177 Mass. 257 | Mass. | 1901
This is an action brought by the assignees in insolvency of the Warwick Cycle Manufacturing Company to recover $10,000 paid by the company to the defendant on November 13,1897, as an unlawful preference. The facts are in controversy but the following statement is warranted by the evidence.
In November, 1897, the company’s assets were not enough to pay its debts. The annual meeting of the company was on the 6th. Before that date Very, the treasurér, had changed valuations in the statement of assets and had included worthless accounts so as to make the company appear solvent at the meeting, but at the meeting Bannigan, a stockholder and a creditor of the company for a large sum, stated that the capital was impaired, and called for a committee to appoint a person to audit the books and an auditor was appointed. Very knew this and knew that the company had lost $60,000 in the last business year. He also had been notified in his capacity of the company’s representative that Bannigan would not renew notes of
One Bill, the president of the defendant bank, was present at the meeting and, it may be inferred, heard what was said at it. He knew, by his own admission, that the debts of the company exceeded its capital. There was also present one Russell, who was the president of the cycle company and a director of the defendant bank, and who along with Very was an indorser of notes of the company held by the bank. On November 12, the bank president’s son, who was a director of the cycle company, resigned his office with the knowledge of his father, and it hardly would be a strained inference that he did so fearing the personal liability of directors in the situation in which he found himself, and that his father supposed that to be his motive. He seems to have been on confidential terms with his father and interested in the bank, in which he became a director soon after.
In this state of things, the representatives of the company and the bank having the knowledge which we have stated, and the auditor having gone to work upon the books, Very and Russell made a large sale, it would seem of pretty much all the wheels which they could scrape together from the company’s own place and from distant cities. On the evidence it might be found that the price was low. Before the transaction was completed checks were received for part of the price, to the amount of $10,000. These checks were not deposited in the usual way, always adopted by the company theretofore, but were transferred to the bank to be credited on the notes held by it, although none of those notes were due, or would fall due until after the above mentioned notes for $50,000 and $25,000 held by Bannigan and other notes due to him and to others. They were so credited by the defendant’s cashier on a note indorsed by Russell and Very, and no rebate of interest'ever was allowed for the prepayment. The company never had anticipated payment of its notes before. The company’s bookkeeper was not notified of the sale
The company went into insolvency on February 26, 1898, in consequence of a suit and attachment by Bannigan. When demand was made by the assignees for repayment the president and cashier respectively said that they had accepted the payment under advice of counsel. Taking all the facts, it is a mild conclusion to say that the bank had notice of the condition of the cycle company, and that the manifestly necessary result of the large payment made to the bank would be to give it a preference. There is at least a plausible argument that a preference actually was intended by all parties concerned in the transaction.
The case was tried by a judge without a jury, and he considered that the allegations of the declaration were proved, and found for the plaintiffs. The finding would have been justified by the evidence properly admitted, if every correct ruling that could have been asked for by the defendant had been given. Under such circumstances we are not disposed to deal very critically with matters of detail.
We have scrutinized every exception that was taken to the admission of evidence, but we do not think it necessary or advisable now to go over them one by one. A large part of them may be disposed of at once by saying that in a case like this there are two things to be proved, on the one hand the condition and intent of the debtor, on the other the reasonable cause to believe etc. on the part of the creditor. The former may be proved by facts of which the creditor had no knowledge if the creditor’s cause to believe can be shown from any other source. Therefore the actual state of the company’s assets, Very’s knowledge concerning them, and his directions as to the conduct in the management of the cycle company with regard to this matter, whether known to the defendant or not, were admissible to prove the company’s insolvency and its intent. The fact that no rebate was allowed for the prepayment, although this did not
So again the conduct of the company in making the sale, although a step anterior to the payment to which the bank ivas a party, properly was allowed to be proved as the first step in a scheme of the company to accomplish the desired result by that means. So all conversations of Very before the payment which threw light on his intent while he was one of those who acted for the cycle company were admissible on the principle which we have stated. There is only one matter on which the judge made a slip. A conversation between Very and the bookkeeper was admitted which took place after the insolvency. This was excepted to. But as pretty much everything was excepted to before it went in, and as the defence was conducted in the manner commented upon heretofore in Commonwealth v. Warner, 173 Mass. 541, 548, we consider that the defendant fairly might be required to call attention to the ground that this was subsequent to the preference, in order to warn the judge that this was something more than part of a general policy of obstruction. This was not done with sufficient clearness, if at all. The judge showed by an express statement at another point of the trial that he had the true rule in mind, and that he did not regard Very’s talk after the payment as evidence, so that it fairly may be assumed that he acted on that rule throughout. Furthermore, the evidence was of the most trifling importance, being only that the bookkeeper said that he thought the wheels were sold at a low figure and that the sale would have demoralized the legitimate trade, and that Very replied that he did not approve of it, that it was done by Russell and Bill. Of course the element of hearsay in Very’s talk was not called for as such and was not taken as tending to prove the facts reported. We are of opinion that justice does not require a new trial on this ground.
Only one other matter of evidence requires specific mention.
We come now to the rulings asked. As to these we must remember that the judge tried the case without a jury and that he found the averments of the declaration proved, and that it is not only possible but probable that he laid some of the requests aside as immaterial to his view of the facts. Nevertheless each must be considered fairly. We only regret that he did not explain the grounds of his action in the bill of exceptions. If he had done so, probably our labors would have been lightened. The first, second, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth requests have been disposed of by our statement of the case. The third and fourth were attempts to require a ruling on a particular item, or, so to speak, stone in an arch of proof. To this the defendant was not entitled. If the evidence as a whole so strengthens each part by the bearing of all the rest upon it that the effect of each part is bound up with the effect of the whole, the judge cannot be required to take up the items separately and declare them inadequate as if they stood alone. See Commonwealth v. Williams,
The fifth request embodies the rule seemingly implied by Stevens v. Blanchard, 3 Cush. 169. It seems to us that the decision in that case did not sufficiently distinguish between the payment of a secured debt which releases property of the debtor from a lien of equal amount, and a payment where the release of the security does not increase his assets. We cannot but think that the question of preference ought to be determined chiefly by its effect on the assets of the debtor rather than by its effect on the position of the creditor. The proposition as stated by the Supreme Court of the United States is that the debtor’s “ dealing will stand if it leave his estate in as good plight and condition as previously.” Cook v. Tullis, 18 Wall. 332, 340. Stewart v. Platt, 101 U. S. 731, 743. “ The reason is, that the exchange takes nothing away from the other creditors.” Sawyer v. Turpin, 91 U. S. 114, 121. Forbes v. Howe, 102 Mass. 427, 430, 433, The objection to a preference is "stated in the same way by this court in a case later than Stevens v. Blanchard. The law “ forbids, therefore, the payment of one creditor, because it prevents such equal distribution ; such is not the effect of a sale of property, for an adequate consideration, or the borrowing of moneys and giving security therefor, in good faith and with no intent to defraud. These acts do not diminish the fund to be distributed, or create inequality.” Williams v. Coggeshall, 11 Cush. 442, 447. The payment of a debt secured only by the personal undertakings of others, although it may not create inequality does diminish the fund to be distributed. It may appear in such a case as matter of fact that the intent of the insolvent is to prefer the person collaterally liable and not the holder of the security, and that, coupled with the fact that the payment was made to the guarantor, not to the holder, was the ground of decision in Abbott v. Pomfret, 1 Bing. N. C. 462, relied on in Stevens v. Blanchard. But that is excluded in the present case by the findings of the judge. The other case cited, Thompson v. Beatson, 7 Moore, 548, was payment of a debt secured by a lien on ship’s papers, the bankrupt’s property, and Mr. Justice Park said: “If the ship’s papers were of no use or value to the bankrupt, it would be a different question.” We
The ninth and thirteenth requests are met by the finding that the averments of the declaration were proved. It is found that the cycle company intended to prefer the defendant, and therefore a ruling that such intent was necessary or that a different intent would not be enough was superfluous. The presence of a self-regarding motive in Russell and Very is consistent with an intent to prefer the bank, and if not, would have been excluded by the finding.
As to the fourteenth and fifteenth requests, the claim was allowed on the same day that the assignees were appointed — not improbably before their appointment. Without further evidence it cannot be considered that they have ratified or estopped themselves from disaffirming the preference by paying dividends upon the claim. So far as has been pointed out to us, they have not lost their right to have the claim expunged. The allowance of the claim at that stage implies what is obvious, that the reason for disputing it was not apparent and was not passed upon, (Pub. Sts. c. 157, § 82,) and that therefore the allowance was not an adjudication upon the matter but simply an ex parte proceeding subject to a motion to expunge at a later date if the assignees when appointed should find ground for it. Assuming that such an ex parte allowance is a judgment, it does not purport to extend so far as to determine the collateral question of preference. Pub. Sts. c. 157, §§ 32, 33. This limitation of its effect might be conceded without touching the point upon which. there was a difference of opinion in Nashua & Lowell Railroad v. Boston & Lowell Railroad, 164 Mass. 222, 226. See further Thomas v. Griffith, 2 De G., F. & J. 555. The point was raised in Stevens v. Blanchard, 3 Cush. 169, but seems to have been abandoned by the eminent counsel for the defendant, or to have been disregarded by the court.
There remain for consideration the sixth, seventh, and eighth requests. With regard to these we cannot help suspecting that if the judge had explained his action it might appear that it was justified by his view of the facts, but we do not feel warranted in assuming it to have been so in the absence of explanation. If the eighth had stood alone, the refusal of that perhaps might