance to Mrs. Mary Bosh was either fraudulent or a preference. Counsel before the jury substantially conceded this. Neither is it contended that the conveyance to William D. Parker was a preference. Meier owed nothing to Parker, and the conveyance to him was to protect him as surety upon certain loans which Meier desired to make.
3. One of the issues submitted to the jury was as to whether the petitioners were creditors of Meier. There was evidence, tending to show that the larger part of the debt claimed by them originated in the sale of territorial rights for the sale of “Acme Bood.” The .defense was that the food was a humbug, and the contract of sale obtained through fraud and misrepresentation. Meier seems to have been ignorant and credulous, and claimed strenuously that he did not know he was giving notes or entering into any arrangement other than a mere agency. Against this defense there was much positive evidence sustaining the good faith of the contract and the value of the “Acme Food.” While the general finding may have been upon the ground that petitioners had not shown a good and
4. Neither can we assume that, the verdict was rested upon the illegality of the contract, because made by a corporation of another state and within the state of Michigan without having complied with the law of the state requiring the filing of the charter before doing business, nor because the defendant may have been regarded as a farmer and not amenable to such a proceeding. No such question was put in issue, and no instruction was given the jury upon either question.
5. The other issues which were submitted to the jury were, first, whether the conveyances made by Meier, mentioned as acts of bankruptcy in the petition, other than those to Mary Losh and Citizens’ Savings Bank, were made with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of Meier;' and, second, if so, has the defendant shown that when the petition was filed he was solvent, excluding any property so fraudulently conveyed? and, finally, if such convej'-ances were not fraudulent in law or fact, were they preferences within the mean-' ing of the bankrupt law? After instructing the jury that it was “an act of bankruptcy for any person to convey any part of his property with intent to delay, hinder, or defraud his creditors or any of them,” the court then said that by another provision of the law the defendant might establish as a defense against such an act of bankruptcy his solvency when the petition was filed. Upon this aspect of the case, assuming the fraudulent character of the conveyances to have been shown, the'court said to the jury:
“With, regard to the burden of proof in this matter as to solvency: The burden of .proof is upon the respondent. That is to say, if a conveyance is made with the intent to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors, if the aggregate of his property, exclusive of that conveyance, was sufficient to meet his indebtedness, then the petition, the law says, must be dismissed, because the man has not cheated his creditors, and they cannot complain of the transfer, so long as there remain in his hands to be reached by the processes of the law sufficient to pay his debts, therefore, if he had such an amount of property, the petition should be dismissed, because he was solvent.”
By subdivision 1 of section 3 of the bankrupt act, of July 1, 1898 (30 Stat. 546, c'. 541 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3422]), it is made an act of bankruptcy when a person has “conveyed, transferred, concealed or removed or permitted to be concealed or removed, any part of his property with intent to hinder, delay or defraud his creditors, or any of them.”
0In Lansing Boiler Works v. Ryerson, 63 C. C. A.- 253, 128 Fed. 701, Judge Severens, speaking for this court, said, that:
. “The language of subsection 1 of section 3 is the familiar language of statutes against conveyances fraudulent as against creditors, and we think there can be no doubt that Congress intended the words employed should have the same construction and.effect as have for. a long period of time been attributed to-those words?’
“It shall be a complete defense to any proceedings in bankruptcy instituted under the first subdivision of this section to allege and prove that the party proceeded against was not insolvent as defined in this Act at the time of the filing of tlio petition against him, and if solvency at such date is proved by the alleged bankrupt thie proceedings shall be dismissed. * * * ”
Insolvency, as defined in the act, exists “whenever the aggregate of his property, exclusive of any property which he may have conveyed, transferred, concealed or removed, or permitted to be concealed or removed, with intent to defraud, hinder or delay his creditors, shall not, at 'a fair valuation, be sufficient in amount to pay his debts.” -
From these provisions of the law two things are plain: First, that in making out this defense of solvency to avoid the consequences of a conveyance made in bad faith, the property thus conveyed shall not be computed in the determination of whether the aggregate of the defendant’s property at the time of the filing of the petition against him was, at a fair valuation, sufficient in amount to pay his debts; second, if the jury cannot on the evidence find such conveyance had been made with intent to defraud that all of the property of the debtor, incumbered or free, is to be taken into account in determining the question of solvency or insolvency under the second and third subdivisions of the same section. In short, solvency when the petition was filed is important only as a defense to an act of bankruptcy under subdivision 1 of section 3, and the burden of showing this is on the defendant. 2 Loveland, Bankruptcy, §§ 67, 83; West v. Lea, 174 U. S. 590, 19 Sup. Ct. 836, 43 L. Ed. 1098. If the act of bankruptcy be the giving of a preference under subdivision 2, or the permitting of a preference through a legal proceeding under subdivision 3 of the same section, there must be a state of insolvency at the time of the preference and solvency or insolvency at the time of the filing of the petition can only have a reflex importance, if any. West v. Lea, 174 U. S. 590, 19 Sup. Ct. 836, 43 L. Ed. 1098; Loveland. Bankruptcy, § 83; In re Rome Planing Mill, 96 Fed. 813. This distinction the court below had in mind and distinctly told the jury that:
’“If a conveyance is made with the intent to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors, if the aggregate of' his property, exclusive of that conveyance, was sufficient to meet his indebtedness, then the petition, the law says, shall be dismissed, because the man has not cheated his creditors, and they cannot complain of the transfer, so long as there remains in his hands to be reached by the process of the law sufficient to pay his debts.”
Not one of the several requests of plaintiff in error for special charges in relation to the effect of solvency or insolvency was rightly framed.
Request No. 2 is, in substance, that if they should find that the conveyances mentioned in the petition were made “with intent to prefer” John Losh over petitioning creditors, and the defendant was insolvent “at the time of the filing of the said petition, your verdict should be for petitioners.” As this request was based alone upon the claim that they were preferences and not mala fide, the fact of solvency at the time of filing the petition was unimportant if the de
The fifth request is placed upon the erroneous assumption that insolvency at the time of the filing of the petition affords the test as to whether a conveyance within four months was a preference..
The sixth request was in these words:
“Sixth. I charge you further with reference to ascertaining whether or not the defendant was insolvent at the time of the filing of this petition that, in determining the solvency or insolvency, you are not to take into eonsideration. the 40 acres of land which defendant transferred to John Bosh under date of November 29, 1904, and that you are not to take into consideration defendant’s interest in the 20 acres of land transferred by defendant with other grantors to Mary Bosh December 30, 1904, and that you are not to take into consideration the two village lots in New Baltimore, Mich., transferred by this defendant to William D. Parker November 29, 1904, and you are not to take into consideration the personal property transferred by bill of sale of defendant to Harry Meier under date of December 1, 1904, but, in order to believe that the defendant was solvent on the 18th of March, 1905, you must believe that defendant had sufficient property to pay all of said petitioners’ debts, together with all other obligations which defendant has admitted that he owed at the time of filing of said petition without taking into consideration any of the property above referred to, notwithstanding the fact that debtor claims-to now own real estate and the personal property above referred to.”
The conveyance to John Tosh was by warranty deed. “On consideration of one dollar and other good and valuable considerations.”' So, also, was tire deed to William D. Parker. The bill of sale to Harry Meier was of certain chattels, and was filed and recorded as a chattel mortgage. Its execution is not averred to be an act of bankruptcy in the petition." There -could be no adjudication of bankruptcy for an act of bankruptcy not averred in the petition. Toveland, Bankruptcy, § 69.
The fact of such a bill of sale as that referred to could only be looked to as reflecting upon the intent with which other conveyances, contemporary in time, were made, and as evidence upon the question, of solvency or insolvency when the petition was filed against the defendant or when the alleged preferences were given under subdivisions 2 and 3 of the third section. The request includes also a conveyance to Mary Tosh made December 30, 1904. The answer denied that this was a conveyance made mala fide or in preference, and set up that the defendant and his two sisters owned a small parcel of' land, and that Mary Tosh bought .this land outright and the defendant joined in the conveyance, the consideration being $1,000, one-third of which was paid to defendant for his undivided interest. There was-no evidence whatever tending to support the charge that this was-a sale for the purpose of hindering or- defrauding creditors, and the counsel upon the hearing below conceded that no preference was thereby given Mary Tosh; she not being a creditor. It was therefore proper that the value of’• this interest so conveyed to Mary Tosh should
There was no error in denying the sixth request. This also disposes of the exceptions taken to the admission of evidence, and the exceptions to the charge of the court in instructing the jury that it was open to the defendant to show the real purpose and intent with which the conveyances in question were made.
The court, in substance, told the jury that upon the question as to whether these conveyances constituted a preference they might estimate the value of the defendant’s equity in the property so conveyed, as well as that not conveyed, and that, if the aggregate of both.was enough to pay all his debts, they should upon this point find for the defendant. This part of the charge must be construed as necessarily resting upon the assumption that the jury should find that these conveyances were not mala fide, he having already instructed the jury that the defense of' solvency at the time of filing of the petition must be made out exclusive of property so conveyed. Thus construed, there was no error in-directing'the jury to estimate the value of the equity
The thirty-sixth exception to the charge was to this language of the court:
“The testimony of Mr. Meier is that these conveyances, although in the form of warraniy deeds, were intended by way of security, and there is no testimony to the contrary except the deeds themselves.”
But in assigning error they have included in one assignment (assignment No. 7) this and so much of the charge as dealt with the question of estimating the value of the defendant’s equity of redemption in determining solvency or insolvency at date of the conveyance. The eleventh rule (90 Fed. cxlvi, 31 C. C. A. cxlvi) of this court requires that each error intended to be assigned shall be separately and particularly set out, and, when it is to the charge, the assignment shall set out the part referred to totidem verbis. We have already ruled that this assignment, so far as it covers the question last alluded to, is not well taken. We cannot sustain a single assignment as partly good and partly bad without violating our rules. But, aside from this, the court was substantially right in saying that the testimony of Meier upon this point was uncontradicted. When the court undertook to state the evidence, it was the duty of counsel to call attention to evidence overlooked, if important, and give the court an opportunity of correcting the statement. - ¡This was not done. We see no sufficient reason for noticing this as “a plain error not assigned,” which under strong circumstances the court at its option may do under Rule 11.
All of the errors assigned have been examined. None of them, are well taken, and the judgment will be affirmed.