18 S.W.2d 285 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1929
Reversing.
A question of priority is presented by this appeal. J.B. Turner instituted the action against Dan Hammock to recover $1,364.84 advanced to him and procured an order of attachment which was levied upon a quantity of tobacco. Hammock admitted owing Turner $1,289.84 for money advanced, and judgment went accordingly. The attachment was sustained, but Turner's lien thus obtained was subordinated to a mortgage lien for $800 asserted in an intervening petition by T.S. Brown. The *837
tobacco seems to have been sold, but brought less than the mortgage debt, leaving nothing to apply on Turner's judgment. Turner attacked the mortgage to Brown as fraudulent and has appealed from the judgment denying priority of his attachment lien. The sole question involved is the validity of Brown's mortgage. Hammock was the tenant of Turner and agreed to pay as rent one-half of the tobacco crop. Turner was to advance money to carry Hammock through the summer season and reimburse himself, when the tobacco was sold, out of the proceeds of the tenant's share. The contract was carried out without controversy the first year, but the crop that year did not produce sufficient money to repay Turner for his advancements. The balance was carried into the next year and Turner put up the money to provide sustenance for Hammock and his family and to pay the wages of his workmen. On a settlement there was due Turner the sum of $1,289.84. Hammock demanded, at the end of the second year, the privilege of selling his one-half of the crop. Turner offered to haul the tobacco to market free of expense, but Hammock hired a truck at his own cost and had the tobacco hauled in the nighttime from Harrison county, Ind., where it was grown, to Shelbyville, Ky., where it was sold. Turner pursued the tobacco and caused the attachment to be levied at Shelbyville. Brown then came forward with his mortgage, which was dated February 3, 1927, acknowledged October 3, 1927, and recorded on the following day in the county where the tobacco had been grown and was then stored in barns. Turner attacked the mortgage on the ground that it was given without consideration and for the fraudulent purpose of cheating, hindering, and delaying the creditors of Hammock, including the plaintiff. Brown took the position that Hammock was indebted to him for wages for the two years he had been farming for Turner in Indiana. Brown was an intimate friend of Hammock and lived with him as a member of his family. When Turner advanced money to pay the wages of the employees, no claim was made for wages for Brown. When attention was directed to the matter, Hammock said that Brown was living with him as a member of his family and was not claiming any wages. On one occasion a small payment was made to Brown on the order of Hammock and at another time a pair of shoes was furnished him by Turner and charged to Hammock. Brown knew Turner was providing sustenance for the family of *838
Hammock and paying the wages of his workmen. Brown said he was not in need of money and did not ask for his wages. He was living on provisions paid for by Turner. The equity of Turner is very strong. Cheatham v. Terrell's Assignee,
It is palpable that Brown and Hammock were cooperating for the purpose of beating Turner, and the mortgage was the instrumentality designed by them to accomplish the purpose under the forms of law. Brown knew of Turner's claim and of his reliance on the crop as security. A conveyance is declared to be fraudulent when its object or effect is to defraud another, or the intent with which it is made is to avoid some duty or debt due by or incumbent upon the party making the transfer. 27 C. J. p. 415, sec. 11. It is not sufficient that the conveyance was founded on a good consideration or was made with a bona fide intent; it must be both, and if deficient in either particular, although good between the parties, it is voidable as to creditors. McDonough v. McGowan, *839
We are satisfied that the mortgage to Brown was a fraudulent conveyance in so far as Turner was concerned, and the court erred in denying priority to Turner. *840 It should have ordered the fund in court paid to Turner to apply upon his judgment.
The judgment is reversed for a judgment in accordance with this opinion.