McInnis v. Wiscassett Mills

78 Miss. 52 | Miss. | 1900

Alexander, Special J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

By the agreement of March 27, 1894, the Meridian Sash & Blind Factory, the owner of practically all the stock of the Wiscassett Mills, obligated itself to transfer and deliver-to certain persons, who afterwards became incorporated into the J. J. Newman Lumber Co., all of said stock. The delivery was to take place October 1, 1894, and the -price therefor, to wit, $40,000, was to be then paid, partly in cash and partly in notes, the last of which was to be matured April 1, 1896. In the agreement, the sash and blind factory also undertook to procure a conveyance to the Newman company of all such lands of the Wiscassett Mills as might be accepted by the Newman company after being inspected. It was also stipulated that.-the capital stock should be transferred “freed from any incumbrance or debts of the Wiscassett Mills, ’ ’ and the sash and blind factory ageed to pay off and discharge, on October 1, 1894, all such debts “then due and owing.”

Afterwards, on May 27, 1895, presumably to sanction and facilitate the execution in part of the said agreement, the Wiscassett Mills executed two deeds to the Meridian Sash & Blind Factory, one conveying its entire plant and its lands and timber rights in Jones and Perry counties, and all the indebtedness due to it, and the other its lands in Covington county, each reciting a paid consideration of $20,000.

On the same day the sash and blind factory conveyed a large .quantity of the lands to the J. J. Newman Lumber Company, for a recited consideration of $10,182.65.

Several years prior to the date of the agreement, appellant, *55H. Mclnnis, had instituted an action in the circuit court of Perry county against the Wiscassett Mills, to recover damages for the wrongful obstruction of a navigable stream, whereby he was injured. This suit ripened into judgment for $1,-100, in November, 1895, a few months after the execution of the last of the above-mentioned deeds.

Execution on his j udgment having been returned nulla bona, Mclnnis filed this bill in November, 1896, against the three corporations, seeking to cancel the agreement and the deeds as fraudulent. The bill contains only the most general averments of fraud, and its allegations as to the facts are painfully meager, giving the widest possible construction to the charges. They may be condensed into the single averment that the agreement was fraudulent, and that the deeds were shams without consideration, and executed to hinder, delay and defraud complainant. It is further alleged that F. W. 'Williams was a member of each of the corporations, and the exhibits show that he was secretary of the Wiscasset Mills and of the sash and blind factory. The insolvency of the Wiscasset Mills when the bill was filed, was alleged and admitted. The defendants jointly answered, denying every charge of the bill touching fraud, and there was no testimony introduced tending in the least degree to sustain the averments of the bill, unless it can be said that the face of the exhibits supply such evidene. The bill was dismissed and complainant appeals.

We reject as unsound the proposition advanced by appellees that complainant, whose claim rested on tort, could not come within the protection of the statute of frauds. In determining who is a creditor, the statute must be liberally construed, and it protects, at least as against actual fraud, one who, at the time of the conveyance, is suing the grantor in an action of tort. Bump on Fraud. Con., 193.

But, in the absence of any evidence, except such as may be gotten from the face of the exhibits, we must affirm the decree. No rule is better settled than that fraud cannot be inferred and *56cannot be charged in general terms. The particular facts that constitute fraud must be set out positively, if known to the complainant, or, if not, on information and belief. Railroad v. Neighbors, 51 Miss., 412; Watts v. Patton, 66 Miss., 54; Richardson v. Davis, 70 Miss., 219.

The deeds and agreement contain internal evidence suggestive of the fact that the scheme of the sash and blind factory was to liquidate the Wiscassett Mills, turn over its capital stock to the biewman company, and take such of its assets as could not thus be sold and pay off its debts. Whether it has done so is not averred or shown. It is not even alleged or proved that the Wiscassett Mills owed any debts at the time of the conveyances. The bill and evidence are silent as to whether the recited consideration in the deeds was paid, or, -if paid, as to how disposed of. It may be that the claim of appellant can be brought within the terms of the assumption .by the sash and blind factory of the debts of the Wiscassett Mills (as to which we do not decide), but it is not even averred or shown that the condition upon which the assumption was based, viz., the actual transfer of the capital stock, ever took place.

Whatever impression this court may get from the record as to the right of appellant, an unsuccessful complainant below, to some relief on a bill properly framed and on a more complete disclosure of facts, we cannot revérse a decree, proper under the pleadings and evidence merely to afford opportunity to make a new and better case. Peeler v. Peeler, 68 Miss., 141.

We affirm the decree, but without prejudice to the right of appellant to proceed, if he may be so advised, against the Meridian Sash & Blind Factory if, in execution of the agreement or otherwise, it has acquired or disposed of the assets of the Wiscassett Mills for its own benefit, or if, by the terms of its agreement, it has become legally or equitably liable to pay appellant’s judgment.

Affirmed.