109 Ky. 311 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1900
Opinion of the court by
Affirming.
On the 24th day of August, 1891, appellant, the Deposit Bank of Owensboro, Ky., instituted a suit in the Daviess Circuit Court against Fuqua & Smith, a firm composed of J. A. Fuqua and Peter F. Smith, who were engaged in the tobacco business, on a note held by it against them for $18,-209.30. No attachment was taken out by the bank at the commencement of the suit. On the 28th day of August thereafter, appellee, Hattie Smith, also instituted a suit in the Daviess Circuit Court against the same parties on two notes which aggregated at the date of the commencement of the suit $9,406.48. She alleged that these notes had been given by the defendants, Fuqua & Smith, to her deceased husband, J. II. Smith, in consideration of borrowed money, and that the defendant J. A. Fuqua had qualified as the administrator of her deceased husbañd, and that, after his appointment and qualification as administrator, he had indorsed and assigned each of said notes to her as a part of her distributable share in the estate, and that she became by virtue of this assignment the owner and holder thereof. She at the same time took out an order of general attachment against the property of each of the defendants on the ground “that they did not have property enough in the State subject to execution to satisfy her debts, and that the collection thereof would be endangered
On the 1st day of September thereafter appellant began another suit against Fuqua & Smith on two bills of exchange, each for $5,677, and on the same day filed an affidavit in its former action for an attachment on the same grounds as those relied on by appellee, and also upon the additional ground that Fuqua & Smith had made fraudulent disposition of their property. Appellant’s attachment was levied upon the same property as that of appellee. On the 7th day of September the appellant was made a defendant in the action instituted by appellee against Fuqua & Smith, and in the answer filed by them it was alleged that Fuqua & Smith were insolvent, and that the attachment of Hattie Smith was sued out by collusion between her and the defendants, who are her son and son-in-law, and resided with her, with the view of preferring Mrs. Smith to the other creditors of Fuqua & Smith, especially the appellant. They specifically aver that Peter F. Smith had suggested to his mother the suing out of the attachment, and had employed a lawyer for her to institute the suit, and had procured sureties on the attachment bond. In addition to this, appellant pleaded that the debt sued on contained usury, and controverted the ground on which appellee’s attachment was sued out. Appellee replied to this answer, denying all the material averments therein. On the 15th day of October, 1891, on the motion of appellee, a judgment was rendered in her favor against Fuqua & Smith for the amount of the notes sued on. Subsequently, on the 20th day of October, 1891, the bank filed an amended answer, in which it was alleged “that the note sued on
Upon final submission the circuit judge sustained the attachment of appellee. It is contended that the judgment was erroneous, and should be reversed: First, because of an alleged variance between appellant’s pleadings and her jmoof. It is claimed under this head that Mrs. Smith has sued on notes executed to decedent’s estate, when the proof shows that her real cause of action was for money loaned to Fuqua & 'Smith, not represented by the notes, and independent thereof. To support this contention the county court settlement made with Fuqua as administrator of J. H. Smith is relied on. J. A. Fuqua testifies in his deposition — and his statements are uncon-troverted — that the notes sued on were transferred and delivered by him, as administrator of the estate of J. H. Smith, to Mrs. Smith, as a part of her distributable interest in the estate, in January or February, 1885, and that she had been the owner and holder of them from that time, and that the payments credited on the back were not made in regular amounts as the interest became
The next ground relied on is the alleged fraudulent collusion between appellee and her son at the date of the suing out of the attachment. This is a contest for priority of attachment between appellant and appellee alone. Appellant seeks to invalidate a prior attachment of ap-pellee, in order that it may succeed under its own attachment. It is not a proceeding under the act of 1856 for the benefit of all of the creditors of Fuqua & Smith. The as-signee of Sawyer, Wallace & Co. instituted a proceeding for the benefit of all of the creditors under the act of 1856, but they appear subsequently to have abandoned this proceeding, and neither of the debtors, Fuqua, or Smith, was ever brought before the court on their cross petition. The mere filing of a petition was ineffectual for any purpose. It was necessary not only to have filed the petition within six months from the date of the alleged act of preference, but to have summonses issued against the debtors. See Bank v. Administrator, 83 Ky., 149. And their attorney has filed a brief in this court, in which he says Sawyer, Wallace & Co. have abandoned their claim, and asked to be dismissed. Under the act of 1796 to prevent fraudulent sales and conveyances, the attaching creditor was given the right to set aside a sale which was merely fraudulent, and subject the attached property to the payment of his debts; but there is nothing in this act which prevents an insolvent debtor from preferring one creditor to the exclusion, in part or in whole, of the others. This right has always existed at common law (see Millett v. Pottinger, 4 Metc., 213), and was for the first time prohibited in this State by the act of 1856, which says: “That every sale, mortgage, or assignment made by debtors, and
Another ground on which reversal is asked is that ap-pellee’s attachment fails because there is no proof that her debt would harm been endangered by delay other than that which comes from proven insolvency. Counsel for appellant argues that the opinions of this court in construing subsection- 2 of section 194 of the Civil Code are in hopeless conflict. It does not seem to us that the opinions referred to support this contention. In the well-considered case of Burdett v. Phillips, 78 Ky., 246, Judge Cofer says : “The only rational construction we are able to give this statute is that it authorizes an attachment against all of the property of the debtor not exempt from execution whenever he is without a sufficiency of property subject to execution to satisfy the debt, although he may have no design on his part to do anything that will render