125 Tenn. 532 | Tenn. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Complainant, Jas. D. Richardson, Jr., administrator of Will-A. Vick, deceased, brought this bill against the heirs and creditors of his intestate, in the chancery court of Rutherford county, to have the estate of the intestate there administered as an insolvent estate. The decedent died July 2, 1909. Complainant was- appointed and qualified as administrator July 9, 1909, and, having first duly suggested the insolvency of the estate, filed the bill in this cause July 20, 190-91. Thereafter the hill was sustained as an insolvent bill, and all creditors enjoined
The cause is now before this court upon petitions filed therein August 16,1909, by the Kentucky Wagon & Manufacturing Company, a corporation, and November 26, 1909, by the Deeds & Hersig Manufacturing Company, a corporation, to review the decree of the chancellor in favor of the petitioners.
The facts charged in the respective petitions of the Kentucky Wagon & Manufacturing Company and the Deeds & Hersig Manufacturing Company, and appearing in the proof, upon which petitioners seek relief, are these:
W. A. Vick was a retail dealer in wragons and other vehicles previous to January 1,1909, in the city of Mur-freesboro. On the day named he formed a partnership with Allen C, 'Johnson for the purpose of conducting the same business, which continued in existence until June 1', 1909, upon which day it was dissolved, and by the terms of the dissolution Vick agreed to take all the vehicles in stock, and assume and pay all indebtedness of the firm due on account of the purchase of the same. He continued in business until July 2d next, when, as stated above, he died intestate and wholly insolvent; the assets of his estate aggregating less than $10,000, and his indebtedness more than $75,000.
The Kentucky Wagon & Manufacturing Company, previous to January 1, 1909, had consigned vehicles to W. A. Vick, as agent, for sale, and about that day, upon his request, accepted his note for the cost price of five
The petitioner Deeds & Hersig Manufacturing Oom-piany sold to Vick & Johnson, as partners, twenty-nine vehicles, taking their notes for the purchase money,' which upon the dissolution of the firm, were taken up by Vick and his notes accepted in lieu of the same.
When Vick died, all the vehicles purchased from the petitioners were in his warehouse at Murfreesboro, were susceptible of identification, and came to the hand of his administrator, and the .several notes given by him for the purchase money were all unpaid.
W. A. Vick, for some years previous to January 1, 1909, had dealt with both petitioners, and had falsely and fraudulently represented to them, respectively, for the purpose of obtaining credit for vehicles purchased, that he was solvent and worth from $60,000 to $7'0,000 above all his indebtedness. He also made from year to year reports of his financial condition to mercantile agencies of which petitioners were subscribers, for the purpose of obtaining credit, and which he knew would be supplied to and acted upon by petitioners, showing his condition to be as represented to petitioner, which reports were received and acted upon by them. These
The petitioners had not, previous to January 1, 1909, dealt with Allen C. Johnson, and did not know him or his financial condition, and in the subsequent dealings with the firm gave it credit upon the faith of the representations made them by Vick of his financial condition. Vick was at this time aware of his insolvency, and knew he could not pay for the property sold him.
Petitioners, respectively, charge that they were induced to sell and deliver the vehicles sold by the Kentucky Wagon & Manufacturing Company to Vick previous to January 1', 1909, and those to the firm of Vick & Johnson after that date on a credit, as stated, and to accept the individual notes for those of the firm, by the false and fraudulent representations made by Vick, as above shown, and that, on account of the fraud thus knowingly and deliberately perpetrated upon them, the said
There is no error in this decree. It is elementary law, of universal application, that fraud renders all contracts voidable, ab initio, at the option of the defrauded party, when diligently exercised, in the absence of intervening rights of innocent third parties. Contracts are not binding where the minds of the parties do not meet and assent to their terms, and there is no real assent where the will of one has been controlled, and his assent procured, by deception and fraud. Where this has been done the contract is voidable, and the party defrauded has the right to rescind it and reassert his original status and rights.
A common case for the application of this principle is where one had induced another to sell and deliver to him property, on a credit, by false and fraudulent representations of solvency, with the intention of not paying for it. In such cases the vendor has the right to disaffirm the same and reinvest in himself the title to the property and reclaim possession. This court said:
. “It is now settled, both in England and America, that, if a person purchase goods with the fraudulent intention of not paying for them, the vendor may disaffirm the sale, although the goods be delivered, and reinvest*541 the property in Mm, and recover them by action against the vendee.” Belding Bros. v. Frankland, 8 Lea, 67, 41 Am. Rep., 630.
The supreme court of the United States has stated the rule in these words:
“The doctrine is now well established by a preponderance of authority that a party not intending to pay, who, as in this instance, induces the owner to sell him goods on a credit, by fraudulently concealing his insolvency and his intent not to pay for them, is guilty of fraud which entitles the vendor, if no innocent third party has acquired an interest in them, to disaffirm the contract and recover the.goods.” Donaldson v. Farwell, 93 U. S., 632, 23 L. Ed., 993.
The fraudulent intent not to pay for the property purchased may he deduced from the facts and circumstances, where no actual false representations of solvency are made, when the purchaser has full knowledge of his insolvent condition and inability to make payment.
And false representations of solvency, knowingly and purposely made to induce the vendor to sell and deliver the goods on a credit, when the purchaser is hopelessly insolvent, are sufficient to establish the fraudulent intent not to pay for them, as his condition must necessarily preclude any honest intent to the contrary-Belding v. Frankland, supra; Katzenberger v. Leedom Co., 103 Tenn., 144, 52 S. W., 35; Talcott v. Henderson, 31 Ohio St., 162, 27 Am. Rep., 501; Remington on
This case presents a strong one for the application oi this rule. The petitioners were induced to make the sales of the property sought to be recovered on a credit, and part with the possession of it, by the false representations of W. T. Vick that he was worth from $60,000 to $70,000, made for that purpose when he knew he was hopelessly insolvent, and could not have possibly had any "reasonable expectation of making payment; and upon the same representations he fraudulently procured petitioners to release Johnson and take his individual obligations for the purchase money due them. These facts not only establish conclusively the fraudulent intent not to make payment, but fraud in general, which vitiates the contracts of sale.
There is nothing in the suggestion that the firm of Vick & Johnson was solvent, because of the solvency of Johnson. Petitioners sold and delivered their goods exclusively upon the credit of W. A. Vick, established with them by his fraudulent misrepresentations of his financial condition. They had had previous dealings with him, but none with Johnson, and did not know or inquire of his ability to pay, and did not give the credit to him. It is not necessary, to avoid a sale, that the false representations be the sole and exclusive consideration for the credit, but only that they be a material consideration, without which the credit would not probably have been extended. In re Marco Gany (D. C.), 4 Am. Banker. Rep., 576, 103 Fed. 930.
Complainant, however, insists that the petitioners lost their right of rescission and reclamation of their property, fraudulently obtained from them, by the suggestion of the insolvency of the estate of W. ¿V Vick. This contention is based upon the statute in regard to the administration and distribution of the assets of insolvent estates of decedents among creditors (‘Code, section 3170 [Shannon’s Ed., section 4065]), which provides that: “Insolvent estates of deceased persons shall be divided among the creditors ratably, and no action brought, judgment, bill single, or notes of land, shall have precedence over unliquidated accounts presented and filed, authenticated according" to law, but all such claims shall be acted upon as being of equal grade,”
This statute was enacted for the purpose of abrogating the.common-law distinctions of debt due on account of the character or form of the evidence of the debt. The
The , general creditors of the estate of an insolvent debtor have no greater right or interest in his property than he possessed at the time of his death. Parchman v. Charlton, 1 Cold., 382.
The contention of the complainant seems to be that the petitioners are attempting in this case to assert a lien on the property which they sold Vick, and which came to his hands with the other assets- of the estate of the decedent; in other words, that the right to reclaim the possession of the property, which the vendee has fraudulently procured through the form of a sale, is an inchoate lien upon the property, which is not fixed and cannot be acquired without an action brought to recover the property, which was not done in this case until
This is a misconception of petitioners’ position and the rights which they are here asserting. They do not claim to he creditors, or to have a lien upon the property, either inchoate or fixed. They claim the absolute title and right to possession of the property, predicated upon the principle that they never parted with it, because of the fraud perpetrated upon them. This proposition is sound, and must prevail. The contracts of sale were voidable from the beginning, and, when disaffirmed, the original status of the parties was restored. The title of the property is in petitioners, and they have the right to the possession of it.
It is well settled that the vendor, in cases of this kind, can recover his property, notwithstanding a valid assignment made to secure general creditors, or the fact that the debtor has been declared bankrupt. Belding v. Frankland, supra; Donaldson v. Farwell, 93 U. S., 682, 23 L. Ed., 993, supra.
The general principles applicable to assignments for the benefit of creditors and proceedings in bankruptcy are much the same as those governing the administration of the estates of insolvent decedents. It has been held that a trustee in bankruptcy,- holding goods affected with the fraud of the bankrupt, is in neither law nor morals justified in holding the goods obtained by
The petitioners are not creditors of the insolvent and deceased debtor. They have disaffirmed the contracts made with him, and merely claim the property which he fraudulently procured from them. The rights of no innocent third parties have intervened or attached. Petitioners have been guilty of no laches, and have not, since the fraud was discovered, reaffirmed the contracts made with them. Their first knowledge of the falsity of the representations made then, and of the insolvency of the deceased, was the suggestion of the insolvency of his estate by the complainant. They then promptly dis-affirmed the sales made by them, and brought their petitions in this cause, under the orders of the court, to recover possession.
The decree of the chancellor, awarding them the possession of the property, as we have above stated, is correct, and must be affirmed.