83 Ky. 321 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1885
delivered the opinion op the court.
This is an appeal from a judgment in three consolidated actions subjecting to the payment of the-respective debts of the plaintiffs a tract of sixty acres of land conveyed by the debtor, J. F. Little,, to his two sons, J. S. and Joe Little, by deed executed .February 3, 1880.
The first of these actions was brought by Leach, on a note given in 1876 by R. F. Jones and J." F. Little. The second by Ragan Brothers, on a note, given September, 1880, by the firm of Little & Jones» of which J. F. Little was at the time a member.. And the third by Blalock, on a note given in 1874-by N. W. & J. F. Little.
No personal judgment had, previous- to the com-mencement of either action, been rendered in favor-of the plaintiff against J. F. Little," and, of course, there had been in neither case an execution and return of no property found. But an attachment-was, at the commencement of each, issued and ievied
Under section 194, Civil Code, the plaintiff may, :at or after the commencement of his action, have an ■attachment against the property of the defendant, •upon the ground he is a non-resident of the State. This fact, however, is not alone sufficient to authorize a judgment setting aside a conveyance of his «estate, because fraudulent in the meaning of chapter ■44, General Statutes, and subjecting it against the •claim of his vendees to the payment of the'plaintiffs’ debt. But it-may be considered a rule settled by this court, that when statements are made in the petition or affidavit of the plaintiff, as provided in .sub-section 7, section 194, Civil Code, and an attachment is thereupon duly issued and levied upon property thus alleged to be fraudulently conveyed by the debtor, a court of equity thereby acquires jurisdiction to subject the property to the satisfaction of the plaintiffs’ debt, and may so subject it, if it is ■established by the proof that the conveyance was made to cheat, hinder, and delay creditors, or as to ■existing liabilities was made without valuable consideration. And the jurisdiction may be thus ac■quired and exercised even before the plaintiff has exhausted his legal remedy.
It is admitted that the debts of Leach & Blalock
It appears that the note sued on was given in September, 188Ó, by the firm of Little & Jones, toRagan Brothers for the balance of a running account for goods sold by one firm to the other,< beginning-before and continuing for some time after the date-of the deed; and there was at that time, in fact, a considerable amount due on the account. We are,, therefore, of the opinion that, although the subsequent purchases of goods from time to time exceeded in amount the payments made, resulting in a somewhat larger balance due at the date of the note-than there was when the deed was executed, the-debt of Ragan Brothers should be regarded as an existing liability in the meaning of the statute.. But this is not a vital .question, if it be true, as alleged by the plaintiffs, that the conveyance of the sixty acres of land was made for the fraudulent purpose of cheating, hindering, and delaying the creditors of J. F. Little. For in that case the property in controversy is subject to the debt, whether created before or after the date of the deed.
It is alleged and attempted to be proved that in 1863 J. F.' Little, the father, purchased for J. S. Little, his son, then about five years of age, another tract of land containing fifty-two and one-half acres, and had it conveyed to him. That previous to 1869 SJiadrach Little, a brother of J. F. Little, had, without right, sold and conveyed that tract to one Morris, who sold to Cary. And in 1869 J. F. Little executed
This explanation of the consideration or reason for the conveyance of the sixty acres of land in Pebruáry, 1880, is not only improbable, but is contradicted by the recitals of the mortgage, the deed from J. S. Little to Cary’s vendee, and also the ■deed from J. P. Little to his two sons.
To accept it as true, we must not only believe, without any reason for it appearing, that J. P. Little caused made a deed of gift to his son when ■only five years of age, to the exclusion of his other ■children, of the fifty-two and one-half acres of land, but. also that Shadrach Little, the brother of J. P. Little, afterwards wrongfully, and without any pretense of right, sold, received the consideration therefor, and attempted to convey the same land to Morris.
The deed for the fifty-two and one-half acres made by Smith in 1863 purports to be to James .Shadrach Little, and was evidently intended to be to Shadrach Little, the brother,' who paid the consideration, and not to J. S. or James Shadrach, the son of J. P. Little; and in the mortgage from J. P. Little to (Cary, made in 1869, it is expressly recited that the
Without the attempted explanation by appellants, the deed from J. P. ■ Little to his two sons might be regarded simply as a conveyance without consideration, which, on its face, it appears to be, and thus fraudulent only as to creditors whose debts existed when it was executed. But this explanation is so ■palpably contradicted in every particular, and so unreasonable, as of itself to satisfactorily sustain the allegations contained in the several petitions of the plaintiffs, and to authorize the judgment of the lower court subjecting the land to the payment of their debts.
Judgment affirmed.