42 S.E. 432 | S.C. | 1902
August 16, 1902. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action by the plaintiff, as trustee in bankruptcy of W.F. Nesbitt Co., to recover certain payments made by the bankrupts to the defendants within four months before adjudication of bankruptcy, on the ground that said payments were illegal and preferences under the United States bankrupt act of 1898. The master sustained the plaintiff's contention, but the Circuit Court reversed the master and dismissed the complaint. The Circuit decree — which cites Loveland on Law and Proceedings of Bankruptcy, sec. 194, in re Eggert, 98 Fed., 843, S.C.; 102 Fed. Rep., 735; Grant v. National Bank,
It would not subserve any useful purpose to discuss the testimony in detail, but considering it in the light of the principles stated, we agree with the Circuit Court that plaintiff failed to show that the defendants at the time of said payments had reasonable cause to believe that said payments were intended as a preference, for it was not shown that the defendants or their agents had reasonable cause to believe that the assets of W.E. Nesbitt Co. were insufficient to pay their indebtedness. The evidence shows that plaintiff, who was then acting as attorney for W.E. Nesbitt Co., and who made said payments from the proceeds of the policy of fire insurance collected by him upon the order of W. E. Nesbitt Co., believed at the time that W.E. Nesbitt Co. were solvent, and so informed the agents of defendants. Mr. Stover, the agent for the Stover-Marshall Co., and Mr. McCollough, the attorney for the Geo. D. Witt Shoe Co., both testified that they had no reason at that time to believe that W.E. Nesbitt Co. were insolvent, and no *461 knowledge of any fact was brought home to them that should have put an ordinarily prudent man upon inquiry beyond such as they made of the plaintiff.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.