160 Ind. 251 | Ind. | 1903
This action was brought by the appellant,'as a trustee in bankruptcy, to recover a sum of money alleged to have been received by appellee as a preferential payment, in violation of §60, subd. b, of the bankruptcy law of 1898. Verdict and judgment for the defendant. The court overruled appellant’s demurrer to the third paragraph of answer which forms the basis of the first assignment of error. It is, in substance, averred in the answer that Headley, the bankrupt, had for more than ten years prior to January 18, 1900, held the office of treasurer of the defendant lodge, and as such officer had received in trust for the lodge $1,496.37, $1,356.95 of which amount he had at the date aforesaid converted to his own use, and the balance, to wit, $139.42, he had, and had had since the day of its receipt, on deposit in the bank to his credit as such treasurer, and had never at any time commingled said $139.42 with his own money, and held and claimed it only as the money of said lodge; that the wife of Headley receiving knowledge that her husband had converted said sum of i$l,356.95 to his own use, and, being anxious to assist him, paid to the defendant lodge said sum of $1,356.95 from her own individual estate, in full liquidation and settlement of the sum so converted; that she paid the sum by depositing the amount with the bank and to the credit and in the name of her husband as treasurer of the defendant, and which deposit added to the $139.42 already on deposit to
We see no reason why this is not a good answer. A trustee in bankruptcy will not be permitted, under the guise of an unlawful preference, to bring into the bankrupt’s estate, as assets, property that never belonged to it, and to which the bankrupt had no claim. The wife had a legal right to pay her husband’s debt, and such payment will not be adjudged fraudulent as against his creditors. Its payment from her separate estate did not diminish the assets of her husband’s estate, and it can not be counted as his payment within the meaning of the bankruptcy lav referred to.
But whether the answer is good or bad, overruling the demurrer to it did not constitute reversible error, because all the matters pleaded were provable under the general denial, which formed the first paragraph of the answer. A general denial traverses all the material averments of the pleading to which it is addressed. Hence under an answer of. general denial the defendant may prove any fact, independent of those alleged in the complaint, which is inconsistent therewith, and tends to overthrow the plaintiff’s cause of action. Marshall v. Beeber, 53 Ind. 119; Balue v. Sear, 131 Ind. 301; Johnson v. Schloesser, 146 Ind. 509, 520, 36 L. R. A. 59, 58 Am. St. 367; Jeffersonville Watter Sup. Co. v. Riter, 146 Ind. 521.
If appellee lodge never received any preferential payment from Headley, as said by this court in Marshall’s case, supra, “we do not see that there can be any better form by
2. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, the court, upon motion, directed the jury 'to return a verdict for the defendant. This action of the court is called in question. Appellant insists that he did submit proper evidence, which tended to sustain his complaint, and that under many decisions of this court the sufficiency of such evidence should have been left to the jury.
The evidence concerning the payment complained of was wholly given by Erancis M. Headley, the bankrupt, and was, in substance, as follows: About the first day of January, 1900, the witness came to realize that he was insolvent. He had been master of the exchequer of appellee lodge for ten years, and as such officer had received of its money $1,496.37, $1,356.95 of which he had mingled with his individual money, and converted to his own use. January 8, upon his invitation, he met with the trustees of the lodge, and informed them that his affairs were in had shape, and he might have to make an assignment, or do something like that, and he would like to settle for the money he owed the lodge, and resign. He informed them that he did not have all the money on hands, and requested that the settlement he postponed a few days to enable him to raise the balance of the money. This was agreed to. He also informed the trustees at that meeting that he had conveyed to his son certain real estate, hoping thereby to invest
He had received in the first days of January, 1900, for the lodge, but $350, which was paid in by the members as dues for the preceding month of December, which money he kept in a separate pocketbook, and entirely distinct from his own money. From the amount he had paid divers orders drawn by the officers of the lodge, against th© ex
The proper rule with respect to the right of the court to direct the verdict was aptly stated in Oleson v. Lake Shore, etc., R. Co., 143 Ind. 405, 32 L. R. A. 149, thus: Where the evidence given at the trial with all the inferences which the jury may justifiably draw from it is insufficient to support a verdict for the plaintiff so that such verdict, if returned, should be set aside, the court is not bound to submit the case to the jury but may direct a verdict for the defendant.” In addition to the cases there collated, see Dunnington v. Syfers, 157 Ind. 458; Menaugh v. Bedford Belt R. Co., 157 Ind. 20.
Under the bankruptcy act .of 1898, if an insolvent transfers property to a creditor within four months before the filing of a petition in bankruptcy, and the person receiving shall have reasonable cause to believe that it was intended
It may be conceded that tbe wife raised tbe money for her husband, and for bis benefit, but there is not a syllable of testimony in tbe record that goes to show that that benefit was to be enjoyed in any other way than by a discharge of tbe lodge debt, and thus probably save tbe family from dire consequences. Rather than complain,- tbe creditors would consistently have wished for more such transactions, for tbe effect was to reduce tbe indebtedness of tbe bankrupt, and leave tbe assets undiminished.
As to tbe $139.42 which made up the balance of the lodge’s debt, there is no question that it was trust funds. It was tbe undisbursed balance of tbe December dues, which bad been kept by Headley as lodge money, separate and distinct from his individual funds, and never in any way recognized or treated as bis own money, and was not, in fact, in any sense property of bis estate. When be deposited it in bank as lodge money, and checked it out to tbe trustees, be did but return to tbe lodge that which already belonged to them.
From a careful examination of tbe evidence we are convinced that it clearly appears that payment to appellee was not made by tbe bankrupt, nor from tbe assets of bis estate, and the court was justified in directing a verdict for tbe defendant.
In tbe course of tbe trial, appellant, upon appellee’s objection, was denied tbe right to testify to a conversation bad by him with tbe bankrupt’s wife, and another with tbe bankrupt, at some unstated time after tbe payment to tbe lodge, and after tbe adjudication in bankruptcy and appointment of appellant as trustee, concerning a claim which
We find no error in the record. Judgment affirmed.