115 Mass. 505 | Mass. | 1874
The only question presented for decision upon the facts found by the master is whether the conveyance to Eben Sears by his brother Richard was merely a preference at common law, and made for the sole purpose of securing the debt to Eben, or for the purpose, and with the intent of hindering, delaying and defrauding the other creditors of Richard, in which both grantor and grantee participated.
It appears by the master’s report, that when the conveyance was made the liabilities of the firm of E. & R. W. Sears were about $92,000. The assets of the firm consisted of certain property amounting to about $33,000, and the individual indebtedness of the two partners; Eben owing the firm about $28,000, and Richard about $30,000. Richard was insolvent, and unable to pay any of this debt, and was also largely indebted on his private account. The firm, so far as partnership assets were concerned, was also insolvent. Eben was not insolvent, but had sufficient assets to meet all his liabilities, and did in fact, before the hearing was concluded, pay all the debts of the firm; though how available those assets were when the deed was given did not appear. On March 13, therefore, Richard was indebted to the firm, and Eben was liable by reason of the insolvency of Richard, in a much larger sum on his account than the consideration of the deed.
The plaintiffs contend that the deed should be set aside as in fraud of creditors. But the important and decisive fact in this case is that the master does not find fraud, or a fraudulent intent to defeat other creditors, but does find that the only purpose of < the conveyance was to secure and protect his brother, to whom he was largely indebted. The circumstances under which this was done, the relations of the parties, their method of conducting their business, and many facts stated by the master, are calculated to excite grave suspicions; but the master, upon all the evidence, and hearing the testimony of all parties, finds no fraud, but only a preference in favor of a particular creditor, and a preference is no fraud at common law.
In Banfield v. Whipple, 14 Allen, 13, Bigelow, C. J., says: “ If a debtor is unable to pay all his debts, he commits no fraud (in the absence of any statute provision regulating the distribution of insolvent estates) by appropriating his property to the satisfaction of one or more of his creditors to the exclusion of all others. Nor does it make any difference that both creditor and debtor know that the effect of such appropriation will be to deprive other creditors of the power of reaching the debtor’s property by legal process in satisfaction of their claims. If there is no secret trust agreed upon or understood between debtor and creditor in favor of the former, but the sole object of a transfer of property is to pay or secure the payment of a debt, the transaction is a valid one at common law. The distinction is
The master’s finding we think conclusive upon this point; the deed is therefore valid, and the plaintiffs cannot maintain their bill. Ho objection having been taken by the defendants to the jurisdiction in equity, we have not thought it necessary to consider that question, the case having béen fully heard by the master on its merits. Bill dismissed, with costs.