183 Mo. 438 | Mo. | 1904
This is a ,bill in equity to recover $5,100 alleged to have been paid to the defendant, by Siegel-Hillman Dry Goods Company, as a preference. The suit is brought under the bankrupt act of 1898, by Swartz, the trustee in bankruptcy of said com
I.
The Siegel-Hillman Dry Goods Company ran a large department store in St. Louis. The defendant was an attorney at law and the company was one of his clients.
On December 1,1899, the company owed him eleven hundred dollars fees for services theretofore rendered to it. A few days thereafter the company sought his services on account of business troubles, and agreed to pay him four thousand dollars for services then rendered and thereafter to be rendered in connection therewith.- The trouble was this:
About the last of November, Asiel Putzel & Co., of New York, sent their account against Siegel-Hillman Dry Goods Company, to a St. Louis law firm for collection. The company paid it, but the New York firm, without waiting to hear from their St. Louis attorneys, began an attachment suit against the company in New York. This precipitated a rush of demands for payment by other creditors for claims due and not then due, and about twelve thousand dollars in such claims were placed in the hands of attorneys in St. Louis for collection. Negotiations were at once begun between Hill-man, the president of the company, and the defendant, the attorney of the company, who also held some claims against the company for collection, on the one side, and the attorneys who held the claims aforesaid, on the other side, which resulted in an agreement that the company would pay one-third of such claims on December 13, one-third on December 20, and one-third on December
The second payment was not met on the day agreed upon, but after banking hours on December 23, the company sent checks therefor to the said attorneys. The twenty-fourth of December 1899, fell on Sunday-and the twenty-fifth was Christmas. On December 26, the company executed a deed of trust upon its stock of goods, etc., to Thomas McKittrick, for $223,888.12, as trustee for the Fourth National Bank of St. Louis and three hundred and seventy-seven other creditors. On December 30,1899, an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against the company. Sometime during the first ten days of January, 1900, the trustee, McKittrick, sold the stock of goods, store fixtures, etc., covered by said deed of trust, for about seventy thousand dollars. On February 6, 1900, the company was adjudged a bankrupt, and on March 10, the plaintiff was elected and qualified as trustee in bankruptcy of said estate. This suit was begun about sixteen months after the adjudication aforesaid.
There is no question that the four-thousand-dollar fee agreed upon in, the early part of December, 1899, was for services then and thereafter to be rendered in respect to the business troubles of the company, and, therefore, does not fall within the prohibition against preferences of the Federal statute. [Bankrupt Act, 1898, sec. 60, 30 U. S. Stats, at Large, p. 562.]
This section provides that if a debtor, in contemplation of bankruptcy, pays money or transfers property to an attorney,for services, the transaction may
This provision of the bankrupt law underwent review by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in Furth v. Stahl, 10 Am. Bankruptcy Reports 442, and it was held that where the money or goods were given in consideration of services presently rendered or thereafter to be rendered, such act was not within the mischief the bankrupt act was aimed against, and was valid, but that the bankrupt court could review the transaction, and if the amount was found to be excessive the excess could be recovered by the trustee.
In Bank v. Bruce, 109 Fed. 69, it was held that where a mortgage was given as security partly “for a present consideration” and partly for an antecedent debt, which was void as to creditors, it was valid as to the first and voidable as a preference as to the latter only.
The same conclusion was reached in In re Wolf, 98 Fed. 84.
The four-thousand-dollar fee for services presently and thereafter to be rendered was, therefore, a valid preference under the bankrupt law. It is plain that if this were not so no' person in failing circumstances could secure the advice and services of an attorney.
No attempt is shown to have the Federal court review the amount so paid, and the State courts have no jurisdiction to do so. They can only enforce a recovery where the preference is unlawful. In fact this is not an action to recover the excess over a reasonable amount, but is an action to recover the whole amount as a fraudulent preference under the bankrupt act.
This leaves for consideration only the question as to the $1,100 due for services previously rendered.
Under the bankrupt law (sec. 60, U. S. Stat. at Large, vol. 30, p. 562) a person is deemed to have given
And’ it is further provided by tbe act, that, “If a bankrupt shall have given a preference within four months before tbe filing of tbe petition, or‘after tbe filing of tbe petition and before tbe adjudication, and tbe person receiving it, or to be benefited thereby, or bis agent acting therein, shall have bad reasonable cause to believe that it was intended thereby to give a preference, it shall be voidable by the trustee, and be may recover tbe property or its value from sucb person.”
And clause 15 of section 1 of tbe act (U. S. Stats, at Large, vol. 30, p. 544) defines tbe meaning of tbe word “insolvent,” as used in tbe act to be:
“A person shall be deemed insolvent within the provisions of this act whenever tbe aggregate of bis property, exclusive of any property which be may have conveyed, transferred, concealed, or removed, or permitted to be concealed or removed, with intent to defraud, binder or delay bis creditors, shall not, at a fair valuation, be sufficient in amount to pay bis debts. ’ ’
Tbe United States Circuit Court of Appeals for tbe third Circuit, in Duncan v. Landis, 106 Fed. l. c. 858, speaking of tbe term “fair valuation” employed in tbe act, said: “We think that tbe present market value of tbe property in question would be a fair valuation of tbe same, but there is nothing in this section of tbe act that authorizes that value to be ascertained by what a purchaser would give who desired to take advantage of tbe necessities and embarrassments of tbe owner, in order to procure the same at a price less than its real or market value. ... A man’s property, at a fair valuation, may amount to sufficient to pay bis debts, al
Under the act the strange condition is presented that if a man makes a general assignment for the benefit of Ms creditors, be may be adjudged a bankrupt, even though he is not shown to have been insolvent. [West Co. v. Lea, 174 U. S. 590.] But a preference is not void unless the debtor was insolvent when it was made, and unless the person receiving it has reasonable cause to believe that it was intended as a preference.
The crucial question in this case, therefore, is whether Siegel-Hillman Dry G-oods Company was insolvent on December 19, when the accounts were assigned to the defendant, and whether the defendant had reasonable cause- to believe that assignment was intended as a preference. ' The trial court held that such insolvency was not shown, and this court is asked to review and reverse that finding of fact.
The plaintiff introduced no witness who said the company was insolvent at that time nor that the assignment was intended as a preference. The plaintiff” s case is builded entirely upon the state of affairs at a subsequent date, and a deduction therefrom of the condition of the company at the date of the assignment, together with correspondence of the defendant and opinions of some of the attorneys who had claims against the company, but who had never examined the affairs of the company, coupled with a refusal of the company to permit a committee appointed by such attorneys to examine the books of the company at some time prior to December 13.
Thus the plaintiff shows that McKittrick sold the stock, fixtures, etc., for about $70,000, under a deed of trust made on December 26, seven days after the assignment was made. The plaintiff shows by an expert that if the inventory and appraisement that McKittrick had made after he took possession was correct, the company was insolvent by over one hundred thousand dollars.
The general rule of law is that a state of facts once shown to exist is ordinarily presumed to continue so to exist until the contrary is shown. But this presumption is not retrospective. [Lawson on Pres. Ev., p. 238; Jarvis v. Vanderford, 116 N. C. 147; Martyn v. Curtis, 67 Vt. 263.] The court has no more right to presume that the company had the same amount of stock on hand on December 19 as it was shown to have had on December 26, than it would have to presume that the amount on hand on December 19 was either greater, or smaller than the amount on hand on December 26. The bulk of the goods on hand on December 19 .might have been sold before December 26, especially in view of the holiday season, or the bulk of the goods on hand December 26, might have been received after December 19. The law requires proof and does not indulge in speculations. The correspondence of the defendant offered by the plaintiff affords no basis for the claim that the defendant knew or had reasonable cause to believe that the company was insolvent and intended the assignment of the accounts to him as a preference. On the contrary those
The plaintiff, however, claims that the adjudication in bankruptcy is evidence that the company was Insolvent. But this is a misapprehension, for in the first place it does not appear upon what ground the company was adjudicated a bankrupt, and as herein shown it might have been adjudged a bankrupt because it made the deed of trust (treating it as a general assignment) and that would not involve the question of whether it was solvent or insolvent. And in the next place the petition in bankruptcy was not filed until December 30,-
Without further analysis of the . evidence, it therefore appears that the trial court was right in holding that the insolvency of the company on December 19 was not shown. But in addition thereto there is no sustan-tial evidence in the case that the defendant knew that the assignment was intended as a preference.
II.
It further appears that the company was adjudged a bankrupt on February 6, 1900', and that this suit was not begun for some sixteen months thereafter, and that by paragraph N of section 57 of the bankrupt act, all claims must be exhibited against the bankrupt estate within one year after the adjudication of bankruptcy, and upon this predicate the defendant claims that the plaintiff has been guilty of such laches as amount to a bar to this action. On the other hand the plaintiff claims that the defendant knew that all claims against a bankrupt estate are barred unless exhibited within one year and also knew that under the provisions of paragraph Gr of section 57 of the bankrupt act it is necessary for a creditor to surrender his preference as a condition precedent to proving up his claim, and that it is the defendant’s own fault if he sat idly by and failed to surrender his preference and prove up his claim.
The infirmity underlying the plaintiff’s contention is that preferences are not declared by the act to be void. On the contrary section 60 (p. 562, U. S. Stats, at Large, vol. 30) declares that preferences are “voidable by the trusteeUntil the trustee elects to treat them as void and to institute suit to recover them, they are binding upon the parties thereto. For without the act the debtor has a right to prefer one creditor over another. If he does so, and becomes bankrupt, the preferred cred
Upon the whole record, therefore, the judgment appears to be for the right party, and it is affirmed.