39 Fla. 617 | Fla. | 1897
On March 29, 1892, the plaintiff in error interposed ■a claim to certain goods and chattels which had been taken bj^ the sheriff of Polk county under a writ of attachment against the goods, chattels, lands and tenements of Montfort & Co., a firm composed of W. T. Montfort and J. S. Oppenheimer, sued out by defendants in error. Upon the trial of this claim proceeding in the Circuit Court of Polk county the following facts were proven: J. S. Oppenheimer was claimant’s brother. On January 1, 1892, Montfort & Co. were insolvent, and the claimant was aware of that fact; Montfort & Co. were at that time indebted to claimant in the sum of $6,302.58, and claimant was security for them to the amount of $4,300 to other creditors, total $10,602.58. On that date claimant purchased of Mont-fort & Co., all their visible property, consisting of two separate and independent stocks of merchandise, one of dry goods, valued at $8,500; the other, groceries, valued at $3,500; notes, mortgages and accounts valued at $2,800; total $14,800; and also wagons, harness and mules, valued at $450. This last item was paid in cash; and the $14,800, was settled in the following manner: claimant cancelled his indebtedness against Montfort & Co., assumed the debts of Mont-fort & Co. for which he was surety; paid Montfort &
Many errors are assigned upon instructions of the court, and upon rulings admitting evidence. The facts as we have stated them were not only proven by competent legal evidence, but the most of them were proven by complainant himself, and none of them were denied by him or contradicted by any other evidence in the case. We think these facts were not only sufficient to authorize, but that they imperatively demanded, the verdict rendered by the jury, showing conclusively as they did that the sale by Montfort & Co. to claimant was void as to creditors under the provisions of our statutes against fraudulent conveyances.
There are expressions in Wilson vs. Lott, 5 Fla. 305, and Ballard vs. Eckman, 20 Fla. 661, which would seem to militate against some of the views expressed above, and to that extent those cases are disapproved. In neither of those cases, however, was there sufficient evidence to show that the purchasing creditors had knowledge of the debtor’s insolvency at the time of
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.