211 F. 643 | 7th Cir. | 1914
Other probative facts (not specified in the report) appear from the undisputed testimony of witnesses introduced on behalf of the trustee, as follows: The business of the bankrupt has long been carried on under like conditions, with goods on hand to the amount of $400 or $500, replenished from day to day by purchases from wholesalers, and his sales were sufficient to “turn over about $400 or $500 of stock a week.” His credit was good with these houses, although sometimes “slow” in payments; and this method' of business was conducted without substantial change, both before and jafter July 20th, up to his abandonment of business as above mentioned.
Testimony does not appear tending to impeach the correctness of the statement so made to the appellant on July 20th, with the single exception of the valuation there placed upon the real estate. While another item of valuation—$400 for “notes and accounts good”—is mentioned in the report as “valueless,” no testimony appears tending to disprove either the existence of such assets or their valuation. In reference to the real estate, it appears from the evidence that the bankrupt and his wife disposed of both parcels when their flight from Chicago was impending—by exchanging them for Wisconsin lands at a nominal valuation of $3,500—and the special master thus states his deductions as to their value: “Evidence disclosed that the real estate has since then been sold for $2,850 on small deferred payments, but that its cash valuation was only $2,500”; that it “was incumbered for $1,200”; that “the bankrupt only owned half” thereof; that “there was a homestead exemption of $1,000 which attached to one of the pieces”; that he “eliminates the real estate as having in substance no equity for the creditors”; and that the appellant should not háve “been governed by the valuation put thereon by the bankrupt.”
We are not satisfied that this finding of $2,500 as the value of the real estate is either well founded, or in accord with the statutory requirement of “fair valuation”; nor do we understand the evidence to authorize the conclusion that the bankrupt appeared to have no substantial equity therein to be applicable for testing his solvency; and, in any view thereof, the ownership and use of such real estate, as described, wpuld tend to support the claim of bona fides in giving
The conclusions of the special master, confirmed by the District Court, that the mortgage was voidable as a preference, are involved with various recitals of the evidence and findings therefrom in the report, but they are stated, in substance, as follows: That “the question of law is found in section 60 (b) as amended in 1910,” and “the mortgage was such a transfer” as there declared voidable by the trustee. That the “bankrupt unquestionably was insolvent as he was so adjudged—the involuntary petition setting up the' execution of the mortgage and charging insolvency at the time same was executed, * * * the mortgagor not making any objection.” And, in reference to the further condition provided by 'the amendment, it is stated, after reviewing various facts: (1) That it may be assumed from the testimony that the appellant “and its agents were familiar with the result to be anticipated in the foreclosure of chattel mortgages”; and (2) that “I am therefore satisfied from the evidence that not only was the bankrupt insolvent at the time he gave the mortgage, but that Sheppard-Strassheim Company had reason to believe that the enforcement of that mortgage by them would produce a condition that would give them a preference over the other creditors, and I so find.”
Whatever may have been the view there- adopted of the meaning of the amendment of section 60b, as mentioned, it appears that its requirements were ultimately treated as raising an issue of fact, in a limited sense, for the test of validity, so that the case -may be distinguishable, in that respect, from the ruling presented on the appeal (No. 2014) in Kenwood Trust & Savings Bank v. Buell, Trustee, 211 Fed. 638, 128 C. C. A.-, wherein our opinion is handed down herewith. It is unquestionable, however, that our ruling in that case is both applicable and controlling upon the present inquiry, for interpretation of the amended provision referred to upon which the single issue of fact involved in the foregoing finding must rest. As there interpreted, the only “preference” denounced by the several provisions of the Bankruptcy Act and amendments thereof is one given by the bankrupt when he is in truth insolvent, as defined in section 1 (15) of the act, so that the common-law right of a debtor to give a preference to one or more creditors over other creditors, by payment of or security for indebtedness, is otherwise unaffected by such provisions; and the amended provision of section 60b, requiring that the person receiving a preference “shall then have reasonable cause to believe thaf the enforcement * * * would effect a preference” to render it voidable, must be read as intending alone the character of preference inhibited by the Bankruptcy Act. Therefore, without evidence tending to" charge the beneficiary with notice (actual or constructive) that the bankrupt was insolvent when the security was given, the statute does not authorize a finding of invalidity, although it must necessarily have been understood as preferential over other creditors in the general or common-law sense of that term.
We are of opinion, accordingly, that error is well assigned upon the above-mentioned rulings against the appellant; tha.t the issue of
The decree of the District Court is reversed, with direction to dismiss the bill for want of equity.