39 W. Va. 644 | W. Va. | 1894
This was a suit in equity brought by C. M. and J. B. Hart in the Circuit Court of Roane county against G. W. Sandy, Samuel Noe, Letitia Noe, William E. Swiger, trus
B. E. Lowe, John Nay, G. T. Harrison, and W. E. Swi-ger, trustee, answered said bill denying that anything had
The plaintiffs also filed an amended bill, in which they alleged,that the agreement made and entered into between said G. W. Sandy and the plain tills at the time of the sale of said sawmill and fixtures, that the said Sandy would give a deed of trust on the said property as security to the plaintiffs for the said two promissory notes of two hundred and ninety dollars each, was a part of the consideration of said sale to said Sand}’ and created an equitable lien upon said property in favor of the plaintiffs, of which the said Samuel Eoe and Letitia N"oe had notice, at the time the defendant Letitia Eoo purchased the said property from said Sandy through the said SamuelLToe as her agent; and they pray, that in the event the court should be Of opinion, that the transfer of the entire property from said Sandy to said Letitia is not fraudulent or voluntary, then the plaintiffs’ equitable lien created by said agreement may bo enforced against the said property, and the same be sold to satisfy the plaintiffs’ debt and costs.
G. W. Sandy demurred to said amended bill, and Samuel IsToo and Letitia ISToe answered the same, and the cause was heard upon the bill, amended bill, answers to each and replications thereto and upon the demurrer to said amended bill, which demurrer upon consideration was overruled by the court and disallowed; and the court held that the plaintiffs were not entitled to the relief prayed for and
The first error assigned and relied upon by the appellants is, that the court erred in holding said transfer of said property'to Letitia Noe valid as against appellants’ debt, claiming that the proofs show clearly, that there was fraud in the transfer, and that defendants Samuel and Letitia Noe had notice of G. W. Sandy’s fraudulent intent and participated therein.
In determining a question of this character this Court has frequently held, that the surrounding circumstances may be taken into consideration, and from the fact, that fraud seeks concealment, circumstantial evidence is frequently the only evidence that can be obtained. The question then presented for our determination is: Did G. W. Sandy convey the property in the bill mentioned to Letitia Noe with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the plaintiffs in the collection of their debt, and did said Letitia Noe have notice of said fraudulent intent? When we go to the date of the purchase of the mill and machinery by G. W. Sandy from the plaintiffs, we find that said Sandy shortly before purchasing said machinery had sold his land for two thousand one hundred dollars in cash and a horse valued at seventy five dollars, and that out of this he paid the plaintiffs the cash payment of three hundred dollars on said sawmill and fixtures on the 15th day of October, ,1889, and executed to the plaintiffs his two notes for two hundred and ninety dollars each payable respectively in nine and eighteen months with interest from date for the residue, which notes were to be secured by deed of trust upon said sawmill and fixtures, when said machinery was delivered to him.
O. W. Gould states in his testimony that the reason said deed of trust was not executed at the time the sale was made was that it was the middle of the afternoon before the trade was consummated, and G. W. Sandy did not want to wait until the deed could be prepared, as he wished to get to Jane Lew in Lewis county that evening; but he
Now, it appears that Letitia Noe, to whom this property was conveyed on the 26th day of April, 1890, before she became the wife of Samuel Noe, was the widow of G. W. Sandy’s brother. She was sick in bed at the time this property was conveyed to her. It also appears that on the 22d day of February, 1890, she had received from W." S. Hay-mond the sum of five hundred and forty four dollars and fifty cents as a gross sum in lieu of her dower in certain lands of which her first husband died seised and possessed, and that in order to save about six hundred dollars, which G-. W. Sandy owed her husband, Samuel Noe, she agreed to purchase said mill-property andfixtures from said Sandy, her said husband acting as her agent in the transaction. This statement, however, does not comport well with the statement made by said Samuel Noe to the witness Gould,
The evidence, then, clearly shows that Samuel Hoc had notice of the existence of the debt from said Sandy to plaintiffs, and the fact that he had agreed to secure the same by trust-deed. When we consider the intiinato relations between husband and wife and the relationship existing between said Sandy and Letitia Hoc and the further fact, that said G. W. Sandy had been doing business in partnership with Samuel Hoe, and that said Letitia was called upon to pay out her own money, which she had received from her deceased husband’s estate, there can he no doubt, that this transaction had been thoroughly discussed between said G. W. Sandy and Samuel Hoe and his wife. Said Samuel Hoe in his deposition states that said Sandy told him that he owed plaintiffs about five hundred 'dollars, and, when asked the question ; “ Lid you not agree with G. W. Sandy to pay plaintiff’s claim against him ?” — replied, “ I did not; Sandy told me that he would leave a payment for Ilarf at Charleston.”
Again, it appears in evidence that when G. W. Sandy conveyed to said Letitia Hoe said mill property he parted with all the visible property he owned, except a horse, saddle and bridle, which.the defendant Samuel Hoe says he afterwards purchased from him, paying him therefor one hundred dollars.
The circumstances shown by the evidence iu this cause can lead to no other conclusion than that G. W. Sandy made this conveyance to his relative Letitia Hoe with the intention of hindering, delaying and defrauding the plaintiffs. Shortly before purchasing this mill and machinery
Did Letitia Hoc have notice of the fraudulent intent of G. W. Sandy in selling and conveying said property to her (for a written conveyance was executed and acknowledged and recorded when the property would have passed by delivery, being personal property) ? It. appears from the testimony of Samuel Hoe and from the answer of himself and wife, that ho acted as the agent of his wife in making the purchase of this machinery.
Upon the question of notice, we find the law stated thus in 1 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, p. 419 : “In the relation of the principal to a third party, the undisputed rule exists that notice to the agent is notice to the principal, if the agent comes to the knowledge of facts while he is acting for the principal. But notice to the agent, to bind the principal, must be within the scope of the agent’s employment.”
In the case of Jackson v. Sharp, 9 Johns. 163, it was held that, “if a subsequent purchaser have notice at tli.e time of his purchase of a prior unregistered deed, it is the same to him as if such deed had been registered; and if the agent of such subsequent purchaser, at the time of making the purchase, knows of the prior or unregistered deed, it is the same as notice to his principal.”
Upon this point we find it stated in Story, Ag. § 140 : “Notice of facts to an agent is constructive notice thereof to the principal himself, where it arises from or is at the time connected with the subject-matter of his agency; for, upon general principles of public policy, it is presumed that the agent has communicated such facts to the principal, and, if he does not, still, the principal having intrusted the agent with the particular business, the other party has the right to deem his acts and knowledge obligatory upon the principal; otherwise the neglect of the agent might operate most injuriously to the rights and intercsts'of such party.”
Bump, on Fraudulent Conveyances, on page 494, says: “The notice of the fraud need only be sufficient to put a man of ordinary prudence and experience in business transactions upon the inquiry. * * * Whatever is sufficient to direct his attention to the prior rights and equities of creditors, and to enable him to ascertain their nature by inquiry, will operate as notice. "When a purchaser has knowledge of any fact sufficient to put him upon inquiry, he is presumed either to have made the inquiry and ascertained the extent of the right that he may possibly prejudice or to have been guilty of a degree of negligence fatal to the claim to be considered a bona fide purchaser. This
Other authorities might be cited showing that notice to the agent while acting in the scope of his authority must be regarded as notice to the principal, but these are regarded as sufficient. I will, however, call attention to a portion of the opinion of Cabell, J., in the case of French v. Loyal Co., 5 Leigh 658. He says: “But although the law in many cases imputes notice to a man on evidence far short of that which, if its weight only were considered, would be necessary to prove actual notice, yet, if wo attend to the nature and character of the facts which the evidence in such cases does establish, we shall see that the law in imputing notice acts with its usual justice and equity. Thus on proof of notice to an agent, the law at once imputes notice to the principal, not because notice to the agent is proof that the principal actually had notice also, but because it is a fact of such a character that the principal ought to be as much bound by it as if he had notice.” See, also, Newlin v. Beard 6 W. Va. 111, and Fidelity Ins. T. & D. S. Co. v. Shenandoah Val. R. Co., 32 W. Va. 244 (9 S. E. Rep. 180) where this Court held that notice to a trustee was notice to a cestui qae trust, etc.
How, all these authorities, when applied to the facts and circumstances of this case, preclude the defendant Letitia Hoe from denying, that she had notice of the fact, that Gr. "W. Sandy was indebted to the plaintiffs in the sum of five hundred and eighty dollars, and that ho had agreed to execute a deed of trust upon the property she purchased from him to secure the payment of said sum, and, although .said
In the case of McVeagh v. Baxter, 82 Mo. 518, it was held that “a creditor can not purchase the goods of his debtor at a price in excess of liis debt, when he knows that the excess so paid such debtor is by the latter to be placed beyond the reach of his other creditors; such purchaser is a participant in the fraud of his debtor, whether his purpose be to aid him or not.”
The intimate relations between the parties to this transaction were such, that we must conclude, that Samuel Hoe was aware of the fact, that G-. W. Sandy was arranging his business with the intention of leaving the state, which he did shortly after the sale of his property; and he must have known from his refusal to execute the deed of trust to secure plaintiffs, that he did not intend to pay the plaintiffs’debt. The first note would fall due in July, and he left the state in June without complying with his agreement to secure the plaintiffs’ notes. Hot only so, he had sold the property on which he agreed to secure them.
How, again, as to the particularity observed in counting the money and executing the conveyance for the transfer of this property, we find in 8 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, p. 788, the law is stated thus: “Whenever there appear to be connected with the transaction circumstances indicating-excessive effort to give it the appearance of fairness or regularity, and which are not usual attendants of such business, the court and juries are often influenced in favor of the creditor. If parties not usually very exact in their negotiations carry out a transaction with great precision, accurate calculations, and the claim of the grantee made to overbalance the valuation, these, with other facts, will lead the court to believe the transaction is not bona fide. Generally, bona fide transactions do not need to be clothed with extraordinary pretenses of prompt payment.”
So in the case of Comstock v. Rayford, 12 Smedes & M. 370, it was held that “ where it is not necessary to record a bill of sale of slaves, and yet the record of it is made, it looks as though it might have been done for effect,” etc.
The appellants assign as an additional ground of error, that “ the court should have held, that the express agreement made by Sandy at the time of his purchase of said property to give a trust-deed upon the same to secure them is enforceable in equity against Samuel and Letitia Hoe, they having had notice of said agreement at the time of their purchase.” But as I have already arrived at the conclusion that said conveyance and sale of said property was made with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the plaintiffs, and that said Letitia Hoe had notice of such intent, and said sale was therefore void as to plaintiffs’ claim, it is unnecessary to discuss or pass upon the other assignment of error in this case.
The decree complained of is reversed, and the cause remanded, with costs of appellants.