67 S.W.2d 703 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1934
Reversing.
This action was originally brought in the Bell circuit court by Eliza Bruce against Walter E. Price to *456 recover a board bill of $413.33. Attachment was issued and levied upon "all the right, title, interest, claim or demand of the defendant, Walter E. Price, in and to the certain tracts or parcels of land lying in Bell County, Kentucky, and belonging to the Hawley Coal Company.
Later on Mrs. Bruce filed an amended petition pleading that the Hawley Coal Company had closed its business as a corporation, and that the title to its property was in the defendant Price, and that the attached real estate was all the property real or personal belonging to the defendant, who was insolvent. Price, who was duly summoned, made no defense, and judgment was rendered sustaining the attachment, and ordering the real estate belonging to the Hawley Coal Company to be sold. Before the date of sale, Price died. At the sale Mrs. Bruce became the purchaser, and later on filed a second amended petition making the Hawley Coal Company, Mary E. Price, widow of Walter E. Price, and W.O. Pollard, parties defendant, and asking that the individual defendants be required to show what interest or claim they had in the property. After their demurrer had been overruled, the new defendants filed an answer denying the allegations of the petition and amended petition, and presenting several defenses, including the defense that the title to the attached property was in the Hawley Coal Company, and that Walter E. Price had no interest therein. After hearing the evidence, the chancellor set aside the former sale of the property, and adjudged that Walter E. Price was the sole owner of the stock of the corporation, that his property was subject to his individual debts, and ordered a sale of the land to satisfy Mrs. Bruce's judgment. From that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
On the hearing there was evidence that on June 18, 1925, Walter E. Price, who then owned all the stock in the Hawley Coal Company, indorsed and transferred the certificates to his wife, in consideration of her giving a deed of trust on her land in Virginia to secure his indebtedness of $18,000 to the Citizens' Bank Trust Company, and that under the arrangement appellant Pollard was to have 12 1/ 2 shares of the stock. The transfer or assignment is assailed on the ground that it was not acknowledged and recorded as required by section 2128, Kentucky Statutes, which reads as follows:
"A married woman may take, acquire and hold *457 property, real and personal, by gift, devise or descent, or by purchase, and she may, in her own name, as if she were unmarried, sell and dispose of her personal property. She may make contracts and sue and be sued, as a single woman, except that she may not make any executory contract to sell or convey or mortgage her real estate, unless her husband join in such contract; but she shall have the power and right to rent out her real estate, and collect, receive and recover in her own name the rents thereof, and make contracts for the improvement thereof. A gift, transfer or assignment of personal property between husband and wife shall not be valid as to third persons, unless the same be in writing, and acknowledged and recorded as chattel mortgages are required by law to be acknowledged and recorded; but the recording of any such writing shall not make valid any such gift, transfer or assignment which is fraudulent or voidable as to creditors or purchasers."
It will be observed that the statute provides that a gift, transfer, or assignment of personal property between husband and wife shall not be valid as to third persons, unless the same be in writing and acknowledged and recorded as chattel mortgages are required by law to be acknowledged and recorded, and the particular question for consideration is whether the provision applies to intangible personal property. In Kentucky Law Journal, vol. 13, p. 175, there is an able and interesting discussion of "Transfers of Corporate Stock between Husband and Wife in Kentucky." The article presents a careful analysis of the various decisions bearing on the question, either directly or indirectly, and points out the purposes of the act and the objections to the view that it applies to intangible personal property. Particular emphasis is placed on the fact that the object of the Legislature was to prevent the transfer of personal property on the ostensible possession of which credit was extended, Jones v. Louisville Tobacco Warehouse Company,
Words and phrases are used in their technical meaning, if they have acquired one, and in their popular meaning if they have not. Section 460, Kentucky Statutes; Higginbothom v. Higginbothom,
We next come to the validity of the sale of the real estate belonging to the coal company. Though it be true that the purchase by an individual of all the stock of a corporation suspends its corporate franchise until the stock is transferred to others, Louisville Banking Co. v. Eisenman,
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. Whole court sitting.