88 S.W.2d 286 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1935
Affirming in part and reversing in part.
In April, 1933, Leo J. Zimlich's assets were estimated at $15,444 and his liabilities at $33,477. He then executed mortgages on his real estate to secure debts to his relatives and an intimate friend. The Security Bank held a past-due note for $1,000 on which his brother was surety. It brought suit to set aside the mortgages and the conveyances hereinafter referred to as being fraudulent. Zimlich's early subsequent death resulted in a suit to settle his estate, and in it the claims of the several creditors were litigated. The court set aside the mortgages and transfers as fraudulent, but there is no appeal from the judgment except on two points.
A son, Amos L. Zimlich, proved that in July, 1932, he borrowed $400 on an insurance policy and loaned it to his father. A few weeks later, when he sought to collect the money, his father advised that he could not pay, but needed more money. Thereupon he surrendered the policy for its cash value and obtained $345 more, which he let his father have. For these two sums, he testified, his father sold him nine shares of stock in the Falls City Ice Beverage Company. He examined the certificate, sealed it in an envelope, and gave it to his father to put in his safety box with his (the son's) insurance papers. It remained there until he moved to Madison, Ind., on February 1, 1933, when he took it with him. The stock, however, was not transferred on the books of the company to the son until April 12, 1933. The court set aside this transfer, but awarded the son a lien on the stock for the money he had paid for it.
The widow, Mrs. Hannah Zimlich, established that in 1930 she had obtained $2,000 from her father as an advancement and let her husband have it; that he agreed at the time to give her either outright or by way of partial security five shares of stock in the Gardeners Farmers Market Company, which, it appears, was *562 then worth $1,000; that the certificate could not be located; when application was made to the company for a duplicate, it was suggested that she wait a year and then if the certificate could not be found and she would execute an indemnifying bond, a duplicate would be issued; that the bond was not made until early in 1933, and in June the duplicate certificate was issued to Mrs. Zimlich and the stock transferred on the books of the company. The court also set aside this transfer and adjudged Mrs. Zimlich a lien on the stock to reimburse her.
The Security Bank appeals from those two parts of the judgment and contends that no lien should have been adjudged either the son or the widow.
As to the claim of Amos L. Zimlich, it is contended that there was no transfer for a valuable consideration and that several inconsistencies in his testimony, together with the entire circumstances disclosed, refute his testimony and that it is not sufficient to sustain the burden resting on him to overcome the result of showing the badges of fraud so manifest in the transaction. The particular aspect of the question with which we are interested is whether the son was a party to the constructive fraud upon the father's creditors or innocent thereof, that is, whether the transfer of the stock for the money paid his father was in good faith so far as he was concerned. While the circumstances raise a suspicion of knowledge of the conditions on the part of the son, yet it is disclosed that the stock was worth at the time only about $775, or approximately what the son undoubtedly paid to his father. The son was away from the city practically all the time, and there is no substantial evidence disproving his contention that he knew nothing about his father's affairs. Zimlich owned considerable property and had been a prosperous and successful contractor. Indeed, there is no evidence that in the summer of 1932 he was insolvent so as to bring this transaction within the terms of the statute relating to fraudulent conveyances. See Hickman Bank Trust Co. v. Pickard and Mayberry,
Section 1906 of the Statutes declares that every gift, conveyance, assignment, or transfer of or charge upon any property made with the intent to delay, hinder, or defraud creditors, and every evidence of debt given shall be void against such creditors. But there is added the provision that the title of a transferee for value shall not be affected unless it appear that he had notice of the fraudulent intent of his immediate grantor or of the fraud rendering void the title of such grantor. From an early date, the statute has been construed as authorizing the allowance of an equitable lien to the mortgagee or transferee on the property, the sale, the transfer, or mortgage of which is set aside as constructively fraudulent, to secure the sum paid as against the creditors if the grantee, transferee, or mortgagee actually paid the consideration without notice of the fraudulent purpose of the debtor. After restitution, the excess of the property is subject to the debts of the transferor or grantor. Short v. Tinsley, 1 Metc. (58 Ky.) 397, 71 Am. Dec. 482; Davis v. First National Bank of Princeton,
It is sufficient to say in relation to the judgment affecting Mrs. Zimlich that section 2128 of the statutes makes invalid as to third persons any gift, transfer, or assignment of personal property between a husband and wife unless the same shall be in writing and acknowledged and recorded. This is applicable to the transfer of corporate stock. Hawley Coal Co. v. Bruce,
Mrs Zimlich was chargeable with notice of this statute and cannot be regarded as one who unwittingly or innocently aided an insolvent debtor to commit a constructive fraud on his creditors. The court is of opinion, therefore, that the judgment is erroneous in awarding Mrs. Zimlieh a lien on the stock.
Judgment affirmed as to Amos L. Zimlich and reversed as to Mrs. Hannah Zimlich.