43 S.C. 448 | S.C. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff brings this action for himself as well as all the other creditors of the defendant, Geo. B. Anderson, who will come in and contribute to the expenses of the action, for the purpose of having certain transactions between the said Geo. B. Anderson and others of his creditors, set aside. These transactions are: 1st. A mortgage to the defendant, D. B>. Anderson, on certain real estate, bearing date the 13th of December, 1891, to secure the payment of a note for $1,200, given by Geo. B. Anderson to one Glenn, with said D. B. Anderson as surety. 2d. Two mortgages on certain real estate, bearing date the 24th December, 1891, given by said Geo. B. Anderson to the defendants, the Frick Co., the one to secure the payment of $1,561 and the other to secure the payment of $1,940. 3d. A deed to Mrs. H. M. Anderson, the wife of said Geo. B. Anderson, bearing- date the 26th of December, 1891, for the real estate described in the above mentioned mortgages. 4th. A confession of judgment to the said O. P. Wood, whose executors are parties hereto, entered 29th of January, 1892, for about the sum of $200. 5th. A confession of judgment to the defendant, Alice C. Ferguson, entered 29th of January, 1892, for about the sum of $1,000. 6th. A purchase made by Mrs. iL M. Anderson, of the interest of the said Geo. B. Anderson in the Lime Kiln tract of land, when the same was offered for sale by the sheriff under executions against said Geo. B. Anderson, which tract of land was covered by some of the mortgages above referred to, as well as by the above mentioned deed to Mrs. Anderson.
These transactions are assailed as void for actual fraud under the statute of Elizabeth, as well as upon the ground that these transactions, taken together, amount to an assignment with preferences, in violation of the assignment law. The testimony, as taken by the referee and reported to the Circuit -Court, is fully set out in the “Case,” and will be referred to as occasion may require. Upon this testimony, and the argument of counsel, the case was heard by his honor, Judge Fraser, who rendered his decree (which should be incorporated in the report of the case), holding that the transactions impeached by
Sow, while in justice to counsel for appellant we have thus stated the questions which he supposes are presented by this appeal, we are not prepared to admit that all such questions fairly arise upon this record, nor — what is more important— that they are all material to the inquiry whether there is any error in the judgment appealed from. We shall, therefore, consider the case in the light which it presents itself to our eyes, without following in their order the questions proposed. It seems to us that two general questions are presented by this appeal: 1st. Whether the transactions sought to be impeached are void under the statute of Elizabeth. 2d. If not, whether they are void under the assignment law.
There is certainly a great lack of testimony tending to show that Geo. B. Anderson was actuated by any fraudulent intention in entering into any of the transactions here assailed. Indeed, as was suggested by one of the counsel for respondents, the fact that he postponed his own wife, who held a valid claim against him, the bona fides of which is not assailed by any testimony, is a strong circumstance to negative any fraudulent intent on his part; for the fact that a part or the whole of this debt was subject to the bar of the statute of. limitations, is not sufficient to show that the debt was not-ñoña fide, especially when it was due by a husband, possessed of large property, to his own wife. As t.o the other creditors, so far as we can dis
The doctrine is well expressed by the late Chief Justice Simpson, in the case of Lamar v. Pool, 26 S. C., at page 446, where, after discussing the subject, he uses this language: “So that in all of these cases, where the instrument assailed as contrary to section 2014 (now section 2146 of the Revised Statutes), does not in its form violate that section, having earmarks that cannot be mistaken, the question must hinge upon the intent of the parties. Is the paper a bona fide mortgage intended as a security, which the law allows? Or was it intended as an assignment, in which the particular creditor is preferred, the form of the paper having been adopted to evade the act? This question in such a case becomes a question of fact, and such is the case now before the court.” So in Meinhard v. Strickland, 29 S. C., at page 496, where this matter was under discussion, we find the following language: “It is plain, then, that in cases of this kind, the question is mainly one of fact as to the intention of the parties. If the instruments employed were bona fide intended merely as security and not as a means of evading the provisions of the assignment act, then they do not fall within the purview of that act. But if, on the contrary, the instruments resorted to, whatever may be their form, were intended not merely as security but asa means of transferring the debtor’s property to the favored creditor, to the exclusion of others, with a view to evade the provisions of the assignment act, then they must be regarded as null and void under the provisions of that act. Without multiplying quotations, we think it may be safely asserted that the same doctrine pervades all of the cases upon the subject.
Now it is quite clear that there is no finding of fact that the several transactions here assailed were entered into for the purpose of evading the provisions of the assignment law, and we think it equally clear that the testimony would not warrant any such finding- of fact. We agree with the Circuit Judge that these transactions were separate and independent transactions, having no connection with each other, and were not
We have not deemed it necessary to discusss any of the exceptions to the competency of the testimony, as that matter was not pressed in the argument here. Besides, we may add that we think the testimony, at least the most of it, was com
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.