Breslauer v. Geilfuss

65 Wis. 377 | Wis. | 1886

Tayloe, J.

On these appeals tbe learned counsel for tbe appellants allege as errors, (1) that tbe county court had no jurisdiction of these proceedings in favor of tbe creditors of Max Meissner who had not, at the time of presenting their petitions, obtained final judgments on their claims against the debtor, Meissner; and (2) that the finding of the jury in the case of Bertha Meissner, and 'the finding of the court in the case of Joseph Breslauer, are not supported by the evidence.

The first objection to the proceedings, holds good as to part only of the claim of Geilfuss, receiver, as his petition shows that he had obtained judgment on one of his claims against Max Meissner before he presented his petition asking the court to intervene in his behalf. As to the petitioner Gore, no judgment had been obtained in his favor when he presented his petition. That fact appeared on the face of the petition; and, as a matter of practice, the objection should have been taken in limine, and made a ground of objection to awarding issues upon his petition. No such objection was taken, and apparently the issues were awarded without objection on the part of the appellants in either case. In both cases the appellants admit in their affidavits, made in reply to the petitions of Gore and Geilfuss, that the actions had been commenced and attachments issued and levied as stated in the petition. They make no issue that the claims of the petitioners are not just and of the full amount stated in their petitions, and assert the justice of their own' claims and judgments, and their right to the proceeds of the sale on the executions issuéd thereon to- the amount of their judgments. The only issues ' named By the allegations of the petitioners and the affidavits of the appellants are upon the question of the alleged fraudulent character of their judgments, as against the petitioners. As the final judgment in these proceedings was not entered until after final judgments had been rendered *384in favor of the petitioners in the actions commenced, hy attachments, we should, were it necessary to support these proceedings, be inclined to hold that the appellants had waived the question of the right of the county court to entertain these proceedings, by not objecting to the award of the issues therein. See Peck v. School District, 21 Wis. 517, 521; Van Cott v. Sup'rs Milwaukee Co. 18 Wis. 247, 250, 251. But as this court has decided in the case of Nassauer v. Techner, post, p. 388 (in which the opinion is. filed at the same time as the opinion in this case), that a creditor who has attached the property of his debtor, upon a writ of attachment, before judgment, may intervene for the purpose of preventing the sheriff from paying over the proceeds of a sale upon an execution against his debtor, issued upon a previous judgment which is alleged to be fraudulent and void as to the intervening attachment creditor, it is unnecessary to discuss that question in these cases; and we refer to that opinion for the reasons for holding that the court had jurisdiction of the proceedings in these cases.

Upon the point that the verdict of the jury and the finding of the court that the judgments of Joseph Breslauer and Bertha Meissner were fraudulent and void as to the petitioning creditors are not sustained by the evidence, we cannot agree with the learned counsel for the appellants. While it is an axiom in the law that fraud will not be presumed in the absence of evidence, yet it is equally well settled that it may be proved by circumstantial evidence, as the highest crimes may be so proved.

In the case of Joseph Breslauer it appears to us that the facts and circumstances admitted by Breslauer himself are such as tend strongly to prove the fraudulent nature of his claim. He was and is the brother-in-law of Max Meissner. He testified that the claim upon which his judgment was rendered is for money borrowed before Meissner married his sister, in December, 1881; yet he says he took no note *385for it, nor made any memorandum of the amount lent to him, in any way or manner; and Max Meissner testifies that, although he kept account books at the time, in which he entered all moneys borrowed by him of any one, he does not produce the books on the trial, nor does he satisfactorily account for them. In addition to this, Max failed in business in January, 1882, shortly after his marriage, and made an assignment for the benefit of his creditors, and in his schedule of creditors, made and,sworn to at that time, he puts down Joseph Breslauer as his creditor for $1,500. Shortly after his failure Max compromised with his’ creditors for fifty cents on the dollar, and Joseph Breslauer agrees to the compromise with the other creditors, and signs a receipt in full for his claim for $1,500. He and Max both testify that he was paid nothing on his claim of $1,500, and that no indorsed note was given to him, as was given to the other creditors for their claims. Breslauer testifies that, shortly after the compromise, he and Max had a talk about his $1,500 claim, and he 'told Meissner that he would make a present to Max’s wife of $500 of the claim, and the $1,000 he (Max) should pay. Ho -memorandum of this agreement was made by either party, and nothing more was said about it afterwards, until 'about the time the judgment notes were given. Then Max came to him, and told him he could not go on any further, and thought it best to give him the judgment note for the $1,000 so as to secure him his pay, and thereupon the note was given and judgment entered thereon.

This evidence certainly does not show a state of affairs which would be likely to take place between business men, and does not satisfy the mind that there was an honest debt due from Max Meissner to Breslauer at the time he gave the note upon which judgment was confessed. It leaves the case open for legitimate inferences, and we think either a court or jury might reasonably infer that the whole trans*386action was an attempt, on the part of Max and Breslauer, to prevent the known and honest creditors of Max from appropriating his property to the payment of their debts, and preserve the same for the use of Max Meissner. The transaction between them on the failure1 in 1882, when it was claimed by both that- Breslauer was a creditor to the amount of $1,500, leads strongly to such inference. He then used his claim to assist in the compromise, as the result shows, not to get his pay on the claim, as he released his claim when the compi’omise was effected (if he ever had one), and permitted Max to resume possession of the property without enforcing Ms claim or even taking any evidence of the existence thereof. The court might well infer that the taking the note and judgment was only another attempt to keep the property for the use of Max Meissner.

The claim of Bertha Meissner, the wife of Max, rests upon evidence of a still more doubtful character. It is said the $2,000 for which her note and judgment were given was for money she loaned her husband in May or June, 1881, several months before her marriage. It is not claimed that she let her husband have any of this money, but that her father let him have the amount, the father to have the money returned to him out of money then deposited in the bank to her credit, which it was intended should be her marriage portion. There is proof that the father let Max have some money, at the time stated, to buy out his former partner, and that it was given to him at the request of Bertha, and that afterwards, in July, 1881, the father drew from the bank the money deposited to Bertha’s credit, and retained the same. No writing of any kind was given by Max to his wife, or to the father, for this money; nor, as appears from the evidence, was there any entry made of the transaction by any of the parties. When Max failed, in January, 1882, shortly after his marriage, and when he made the assignment and a schedule of his creditors under *387oath, be made no mention of tbe fact that bis wife was bis creditor for tbe $2,000 wbieb it is now claimed sbe lent bim only a few months before; and, so far as appears, sbe made no claim then that sbe was a creditor, and no claim was in fact ever made by her until Max informed her, on tbe day tbe judgment note was given for tbe $2,000, that be, could not go on with bis business further, and then proposed to give her such note to secure her tbe $2,000 out of bis property.

In a contest between tbe creditors of tbe husband and tbe wife, transactions between her and her husband are to be scrutinized closely. In Hoxie v. Price, 31 Wis. 82, 86, this court said: “ This court has held that when tbe wife has a separate estate sbe may deal with her husband, may loan bim money, and take a transfer of property from bim in payment thereof; and sbe doubtless might buy property of bim when tbe transaction is fair and honest, and where it appears that tbe husband does not convey it to her merely for tbe purpose of covering it 'up and placing it beyond tbe reach of^ bis creditors. But on account of tbe great facilities which tbe marriage relation affords for tbe commission of fraud, these transactions between husband and wife should be closely examined and scrutinized to see that they are fair and honest, and not merely contrivances resorted to for tbe purpose of placing tbe husband’s property beyond the reach of bis creditors. This is obviously tbe only safe rule to be adopted when we come to examine these business transactions and transfers of property from tbe husband to tbe wife.” See, also, Horton v. Dewey, 53 Wis. 410, 414; Fisher v. Shelver, 53 Wis. 498, 501; Semmens v. Walters, 55 Wis. 675, 684.

Tbe evidence in this case, tested by tbe rule laid down in the above cases, does not so clearly establish the-good faith and Iona fldes of tbe transaction between Max Meissner and bis'wife, Bertha, as would justify this court in setting *388aside the finding of the jury, approved by the learned county judge, that the note and judgment thereon in favor of Bertha Meissner is fraudulent and void as to the creditors of her husband.

If it should be admitted that there is sufficient evidence in both cases to show an actual indebtedness of Max Meiss-ner to Joseph Breslauer and Bertha, his wife, at the time he gave the notes upon which the judgments were entered, still we think the findings might be sustained on the ground that they were given for the purpose of hindering and delaying the other creditors, and keeping the property for the use and benefit of Max Meissner.

By the Oowrt.— The order and judgment of the county court, appealed from in each of said cases, is affirmed, and the cases are remitted for further proceedings.