5 Mich. 155 | Mich. | 1858
Lead Opinion
This is an action of replevin, brought to recover certain personal property claimed by the plaintiff, which was taken from his possession by virtue of two writs of attachment issued against the goods and chattels of one John C. Baughman. On the 20th day of November, 1855, the plaintiff, as the case shows, was the creditor of said Baughman in the sum of $15,000, for cash advanced; and was also liable on his paper, as endorser and accommodation acceptor, to the
To defeat the plaintiff’s recovery, it is insisted by these defendants that the sale of this property was designed to hinder, delay, and defraud creditors, and is therefore fraudulent and void.
. Had the transaction been confined to the turning out of the personal property in satisfaction of the indebtedness of $15,000, no question of its bona fide intent could have been raised; for it appears from the case, that the property was no more than adequate for the payment of that sum; and it is not denied by the defendant’s counsel, nor can it be, that an insolvent debtor may prefer one creditor over another in the payment of his debts. The' difficulty suggested by the defendants springs from the conveyance of the real .estate; which, it is claimed, “was intended as a substitute for, and to subserve the purposes of, an assignment, with the implied conditions that would render such an instrument void”;
An examination of the facts and the evidence reported in this case, has failed to convince us that this transaction is in the least degree tainted with fraud. Baughman, finding himself to be insolvent, was desirous to pay to Hubbard the amount in which he was indebted to him, and to protect him, as far .as possible, from loss by reason of the eonfiden
This is rendered more apparent by the fact that, within
Nor can we discover anything in the testimony of the witnesses evidencing fraud —that of Baughman is clearly and •conclusively of the opposite tendency. The letter to Jones comes to us without any explanation of the occasion of its ■being written, except what may be gathered from itself. This letter, and the testimony of Whittemore, do not establish the fraudulent intent to hinder and delay, nor that the deed and mortgage were intended to operate in fact as an assignment; they only show why the plaintiff was unwilling to accept an assignment, and thereby subject himself to greater loss, on account of his obligations in behalf of Baughman and •others, than would occur were the property absolutely conveyed to him. All the testimony shows a desire on the part 'of the plaintiff and Baughman to save the former, as far as •possible, from loss; to place means in his hands which- would be accessible to him, and to the creditors, for the discharge of the debts upon which he was liable' — without any design •respecting others, and without any expectation (and, as the proof shows, without any ground for expectation) that he would •be thereby wholly saved from loss, or that anything would be left for others. Under such circumstances, it would be hard indeed to hold that the design of the parties was to ■anticipate that which could not occur, and, upon such a foundation, hold the transaction fraudulent.
Concurrence Opinion
concurred. Campbell J, did not sit in the case, having been of counsel for one of the parties.