103 Mich. 543 | Mich. | 1895
Plaintiffs obtained judgment against
*547 Mr, J. Lustig, City.
'To purchase of stock Lustig Cigar Co.......... $1,673 35
To purchase of accounts Cigar Co. (good)......' 3,335 79
To purchase of accounts Cigar Co. (questionable)............ 1,425 34
To purchase of the Hub stock................. 1,826 10
To the purchase of the Hub outstanding accounts............... 754 44
To purchase of the Hub fixtures............... 325 00
As per attached inventory amount of debit to your account................................. 828 21
Total.................. $10,158 03
Diverse.
Amount of credit to your account............. $3,361 62
Amount of your earnings in the Lustig Cigar Co. .......................................... 1,064 86
Amount of credit for selling bad accounts, which were bought at 15 per cent, of face of inventory................ 1,211 49
Amount of check No. 1...................... 2,520 06
Amount of 30-day note................. 1,000 00
Amount of 60-day note________________________ 1,000 00
Total........................................ $10,158 03
The first item of credit upon this account, of $3,361.62, •“is composed of $2,804.52, which Mrs. Lustig transferred from her account to Lustig’s account at that time, and the credit of $557.10 on his personal account.” The second -item is the profits of the business for the year, which “we gave to Lustig.” The third item of credit is not explained, but it is, presumably, a mode of stating the discount on the accounts receivable, which had been transferred. On the day of the sale, Lustig is alleged to have given his note for $3,500 to Emanuel Treusch, and it was admitted, on the trial that the $2,520.06 check (the fourth item of ■credit) was a part of the $3,500 borrowed from E. Treusch. It therefore appears that Lustig was started out with the—
*548 Lustig Co. store stock................$1,673 25
Hub store stock...................... 1,826 10
---$3,499 35
Accounts receivable................-..........- 4,293 98
Hub store fixtures.............................. 325 00
Total assets.......................-......... $8,118 33
His liabilities were:
Due Mrs. Lustig......................$2 804 52
Due E. Treusch...................... 3,500 00
Due M. H. Treusch & Bro............ 2,000 00
--$8,304 52
The testimony tended to show that a representative of R. G. Dun & Co. called on Lustig, March 4, 1889, who stated that his stock and fixtures inventoried $11,000; that he paid $9,000 cash, and gave two notes for $1,000 each. Upon that statement, he was given a rating of from $5,000 to $10,000. The testimony further tended to show that a representative of Bradstreet called in January, 1889, upon Emanuel Treusch, and interviewed him concerning the financial standing of Jacob Lustig; that-Emanuel Treusch informed him that Lustig had purchased the business at a total of $10,158.03, and had paid for it by credit account, $3,361.62; earnings, $1,064.86; discount, $1,211.49; cash, $2,520.06; and two notes of $1,000 each; that Lustig had in the neighborhood of $8,000 in his business. No reference was made to any indebtedness to Mrs Lustig or to Emanuel Treusch. On. this statement, Bradstreet gave Lustig a rating of from $5,000 to $10,000.
Lustig failed in July, 1891, having stock of the value of $10,000, and owing $8,400 in debts secured by chattel mortgage, and about $34,000 in unsecured debts. His. books showed that from March 1/ 1890, to August 1,. 1890, his purchases were $20,636.81, and his sales, during the same period, $34,985; that from March 1, 1891, until
Under the facts stated, the plaintiffs should have been-allowed a wider range of inquiry in the examination and cross-examination of witnesses than was permitted. It is well settled that, when the issue involves a charge of fraud, evidence tending to establish such fraud' is freely admitted, and a wide range of inquiry into transactions between the parties is allowed. The transactions covered a period of two years and a half. Although the alleged indebtedness was but $10,000, goods of the value of several times that amount were purchased, and merchandise of the value of three or four times the amount of the indebtedness was traced to the defendants. Lnstig’s indebtedness at the start, if any existed, was $8,300, but at the finish it was $42,000, and Lustig had appropriated to himself nearly $11,000.
The trial court, after the discussion of other questions, charged the jury as follows:
“This leaves the case where, in my judgment, it should be left, to be determined upon the single question, whether or not, — or the two questions, perhaps, — whether or not, first, Lustig did obtain goods from divers persons during the three or four months before his failure (the time covered by the evidence) with a fraudulent intent at the time
The plaintiffs have a right to complain of this instruction, for the reason that it limited the issue. If the indebtedness to the Treusches was not Iona fide-, the conveyance of the goods to them was void as to creditors. If any goods were transferred to the defendants without, consideration, or for a consideration that was merely nominal, plaintiffs should recover. If the value of either the: Lustig stock or the Hub store stock, or the fixtures or the accounts, was inflated, in pursuance of a scheme to establish Lustig’s credit, and obtain goods, and turn them over to defendants, the indebtedness to which the goods are alleged to have been applied cannot be said to have been Iona fide, and plaintiffs are entitled to recover. If such fraudulent purpose entered into the transfer to Lustig, the indebtedness originating from it, or based upon it, cannot be said to have been Iona fide, and plaintiffs-are entitled to recover. The defendants transferred to Lustig two broken stock’s of goods and certain store fixtures, the remnants of business ventures that had not been attended with satisfactory results; and although defendants continued in the same business in the same city, and certain of the accounts, amounting to $754.44, were due to them, and were not in any way connected with the business of the Lustig Company, yet, of the assets, booked, charged, and transferred to Lustig at
We cannot agree with the majority opinion in Treusch v. Ottenburg, 4 C. C. A. 629, 54 Fed. Rep. 867, but concur in the views expressed by Judge Taft in the dissenting opinion therein. The statute provides that—
■“ If any person garnisheed shall have in his possession any of the property aforesaid of the principal defendant, which he holds by a conveyance or title that is void as to creditors of the defendant, or if any person garnisheed shall have received and disposed of any of the property aforesaid of the principal defendant, which is held by a conveyance or title that is void as to creditors of the defendant, he may be adjudged liable as garnishee on account .of such property, and for the value thereof, although the principal defendant could not have maintained an action therefor against him.”
Judge Taft, in the Ottenburg case, says:
“The action by the defendants in error, therefore, was, as general creditors, to recover by garnishee process the value of the goods, which they had never owned, to the amount of their claim against Lustig. The only ground
The instruction given predicated the right of recovery upon fraud perpetrated, not upon a general creditor by the ■tranfer, but upon individual creditors, other than plaintiffs,
It was competent to show by Lustig’s employés just how and when orders for goods given by defendants were filled, — ■ whether as in the usual course of business or otherwise.
The evidence that, immediately after the sale to Lustig,. he sent out a number of letters to different dealers, asking for quotations and samples, should have been admitted. Such requests, made by a responsible party in the usual course, would not, standing alone, be indicative of a fraudulent purpose; but here Lustig was without capital, and, according to defendants’ claim, his indebtedness equaled, if it did not exceed, his assets. It was also proper to show what was done with the samples received.
The objection made to the introduction of Lustig’s testimony is without force.
The court very properly refused to permit plaintiffs to show that defendants had settled with certain other creditors, and the record of the judgment in a case between defendants and other parties was properly rejected.
The court erred in permitting defendants’ counsel, upon cross-examination of the witness Ferguson, to ask if he had ever known of any dishonest transactions on the part of defendants.
“ The proof to establish fraud should be clear and convincing. If the circumstances • are equally as -consistent with honesty and fair dealing as with fraudulent and dishonest transactions, then it must be said that the fraud is not established. The presumption' of law is in favor of honesty and fair dealing, and that presumption must be overcome: and where it is sought to overcome it by circumstances, in the absence of direct or positive proof of fraudulent acts, the proof must be clear and- convincing. It is not sufficient to prove facts and circumstances, or a combination of facts and circumstances, that create doubt and suspicion in the mind as to the honesty and fairness of the transaction, but the proof must be of the kind and amount as to create in the mind a hearty conviction that the charge is true. Fraud is never to be presumed, neither is it to be lightly inferred, but the proof should be clear and convincing. It is not necessary to establish it by proof beyond a reasonable doubt, but it must be proof, as I have said, that carries to the mind a conviction — a hearty conviction — that the charge is true."
tinder the rule laid down in Ferris v. McQueen, 94 Mich. 367, the court was not justified in the use of the language given. The words “clear proof" and “hearty conviction" are apt to mislead. Proof of facts and circumstances is sufficiently clear if it creates a belief that a fraud has been perpetrated, and a conviction so produced is sufficiently hearty to predicate a verdict upon.
The judgment is reversed, and a new trial granted.
Plaintiffs offered in evidence the examination of Lustig taken on supplementary proceedings in the principal case, and containing statements relating to his business, failure, and relation to the Treusches.