19 S.D. 514 | S.D. | 1905
This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment rendered in favor of the defendant, and from an or der overruling a motion for a'new trial. The action is one in the nature of a creditors’ bill brought by the plaintiff, as a trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of John 0. Haines, bank rupt, against the said bankrupt and John 0. Haines, a corpor-
The findings of fact are very voluminous, and we shall not attempt to give more than a summary of the same. The court finds that John O. Haines, Incorporated, has been since the 18th day of October, 1895, a corporation duly organized under the laws of this state; that said defendant John O. Haines on or about the 14th day of September, 1898, filed his voluntary petition in bankruptcy in the Western Division'of South Dakota; that plaintiff has been for more than two years past the duly appointed and qualified trustee of the estate and effects of the said defendant John C. Haines; that the defendant John 0. Haines, Incorporated, is a corporation organized by the defendant John C. Haines, May Haines, his wife, andH. C. Loveland, his mother-in-law, who: were the incorporators thereof; that, upon the organization of said incorporation, said John C. Haines was elected president and secretary thereof, and said May Haines, his-wife, vice president and treasurer, and that they have remained such
It will thus be seen that the defendant Haines executed the assignee’s bond of said Bailey in December, 1893, and that the Corporation was organized, to which said Haines conveyed ' all his property, in October, 1895; that the judgment against said Haines in the suit upon the assignee’s bond was enlered in the fall of 1897; and that in the fall of 1898, the defendant filed his petition in .bankruptcy. It therefore appears that the corporation was organized and the property conveyed to it by the defendant Haines two years or more before the judgment was ob tained against him, and that bis petition in bankruptcy was filed about three years after the organization of the corporation.
It is contended by the appellants (1) that conceding, by way of argument, that the findings of the court were sustained by the evidence, these conclusions and judgment should have been rendered in favor of the plaintiff; (2) that the transfer and conveyance of the property by the defendant Haines to the corporation was without consideration, and had the direct effect to delay, hinder, and defraud liis creditors, and is invalid without reference to the actual intent; (3) that the subsequent
Upon a careful-review of the evidence-we are satisfied that the findings of fact were fully sustained by the same, aud tha,t ■the contention of the appellant that the transfer of .the prop-' erty by the defendant Haines to the corporation was made with the actual intent to defraud his creditors is not sustained -by the evidence. It is also quite clear from the evidence that the object of defendant Haines in organizing the corporation - was for the purpose, as found by the court, of satisfying the debts outstanding against him. The defendant Haines, being somewhat embarrassed in 1895, was authorized by the Code of this state to convey his property to such creditors as he might deem proper to prefer; and, if he could more effectively accomplish that purpose by transferring the property to the corporation, it was competent for him to do so. Section 2366 of the Revised Civil Code provides: “A debtor may pay one. cred
The second contention, therefore, of the appellant, which seems to assume that the transfer was made without consideration, is clearly untenable. The capital stock of the corporation in the bands of Haines was practically of a value equivalent to the value of his stocks of merchandise, as found by the court; and we are of the opinion that the stock of the corporation, if formed in good faith, was a valid consideration for the transfer of the merchandise owned by Haines. The third proposition of the appellant, that the subsequent transfer lo Marshall Field & Co. of the stock by Haines did not validate the original transaction, is perhaps a .correct proposition, 'if the original
The contention of the appellant that there was no immediate delivery, and that the sale was not followed by an actual continued change of possession, is negatived by the findings of the court, which findings were fully sustained by the evidence. The other contentions of the appellant are clearly untenable. It is contended that the Haines Company, having sold the property and realized money therefrom, is subject to a money judgment in favor of the defrauded creditors, but there is no evidence that the corporation sold or disposed of the stock of the company. That was owned by Haines individually, and he disposed of it, as he had a right to do, in payment of his debts. With that transaction the corporation, as such, had no connection. Upon the transfers by Haines of his stock to Marshall Field & Co., that company became owner of the merchandise transferred by Haines to the corporation. It is further stated by the appellant that the organization of the corporation and transfer of the property of Haines to it were effected with an actual intent to defraud the creditors of Haines, but as we have seen, this is unsustained by the findings of the court, or, rather, the court has found that no such intent was proven on
The contention of the appellant that giving the Potter note was a sham and a fictitious proceeding is certainly not warranted by the evidence, as both Potter and Haines testified to the bona fides of that transaction. And the fact that Haines subsequently borrowed $25,000 from Marshall Field & Go. to take up that note was clearly sustained by the evidence; hence the assertion that the giving of the Potter note, its renewal by a new note, and its subsequent payment by money obtained from Marshall Field & Co., were bona fide, stands uncontra-dicted.
We have not overlooked the. authorities cited by appellant in support of his various propositions, and especially the cases of Kellogg v. Douglas Co. Bank, 58 Kan. 43, 48 Pac. 587, 62 Am. St. Rep. 596; Bennett v. Minott, 28 Or. 339, 39 Pac. 997, 44 Pac. 288; First Nat. Bank v. Trebein Co., 59 Ohio St. 316, 52 N. E. 834. But in these cases the fact was found by the court that the organization of the corporation was for the purpose of hindering, delaying, and defrauding the creditors of the party making the conveyance to the corporation; and, assuming that such findings were supported by the evidence, as the court does not intimate that they were not, the conclusions reached by the appellate courts were undoubtedly correct. But, as we have seen, in the case at bar there were nó such findings, and apparently no evidence to warrantsuch.a finding;, hence those cases are not in point. Several of the other cases cited, in which it was held that conveyances made without consideration would be void'as against creditors, clearly have no
We are therefore of the opinion that the court was right-in stating its conclusions of law, and rendering judgment in favor of the-defendant, dismissing the action.
The judgment of the circuit court and order denying a new trial are affirmed.