264 S.W. 192 | Tex. App. | 1924
Appellee objects to the consideration by this court of the statement of facts in this case because the original statement of facts was not sent up with the record. What purports to be a complete statement of facts, agreed to by counsel for both appellant and appellee, and approved by the judge of the court in which the case was tried, is copied in the transcript. The transcript was filed in this court on December 17, 1923. No motion to strike the statement of facts from the transcript was filed. Appellee's complaint at the manner in which appellant attempted to bring the facts proved on the trial before this court in this appeal is contained in his brief, which was filed only a few days before the submission of the case, and called to the attention of the court for the first time at such submission, which occurred on April 10, 1924. The failure of appellee to move to strike the statement of facts from the transcript or to interpose any objection whatever to the consideration of such statement prior to submission of the case should be held a waiver of any complaint on the grounds asserted. Rule 8 of the Courts of Civil Appeals; Royal Ins. Co. v. Texas G. Ry. Co.,
Appellant requested the court to instruct the jury peremptorily to return a verdict in its favor. The refusal of such instruction is assigned as error. Appellant contends that the evidence was insufficient to authorize the submission of the case to the jury. Appellee sued in this case to recover payments made on an account owed by the bankrupt to appellant. Such payments were admittedly made within four months immediately preceding the filing of the petition by said Orbeck to be adjudged a bankrupt. The validity of said account was not disputed. The law presumes that payments made on a valid account owed by the bankrupt are legal. The burden was therefore on appellee in this case to overcome such presumption and to establish the essential elements of a voidable preference. He was required in order to recover to prove the insolvency of Orbeck, the bankrupt, at the time such payments were made; the existence at that time of other creditors of the same class as appellant; that the result of such payment would be to give such other creditors a lesser percentage of their debts than appellant received by such payments; and that appellant then had reasonable cause to believe that the receipt of such payments would result in such preference. National Bankrupt Act, § 60, 2 Collier on Bankruptcy (13th Ed.) pp. 1327-1330, and authorities there cited.
Section 1, subd. 15, of said Bankrupt Act (section 9585), provides that a person shall be deemed insolvent within the provisions of said act whenever the aggregate of his property shall not at a fair valuation be sufficient in amount to pay his debts. Such statutory definition does not exclude exempt property, and the value of such property should be considered in determining the issue of insolvency in a suit to recover preferences. Collier on Bankruptcy (13th Ed.) p. 1250; Id. pp. 20, 21.
Appellee proved that the bankrupt owned a farm of 195 acres, some live stock, and some farming implements. The value of such property was not testified to by any witness. The bankrupt testified as a witness for appellant. He testified that he was married, and had a family. On cross-examination he testified that he owed at or about the time of the payments sued for nearly $10,000 and that he could not have then paid his debts without selling his farm. There was testimony that the bankrupt resided on said farm. Several of the witnesses testified that in their opinion the bankrupt was insolvent at the time of such payments, but none of them attempted to qualify as to the value of his property or claimed to be acquainted with the amount of his indebtedness. Such testimony from appellee's witnesses was introduced before the bankrupt took the stand and testified to the amount of his indebtedness. Several witnesses testified that the bankrupt owed them money on notes and otherwise, and that they had never received any payment thereon. Apparently to supply deficiencies in the testimony introduced, appellee, over the objection of appellant, introduced in evidence the original petition and schedules filed by the bankrupt in the District Court of the United States at Waco. Such schedules show that the bankrupt listed debts amounting to $9,899, and that he valued his entire property at $8,690, and that he claimed practically all of the same as exempt. Said petition and schedules were not admissible in evidence against appellant to supply any deficiency in appellee's proof on such issue. *194
The statements of fact made therein were as to appellant the ex parte declarations of the bankrupt made long after the transactions at issue in this case. 7 C.J. pp. 271, 272, § 437; Simpson v Carlton, 1 Allen (Mass.) 109, 79 Am.Dec. 707, 711, 712; Batchelder v. Home Nat. Bank,
Upon another trial, the issue of insolvency should be determined from competent evidence, according to the rule announced in the authorities above cited. Whether the payments sought to be recovered operated as a preference, and whether appellant had reasonable cause to believe they would effect a preference, are issues to be determined from the evidence submitted at such trial concerning the financial condition of the bankrupt at the time each payment was made. National Bankrupt Act, sec. 60b, 2nd Collier on Bankruptcy, pp. 1288-1295; Hicks v. Moore, (C.C.A.) 261 F. 773, 775; Brittain Dry Goods Co. v. Bertenshaw,
The copies of the decrees of the bankrupt court adjudicating Arne Orbeck a bankrupt and reciting the appointment and qualification of appellee as trustee of his estate in bankruptcy, certified by the referee, were properly admitted in evidence. They were both decrees made by the referee himself, and are made admissible in evidence by the provisions of subdivision (d) of section 21 of said Bankrupt Act (U.S. Comp.St. § 9605). 22 C.J. 843; Duncan v. Watson,
Appellee objected to the consideration of every proposition submitted in appellant's brief on the ground that the rules of court had been violated in the manner in which the same was presented. We recognize that the amended rules for the preparation of briefs are still comparatively new, and feel that indulgence should be shown when it appears that failure to comply with the provisions of such rules has resulted from oversight or misconstruction of their provisions. We feel, however, that we should call special attention to rule 31 for the preparation of briefs, which reads as follows:
"After the propositions upon which the appeal is rested the brief shall contain, addressed respectively to the several propositions or points presented, such argument or discussion as is desired, with a reference to the authorities relied on, and a clear and accurate statement of the record bearing upon the respective propositions, with a reference to the pages of the record. Where the error relates to the charge of the court or special charges given or refused, the part of the charge complained of, or the special charges under discussion, shall be set out in full. Where the error relates to the admission or rejection of evidence there shall be quoted the full substance of the evidence admitted or rejected. To avoid unnecessary repetition, it shall be permissible for the brief of the argument to contain the necessary statement from the record, but such statement shall be correlated entire and distinct, and so presented as to enable the court to readily consult it. If the statement from the record thus made is not distinctly challenged by the opposing party, it may be accepted by the court as correct. If no argument is presented, the statement from the record shall nevertheless be given."
There should be a substantial compliance with the provisions of this rule in the preparation of every brief.
The other matters complained of in this appeal will probably not arise on another trial. The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded.