72 Mo. App. 411 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
For more than ten years prior to February 10, 1892, the defendant, Stephen J. Burns, under the name of Burns & Company, had been engaged in the wholesale flour and feed business at St. Joseph, Missouri. He began in a small way, but from time to time enlarged his business, so that at the date this controversy arose, and his failure occurred, he might be considered an operator on a large scale. He seems to have purchased largely from numerous mills over the country, and had in storage at his failure something over $40,000 worth of flour. In addition to buying and selling flour at wholesale, he had also erected and was operating a mill for the manufacture of oat and corn mea].
During the entire course of his business, said Stephen J. Burns was a customer of theNational Bank of St. Joseph, and at times borrowed large sums of money from the same as well as from the Burnes family corporation known as the Ayr Lawn Company. This indebtedness, according to the interpleader’s showing, aggregated on February 10, 1892, about the sum of $57,000. With the exception of an overdraft of something over $8,500, this indebtedness was evidenced by nine promissory notes executed by said Stephen J. Burns and payable to said bank and Ayr Lawn Company. These notes grew out of loans made at different
During the first part of February, 1892, Galvin F. Burnes, as the representative of the St. Joseph bank and Ayr Lawn Company, seems to have become uneasy as to Stephen Burns’ condition and demanded of said Burns that he reduce his indebtedness to said corporations or give security therefor. This resulted in said Stephen Burns transferring certain warehouse receipts for flour stored at different places in St. Joseph, to the Ayr Lawn Company, and the further execution of a deed of trust covering flour, etc., on hand to the interpleader Piggott for the benefit of both the bank and said Ayr Lawn Company. Another deed of trust was also made covering the mill and machinery. These conveyances, together with the assignment of some accounts, had the effect in fact of pledging all the property belonging to said Stephen J. Burns for the security of the $57,000 he then owed to the Burnes corporations.
Immediately following this, the plaintiff in this action, together with several other millers throughout the country who had claims for flour sold to said Stephen J. Burns, brought various attachment suits and levied on the flour and other property which had theretofore been transferred for the security of the bank and Lawn Company. The latter corporations at once gave forthcoming bonds for the property and in due time by their trustee filed their interplea. To this the plaintiff in effect answered that the said transfers to the inter-pleader were fraudulent; that the claims of said bank and Lawn Company were in part, if not all, fictitious; that said conveyances in trust were made to hinder, delay, and defraud the plaintiff and other creditors, and that the beneficiaries therein had knowledge thereof and participated therein.
The particular charge is, that in the fall of 1891, and some three or four months before Burns’ failure, Calvin F. Burnes and Stephen J. Burns, being satisfied of the latter’s insolvency and failing condition, entered into a conspiracy to get into the hands of Stephen J. all the flour the latter could purchase on a credit; that said Stephen would never pay therefor, but the same should then be transferred to the bank and Lawn Company represented by said Calvin F. Burnes.
We find in the record no evidence to justify this charge of conspiracy to defraud creditors. The nearest approach to evidence tending in that direction is that during the few months preceding the execution of the deed of trust to the bank and Lawn Company, Stephen J. Burns did make large purchases of flour and did increase his stock much beyond that usually carried. He stated, however, as a reason for these large pur
Further attention is called to the fact that during these several months preceding Stephen J.. Burns’ failure, the bank and Lawn Company continued to loan and advance more money to said Burns, and it is reasoned therefrom that the purpose of said corporations was thereby to bolster up the credit of said Burns until he could secure large and additional amounts of flour, etc. It seems to us that this is a rather improbable and remote inference. It is true that from October 1, 1891, to the date of failure in February, 1892, these beneficiaries in the deeds of trust did continue to accommodate Stephen'Burns with some $18,000 additional loans. But is it reasonable to infer therefrom that the bank’s purpose in so doing was to strengthen the credit of a known insolvent debtor and allow him to'impose on other creditors'? Is it not more reasonable to suppose that the truth was, as all the direct evidence tended to prove, that Calvin F. Burnes, representing the bank and Lawn Company, had even then implicit confidence in the financial ability and business integrity of Stephen J. Burns, and that said Calvin believed, as he told some of these attaching creditors, that Stephen J. was good for his obligations. Said Calvin F., when called as a witness 'for the plaintiff, testified that at the time he thought Stephen J. solvent and a successful business man. And his conduct and indulgence shown in past transactions covering a series of years tended to support this measure of good opinion; for the evidence shows that Stephen J. had on
Counsel for plaintiff say that it was absurd and therefore 'unreasonable that Calvin E. Burnes (whom they characterize as a shrewd financier) should have loaned Stephen J. so large an amount of money, and that, too, without any tangible security. But are we to pronounce the $57,000 claim a mere fiction because its creation seems to have been unbusinesslike or ill-advised? If this is a reasonable inference, then in like manner may it be inferred that these attaching creditors have not just or valid claims against the insolvent? As we now look back “through the hind sights” it is easy enough.to see that Stephen J. Burns was not at any time entitled to the credit extended.
These authorities draw additional force from the fact that in these cases the attachments were levied on the flour and other property formerly belonging to defendant Burns and without regard to whether such goods came from such attaching creditors or other parties. For aught that appears, it may be that the flour seized on the writ issued at the suit of this plaintiff may have all been purchased from other creditors not suing.
But as already said, even conceding that Stephen J. Burns had a fraudulent purpose in buying the flour, and intended at the time not to pay therefor, we think there were no facts or circumstance shown from which the jury might have legitimately inferred that the interpleader' or those he represented were parties thereto.
If, now, there was any proof that this $469.45, or any considerable portion thereof, was paid over to the debtor, then the insistence of plaintiff’s counsel would be of some avail — notwithstanding its insignificance when compared with the magnitude of the transaction. For the law is well settled that while the creditor may accept from the debtor sufficient of the latter’s goods to satisfy his claim, yet in doing so he must not use the occasion to cover up and conceal other property that might be reached by the unpreferred creditors. And if he should do so, the entire transaction will be invalidated. This would be a conveyance to the use of the grantor and void under the statute of fraudulent conveyances.
But the weakness of this point is manifest from the consideration of other conceded facts and the utter absence of any evidence to prove that Stephen J. Burns received any part of this $469.45. The burden of so showing rested on the plaintiff. In his behalf the bank’s officers were called as witnesses and the books introduced, and therefrom the proof was, that at the date of the transaction (February 10, 1892) there were outstanding against this account numerous checks, and
As to the extent and genuineness of the debt which Stephen J. Burns owed the bank and Lawn Company, it would seem, ought not to be a matter of serious dispute. Plaintiff introduced the books of the bank and all the parties likely to be informed, and I undertake to say that they prove beyond all question the debt existed to the full limit named in the deeds of trust providing for the preference. The notes uncanceled and in the hands of these beneficiaries, the testimony of all the parties, the books used to record the various business transactions, all go to show this, and that, too, without any substantial contradiction. It is true that Stephen J. Burns, while on the stand, testified that he thought perhaps he at some time in January or February before the failure paid off some note of $4,000 or $6,000, but there is not a scintilla of evidence to support this guess or uncertain statement, and in his; own evidence he unqualifiedly admits the full amount of the debt as claimed. The evidence in this respect is so overwhelming and conclusive that if the jury had found that any of the notes had been so paid, it would have been the plain duty of the court to set such verdict aside as unsupported by any substantial evidence. This being so, then the court was authorized in advance to treat such allegation as unproved, and instruct accordingly.