124 Minn. 112 | Minn. | 1913
The defendants E. O. Lee and W. B. Lee appeal from an order •denying their motion to dissolve a writ of attachment issued under R. L. 1905, § 4216, (G. S. 1913, § 7846). The ground of the writ was their disposition of their property with intent to delay and de•fraud their creditors.
Abbreviating the facts and omitting those not essential to the .application of the controlling principle of law and stating them favorably to the contention of the plaintiff, the situation is about this: ■On April 5, 1913, when the attachment issued, the Lees through an assignment from Hattie L. Ross, their sister, had a contract with one Holte for the purchase of a quarter section in Polk county. Some ■payments had been made, the Lees were in possession, and they were the equitable owners. Holte’s claim was $4,725. The Lees pro
It is upon this contemplated payment to Mrs. Ross that the plaintiff rests its right to an attachment.
The transaction outlined amounts to nothing more than a preferential payment.
The transfer with intent to delay or defraud creditors contemplated by the attachment statute is a transfer fraudulent as to creditors at common law, or under statute 13 Eliz.,. or under our statute, R. L. 1905, §§ 3495-3504, (G. S. 1913, §§ 7010-7019). Preferential payments and transfers are void only when an insolvent or bankrupt law makes them so, and then only in aid of an insolvent or bankruptcy proceeding. Smith v. Deidrick, 30 Minn. 60, 14 N. W. 262; Berry v. O’Connor, 33 Minn. 29, 21 N. W. 840; Mackellar v. Pillsbury, 48 Minn. 396, 51 N. W. 222; Dyson v. St. Paul Nat. Bank, 74 Minn. 439, 77 N. W. 236, 73 Am. St. 358.
We do not mean to say that a transfer which works a preference may not at the same time be actually fraudulent as to creditors. It may be; and a preferential transfer may be avoided because of actual fraud inhering in it though not avoidable as a preference, or because of such fraud it may be the basis of an attachment. Means v. Dowd, 128 U. S. 273, 9 Sup. Ct. 65, 32 L. ed. 429; Hobbs v. Greenfield, 103 Ga. 1, 30 S. E. 257; Holt Mnfg. Co. v. Thomas, 69 Wash. 488, 125 Pac. 772. Such a situation was in mind in First Nat. Bank v. Anderson, 101 Minn. 107, 111 N. W. 947, where an attachment was sustained because lurking in a preferential transfer was found an intent to delay and defraud creditors. Where there is a simple preference, and nothing more, a preferential transfer or payment does not sustain an attachment. Campbell v. Warner, 22 Kan. 604; John
Order reversed.