102 Kan. 202 | Kan. | 1918
The action was one to recover on a promissory note for $10,000, given by the defendant, Mrs. M. L. Greene, whose liability was not contested. An attachment was levied on certain chattels as the property of the defendant. Dr. C. R. Hepler intervened, claiming the chattels under a bill of sale from the defendant. The question was whether or not the bill of sale was made to defraud creditors. The court sustained the bill of sale, and the plaintiff appeals.
Mrs. Greene incurred liability to the plaintiff to assist two sons, who were engaged in the banking business in Pueblo, Colo. To protect her they gave her title, or the means of procuring title, to various tracts of land in Colorado, New Mexico and Michigan. At that time the defendant owned a widow’s portion of a faym in Franklin county, Kansas, a one-half interest in some stock and implements on the farm, and a one-sixth interest in an estate in Illinois. The' sons failed, and a number of indictments were returned against them for violations of the federal banking laws. Some difficulty was experienced in procuring bonds and in procuring desired counsel. The mother came to the relief of her sons, and called to her assistance the interpleader, Dr. Hepler, who was her son-in-law. Dr. Hepler is a physician who formerly resided at Manhattan, and held a position in the state hospital at Osawatomie. He had gone to Colorado to look after a sick brother, and became connected with the management and disposition-of real estate in which the Greenes were interested. Two attorneys were employed to defend in the district court the criminal actions pending against the sons. The fees of the attorneys were $5,000 and $2,000, respectively, and they required $1,000 for expense money incident to the litigation. Mrs. Greene signed a note for $8,000 for these fees and expenses, and secured it by mortgage on the Franklin county farm. Doctor and Mrs! Hepler, at Mrs. Greene’s request, signed obligations to the attorneys for their fees. Mrs. Greene gave Dr. Hepler a bill of sale of her interest in the stock and implements on the farm, and she gave Mrs. Hepler an assignment of her interest in the Illinois estate. The consideration of the bill of
The district court made a general finding in favor of the interpleader. This finding includes, of course, findings on all the material issues. The plaintiff contends that the bill of sale was given with intent to defraud, that Mrs. Greene was insolvent at the time she made the bill of sale, and that the consideration for the bill of sale was of a character to render it fraudulent.
The finding of the district court that Mrs. Greene entertained no actual intention to hinder, delay or defraud her creditors, is approved. The conclusion to be drawn from the evidence is that the security which the sons gave Mrs. Greene when she executed for their benefit the $10,000 note sued on was chiefly, if not entirely, trading property of speculative value. There is no evidence that she possessed the necessary skill and ability to handle such property successfully. Marlborough Terrace was practically all she realized from' it, of any value. Concerning the tracts of land turned over to Dr. Hepler before the transaction of January 27, 1914, she said: “I am an old woman, and I wanted to get these things off my hands.” When her sons were indicted and incarcerated she
“I made the bill of sale to Dr. Hepler on the 27th day of January because he had signed obligations for me, and I was alone in the world and I had these cases of the boys to look after, my husband is dead, and I had no one when my boys were in trouble but Dr. Hepler and I appealed to him, and I had to compensate him in some way, and I gave him a bill of sale to compensate him for going on my obligations.
“Q. What obligations do you refer to? A. I refer to attorneys’ fees and expenses of this trial pending against my boys.”
Besides this, she said she had to live, and that Dr. Hepler could not go on her obligations and protect her without some compensation. The assignment of her interest in the estate in Illinois was made to her daughter on the same consideration. She believed the plaintiff was amply secured, and there is nothing to indicate that she had any intention whatever of wronging either of her other creditors, a bank in Ottawa and a Mr. Wilson, of Illinois. There is evidence that all parties to the transaction of January, 1914, believed Mrs. Greene was solvent. The plaintiff was the only creditor that had been preferred. Other creditors had not asked for security, and the plaintiff’s president had expressed satisfaction with his security when Mrs. Greene assigned the mortgage for $6,000 on Marlborough Terrace. The plaintiff does not strongly impute evil-mindedness to Mrs. Greene in coping with her difficulties, and the real question in the case is whether or not the bill of sale was fraudulent in law.-
The finding of the district court that Mrs. Greene was solvent when the bill of sale was made is approved.
Her assets were:
Franklin county farm (above mortgage)......... $5,530
Estate in Illinois............................... 3,000
Property covered by bill of sale.................. 1,368
Marlborough Terrace (above first mortgage)...... 6,000
$15,898
Her liabilities were:
To plaintiff....... $10,000
To Bank of Ottawa............. 1,880
To Mr. Wilson..... 1,000 12,880
$3,018
The court has little-time to discuss evidence, and little space in the Kansas reports for the publication of • discussions of
The finding of the district court that the bill of sale was not voluntary, but was based on a valuable consideration, is approved. Whether providently or improvidently, Mrs. Greene became obligated to the attorneys whom she employed, on a note and mortgage, and liability on this obligation cannot be gainsaid. While the assistance which she rendered her sons was voluntary, her obligation to the attorneys was not voluntary, because it was based on a valuable consideration, the adequacy of which is not in dispute. It is said, however, that the law will regard the note and mortgage as fraudulent, because not given for a present consideration. Cases are cited in which transfers of property made in consideration of the rendition of future services were condemned. It is not necessary to review them. In this instance the employment was not a general employment to render whatever legal services might be required, in whatever litigation might arise in the
The mortgage to the attorneys was not sufficient to secure payment of the note. Sureties were required. Dr. and Mrs. Hepler assumed $7,000 of the amount, and so became bound to the attorneys by an obligation, subject to no defense disclosed by this record. To compensate them the bill of sale and assignment were given. The consideration was a valuable one, which arose at the time of the transaction, and consequently the instruments were not voluntary, under any rational interpretation of the statute of frauds. (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 4885.)
In the case of Smith v. Rankin, 45 Kan. 176, 25 Pac. 586, a principal transferred property to his surety. The surety received the property not simply as indemnity, but as consideration for his promise, made at the time of the transfer, to pay the principal’s debt. The transfer was upheld when assailed as fraudulent by attaching creditors.
It is said the fact that the bill of sale was given in part for future advances rendered it a hindrance to creditors and a fraud on their rights. The evidence does not establish any definite sum of money which Dr. Hepler had advanced on Mrs. Greene’s account before the bill of sale was executed. Afterwards he said he advanced from $500 to $700. Treating the bill of sale as intended to cover future advances by way of expenses and by way of Mrs. Greene’s support, it was not necessarily fraudulent. Such a transaction is open to explanation, and if the purpose were not to cover up property with a pretended claim, in order to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, it will be sustained to the extent that it was supported by
There was testimony that the bill of sale and the assignment to Mrs. Hepler were to be considered as absolute transfers, and not merely as transfers by way of security. The fact is unimportant. For the plaintiff’s benefit, it may be conceded that under the circumstances the law will regard the transfers as for security only. The result is the same.'
It is not necessary to extend this opinion further. Absence of intent to defraud, solvency, and valuable consideration fairly adequate, are the determining facts of the case. The evidence sustains the finding of the district court with reference to these facts, and its judgment is affirmed.