299 Mass. 360 | Mass. | 1938
This is a suit in equity to establish the indebtedness of the defendants Jacob Cohen and Ida Cohen to the plaintiff and to reach and apply in payment thereof stock in the defendant corporation owned by Jacob Cohen and now alleged to have come through fraudulent transfers into the hands of the defendant Arina Lassow. Upon this appeal by Lassow alone the question is whether she can hold as against the plaintiff the Jacob Cohen stock which was assigned to her on April 2, 1936.
Pertinent findings of the master are these: Jacob Cohen had borrowed sums aggregating $2,000 from Lassow and had given her his unsecured note therefor, which had been renewed annually. The particular note which was outstanding on April 2, 1936, when the assignment of stock was made, was surrendered and a new note was then given maturing June 30 of that year. The assignment of stock secured the new note. On June 30 six months’ interest was paid, and again a new note was given to Lassow for the $2,000 payable in one year. She retained the stock certificates. The last mentioned note is still outstanding. “There was no agreement that the assignment should secure any future or other obligation than the then existing note.” “This note was paid and extinguished by the giving of the present outstanding note on June 30, 1936.” The master expressly
Upon these findings Lassow gave “Fair consideratioti” for the stock within the meaning of those words as defined in the uniform fraudulent conveyance law, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 109A, § 3 (b). By the terms of that section an antecedent debt constitutes consideration, and there is no suggestion that the amount owed to Lassow by Jacob Cohen was disproportionately small as compared with the value of the stock. As an innocent purchaser for fair consideration, Lassow, when she received the stock, was entitled to hold it as against the plaintiff under the provisions of § 9, notwithstanding the insolvency and the fraudulent intent of her grantor. The law protected the innocent purchaser before as it has since the adoption of the uniform act. Morse v. Aldrich, 130 Mass. 578. Cohen v. Levy, 221 Mass. 336, 338, 339. Samuels v. Charles E. Fogg Co. 258 Mass. 402, 406. Harris v. Flynn, 272 Mass. 8, 13. Merchants Discount Co. v. Esther Abelson, Inc. 297 Mass. 517, 520. A mere preference is not a fraudulent conveyance. Lyon v. Wallace, 221 Mass. 351, 353. In none of the cases cited by the plaintiff was the grantee an innocent purchaser for fair consideration.
We are of the opinion that Lassow did not lose her right to hold the stock as security when she accepted the last-note for the $2,000 which Jacob Cohen owed her in place of the note which she took with the assignment. From á literal reading of one. or two sentences in the master’s report apart from the report as a whole it might seem that the parties intended to limit the collateral security of the stock to the particular note which was given at the time of the
Although the suit, in so far as it is based upon a fraudulent conveyance, fails as against the defendant Lassow, nevertheless the amended bill and the findings seem adequate to permit the plaintiff to reach and apply under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 214, § 3 (8), such interest as his debtor Jacob Cohen has in the pledged stock. Therefore paragraphs 3, 5 and 7
Ordered accordingly.