169 Ga. 608 | Ga. | 1929
S. H. Hardin as trustee in bankruptcy for Louis N. Cohen, bankrupt, brought a petition against S. W. Rubin and his agents, Celia Caplan and Meyer Caplan, and C. N. Mullís, sheriff of Dodge County, alleging that on January 8, 1925, Cohen purchased from Rubin a stock of merchandise and fixtures, agreeing to pay therefor the sum of $6650, of which sum $500 was paid in cash. The remainder due was to be paid in weekly installments. The parties executed a written contract in which Rubin retained title to the property until the entire amount of the debt was paid. This contract was not recorded immediately by Rubin; and according to Cohen’s contention it was not to be recorded, under a verbal agreement between liim and Rubin, in order to enable Cohen to purchase other merchandise. This contention on the part of Cohen is denied by Rubin. The' contract was recorded by Rubin on August 9, 1926. On September 1, 1926, Cohen filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy, which followed foreclosure proceedings instituted
Ground 1 of the motion for new trial complains that the court erred in excluding from the evidence a “property statement to C. H. Schneider & Bro.,” dated April 3, 1925, purporting to have been signed by Louis N. Cohen, and purporting to show the financial condition of Cohen as of March 1, 1925, the statement being upon a printed form containing the following question: “Are any of your creditors secured by mortgage or other lien?” And immediately following the question is written the word, “No.” The statement showed total’assets of Cohen to be $10,748.93, and his total liabilities $5810. Pinned to the property statement was a letter dated April 3, 1925, addressed to C. H. Schneider & Bro., Augusta, Georgia, and reading as follows: “In reply to your letter of the 2nd inst. I bought the stock, lease, and fixtures of S. W. Rubin in Eastman, Georgia, on the first of the year for $5500.
Error is assigned in the second ground, because the court erred in admitting in evidence, over the objection of the plaintiff, the testimony of S. W. Eubin, as follows: “Q. Did you, at the time you put this paper on record on August 9, have any reason to believe that Cohen was not solvent? A. No, sir, he was solvent.” Plaintiff objected to both the question and answer upon the ground that the question asked for and obtained a conclusion of the witness. The court made no ruling upon the objection, and the evidence was permitted to go to the jury. It is contended that this testimony was harmful to the plaintiff, for the reason that one of the issues in the case was whether the contract which retained the title to the merchandise in Eubin was an illegal preference under the bankruptcy law, the contract having been executed on January 8, 1925, and recorded in the office of the clerk of the superior court of Dodge County on August 9, 1926, and Cohen having filed his voluntary petition in bankruptcy on September 1, 1926,' and thereafter having been adjudicated a bankrupt, and a trustee having been appointed for him on September 20, 1926. It is insisted that in order to prevail on said issue it was necessary for the plaintiff to show that Cohen was insolvent at the time the retention-of-title contract was recorded and that Eubin had reasonable cause to believe that Cohen was insolvent, and the recording of the instrument would effect a preference contrary to the bankruptcy statutes; that, although the witness was competent to state any facts within his knowledge bearing upon the question of Cohen’s financial status, he could not state positively his conclusion that he was solvent, as that was one of the issues to be determined by the jury. The exception is without merit, in view of the previous testimony of the witness, in which he gave the basis and reason for his conclusion that Cohen was solvent. Furthermore, on cross-examination Eubin testified that Cohen “was not insolvent at that time.”
As to whether there was a secret agreement between the bankrupt Cohen and Eubin, the creditor who had a conditional bill of sale to the bankrupt’s stock, the evidence was conflicting, the bankrupt declaring that there was such an agreement and that the bill of sale was to be withheld from record for the purpose of enabling the bankrupt to secure other credit, and the creditor denying that any
The court below erred in refusing a new trial.
Judgment reversed.