97 Ky. 294 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1895

JUDGE GRACE

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an. appeal by the Fulton Bank and sundry other parties, defendants in the court below, wherein a judgment was rendered in favor of the Huntington Bank and the First National. Bank of . Mayfield, setting aside divers and sundry conveyances, assignments and transfers, made by J. E. Bowers, Bowers & Boone, and by C. T. Bowers, to appellants and others, on the ground that they were severally made in contemplation of insolvency, and with a view to prefer certain creditors named in the petition. The judgment recites specifically the several transactions that it adjudges so made, and with the exception hereinafter named we think the judgment correct.

It is manifest from the great weight of the testimony in the cause, that these parties at the date of the transfers and assignment brought in question and adjudged to be within the prohibition of the act of 1856, were largely indebted far beyond any reasonable, probability of paying, and that certain of their large creditors were apprehensive of losing their debts.

Manifestly recognizing the inability of the defendants to make payment in full, and that they, mostly being on the ground and near by, were constantly urging that some arrangements be made whereby their several debts could be paid. In fact, the chief officers of the Clinton Bank participated in the transaction -whereby a sale of the dry-goods establishment, belonging to Bowers and Boone, was made, amounting to some thirteen thousand dollars, wherein and whereby some $4,200 of debts due that bank for which they were liable as endorsers was paid. This was in December, 1889. And not long after this the Fulton Bank obtained a conveyanceof a thousand-acretract of land in Wolfe county, *297to secure among other indebtedness some $2,200 due them! Divers other transactions of a similar character occurred near by the time indicated, all evidencing the alarm and uneasiness of the several creditors so secured, and all made under such circumstances as clearly brought the several transactions within both the spirit and the letter of the act of 1856, under which plaintiffs filed their suit.

It may be observed that in none of these assignments or transfers was any provision made looking to the payment or security of either of the plaintiffs, who,together, were creditors in the sum of nine thousand dollars.

The isolated matter to which we refer in the judgment as being one that is now seriously questioned is that wherein by the judgment of the court appealed from, it adjudges that the conveyance made by C. T. Bowers of date December 21, 1889, to Reid and Ringo, was made in contemplation of insolvency. And thus the court makes this the transaction and the sale of same whereon it declares all the property of C. T. Bowers to pass under the act of 1856 to his creditors. The conveyance referred to as shown by the evidence was of a house and lot at the price of $500, and which C. P. Bowers says in his evidence was conveyed by him to said parties Reid and Ringo, and to pay a pressing outstanding debt of his to said Ringo and Reid.

As to this judgment of the court appellants Ringo and Reid complain, and say that plaintiffs, in their petition, filed under the act of 1856, did not set up or attack the sale of this lot by C. T. Bowers to them at all, and this is true; while another transaction that C. T. Bowers had with the Fulton Bank on the 18th day of March, 1890, is attacked as being an act of insolvency. And this, too, is sustained by the court, yet it nowhere appears that plaintiffs ever set out either in their original or in any amended petition the *298sale of the house and lot by C. T. Bowers to Ringo and Reid, of date December 2i, 1889, as being made in contemplation of insolvency, and to secure said parties to the exclusion of their other creditors.

In our opinion, such an allegation is indispensable under the statute. It may be noted that no transaction can be made to assign and transfer the property of a debtor to axid for the benefit of his ci'editox’s, uxxless suit is filed based on that transaction, setting up the proper allegations under the statute, and filed, loo, within six months of the making of the transfer or assignmexxt. The thing done and relied upon must be set out and charged to have been done in contemplation of insolvency, and with a view to prefer one or xnore creditors to the exclusion of his (the debtor’s) other creditor’s, as well as the suit must be filed within the six months.

It is indispensable under the statute that the vendee, assignee or party receiving the benefit must be .made a party to this petition and to these allegations, that he may respond to same and make defense if he chooses so to do. Iiis property secured by regular deed of conveyance, as in this case, can not be taken from him without suit and notice». The allegation must precede the proof. Without appropriate allegation no amount of evidence can be sufficient to deprive a creditor of his deed under the statute.

True after the act of insolvency has been once established, then by operation of law all subsequent assignments and conveyances ax-e subject to control by the courts with a view of finally distrilrati'ng the estate of the debtor among all his creditors. Bxxt in this case no previous act of insolvency is charged, or shown to have been comxnitted by C. T. Bowers, and hexx.ee this conveyance is not affected under that clause of the statute.

*299While it is true that in this case the said Ringo and Reid were made defendants, yet it was to answer an allegation in the petition that the other brother, J. E. Bowers, had assigned to them certain other property mentioned, and that allegation was answered.

We do not find the deed from C. T. Bowers to Ringo and Reid in the record, nor the date of the transaction. Doubtless, however, the court correctly identifies the same as being within six months before petition filed, but the legal objection remains that that transaction had not been attacked by any creditor.

In the case of Wintersmith & Young, v. Pointer & Conway, 2 Met., 460, this court said: “A creditor who claims the benefit of this act (of 1856) must file his petition alleging the facts on which he bases his claim, within the time prescribed by the act itself. His right to treat the sale or transfer as an equitable assignment for the benefit of creditors generally, depends on the filing of a petition by himself or by some other interested person, within the time mentioned. This fact being essential to the existence of the right, must be made to appear, either by a direct allegation on the subject in the petition, or by stating therein the time the transfer was recorded, or sale made and property delivered, so that by reference to that statement, and the time the petition was filed, it shall appear to have been within the time limited.”

See also Heidrich & Co. v. Silva, 89 Ky., 426; Vinson, &c., v. McAlpin & Co., 87 Ky., 357.

It is true that plaintiffs charge in their petition that the defendants, J. E. Bowers and C. T. Bowers, had made sundry other assignments and transfers to other persons, unknown to them, all in contemplation of insolvency and within six months next before the filing of their petition. And *300.though they- call on said Bowers Brother to answer and disclose any and all such transfers, yet there was made no specific charge of the particular transaction with Ringo and Reid, which called on them to answer, such as indicated by the court in its judgment. (H. B. Claflin Co. v. Levitch, 16 Ky. Law Rep. 866.)

Wherefore it is adjudged by the court that so much of the judgment only as declares the transfer by C. T. Bowers of the house and lot to Ringo and Reid of date, December 24, 1889, to he an act of insolvency on the part of said C. T. Bowers, and that it operated to transfer all property owned by him on that date to and for the use of his creditors generally, he and the same is reversed, set aside and held for naught.

In all other respects the judgment is approved, and this cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

© 2024 Midpage AI does not provide legal advice. By using midpage, you consent to our Terms and Conditions.