199 F. 319 | N.D. Ga. | 1912
This is a case similar to that of In re Walden Bros. Clothing Company, 199 Fed. 315, just decided. The principal difference in the two cases is that in the Case of Walden Bros. Company the company mortgaged its entire stock of merchandise, as well as all its choses in action, notes, and accounts due it; in this case the bankrupt mortgaged the whole of his two stocks of merchandise in Columbus, Ga. Thweatt, the bankrupt, used all of the S6,000 received from Johnson, except a trilling amount, to pay immediately his bank and his kinsman debts due them. He left a large number of creditors, as shown by his schedule in bankruptcy, wholly unprotected and unprovided for in any way. Thweatt was clearly insolvent at the time of this transaction, and he knew — must have known — that the effect of what he was doing was to delay, if not to hinder and defraud, all his other creditors, except the two he paid. This much is perfectly clear from the evidence.
■ “Q. You knew that he [Thweatt] owed for goods? A. No, sir. Q. You did not investigate to see? A. No, sir. Q. You did not know whether it [the merchandise] was paid for or not? A. That was none of my business. Q. You did not know, and you did not care? A. No, sir.”
Johnson’s idea, apparently, was that, if the goods mortgaged were free from incumbrances and of sufficient value to make his loans secure, he could shut his eyes to everything else. In this he misapprehended the law, as I understand it. The transaction was such, it seems to me, as to put Johnson on inquiry. The undisputed facts show what that inquiry would have disclosed; that is, that it was Thweatt’s purpose to use the borrowed money to pay two creditors only in full, leaving all the others wholly unprovided for. He would have ascertained, also, that this necessarily resulted in hindering .and delaying all of Thweatt’s other creditors, except the two he intended to pay. It seems to me that only ordinary and reasonable judgment and business sense called for this inquiry. Johnson’s apparent view of the law was that if he did not know anything he could not be charged with anything, and not that there was a duty on his part to do what ordinary business judgment would require of him.
This case, also, is made under the law of the state, as was the Walden Bros. Case; and the law, as I have stated, put Johnson on reasonable inquiry, and charged him with all that that would have developed, provided, of course, that the surrounding facts and circumstances were such as to put him to this inquiry. I have already stated that they were.
My conclusion is that the referee correctly found: (1) That Thweatt was insolvent at the time the mortgage was given, and knew he was insolvent; (2) that the mortgage ,was made with the intent, certainly to delay, if not to hinder and defraud, all the other creditors, except the two he paid; (3) that the facts and circumstances surrounding the transaction were such as to put Johnson on reasonable inquir)'-, and that that inquiry would have developed the fact of insolvency, and of Thweatt’s intentions to pay the money received from Johnson to two creditors only, and thereby hinder and delay, if not actually defraud, all others. Cer
I do not believe that any actual fraud or intentional wrong is shown on the part of Mr. Johnson, and the case is determined solely on the law of the state, to which I have referred in the Walden Case. Sections 3224 and 4530, Code of Georgia 1910.
The action of the referee is approved and confirmed.