Union Trust & Savings Co. v. Taylor

139 Ky. 283 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Hobson.

R. T. Marshall died a resident of Fleming county on May 7,_ 1907, the owner of a considerable estate and owing many debts. This suit was brought on July 3, 1907, by J. P. Taylor and others as his creditors, attacking a number of transactions by him within six months before the petition was filed, under section 1910, Ky. St. (Russell’s St. sec. 2101), on the ground that they were had in contemplation of insolvency and with the design to prefer one or more of his creditors to the exclusion of the others. On a final hearing of the case the. circuit court entered a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs as to certain of the transactions, and dismissed their petition as to others. From this judgment the plaintiffs and the defendants have both appealed. The matters involved on the appeals will be disposed of separately.

1. In December, 1907, Marshall proposed to borrow $10,000 from the Deposit Bank of Pearce, Fant & Company. The bank finally agreed to lend him the money upon the execution of a mortgage on his land. He executed the mortgage and the money was paid him. The mortgage was then lodged for record with the clerk; the tax being paid. But Marshall request*287od the clerk not to record it and he in fact did not record it. There is some conflict in the evidence as to what occurred when the mortgage was left with the clerk, hut we think the weight of it shows that Marshall requested that the mortgage should not he recorded, and that the president of the hank when the clerk asked him about it, said that he must take his own course. The mortgage had not been recorded on January 5, 1907, when Marshall borrowed $10,000 from another source and paid the debt. The mortgage was then by order of the bank surrendered to Marshall, having not in the meantime been recorded. The statute is in these words: “Every sale, mortgage or assignment made by debtors, and every •judgment suffered by any defendant, or any act or device done or resorted to by a debtor, in contemplation of insolvency and with the design to prefer one or more creditors to the exclusion, in whole or in part, of others, shall operate as an assignment and transfer of all the property and effects of such debtor, and shall inure to the benefit of all his creditors (except as herein provided) in proportion to the amount of their respective demands, including those which are future and contingent; but nothing in this article shall vitiate or affect any mortgage made in good faith to secure any debt or liability created simultaneously with such mortgage, if the same be lodged for record within thirty days after its execution.” (Section 1910, Ky. St.) The original transaction was simply a lending of money. The mortgage was given in good faith to secure a debt created simultaneously with the mortgage.. There was nothing in the transaction in contemplation of insolvency, or with the design to prefer one or more creditors of Marshall to *288the exclusion of the others. Thirty days had not expired after the execution of the mortgage when the debt was paid, and so the bank had not lost any of its lights by the fact that the mortgage had not been recorded up to that time.

2. On January 11, 1907, Marshall borrowed of the Deposit Bank of Pearce, Fant & Company, $3,000 secured by a mortgage upon his cattle; the money being' furnished simultaneously with the execution of the mortgage, but the mortgage was held unrecorded until May 8, 1907, the next day after Marshall’s death. This mortgage was not recorded within 30 days, but as it was given to secure a debt created simultaneously with its execution, it does not fall within the statute. In Meier v. Flinsbach, 95 Ky. 145, 24 S. W. 236, 15 Ky. Law Rep. 485, the court construing the statute said: “After providing in the body of the section that every sale, mortgage, etc., made by a debtor in contemplation of insolvency and with the design to prefer one or more creditors to the exclusion of others, shall operate as an assignment, the section concludes with this proviso: ‘But nothing in this article shall vitiate or affect any mortgage made in good faith to secure any debt or liability created- simultaneously with such mortgage, if the same be lodged for record within thirty days after its execution.’ (Gen. St. 1888, c. 44, art. 2, sec. 1.) Now certainly it would seem self-evident that before trying to apply this proviso we should first find a case to which the body of the section can be applied. In order to hang a thiéf you must first catch him as ‘catching comes before hanging.’ In order to apply-this proviso, you must first find a case in which an insolvent debtor, or one-in contemplation of insolvency, has made a mortgage or sale, etc., with the design to prefer one creditor *289•to another.” The mortgage cannot therefore "be held within the statute although not recorded within 30 days.

3. On January 27, 1907, Marshall paid to the State National Bank $800, on an antecedent debt; on March 4, he paid to the Deposit Bank of Pearce, Eant & Company $1,150, upon an antecedent debt, and on the same day he paid to the State National Bank of Mays-ville $1,000, on an antecedent debt; on March 25,1907, he paid to Nelson Pant $1,062, on an antecedent debt. All these payments are attacked under the statute, and may be disposed of together. Marshall owned 1,136 acres of land which he valued at $80,000; he had visible personal property which he valued at $20,000; he had $6,000 or $8,000 of notes. The land after his death sold for $47,000;' the personal property for about $11,000. He handled a large amount of cattle and was engaged in the export business. He raised horses and cultivated" large crops on his farm. In carrying on his business he needed large sums of money. He stood high and was regarded-as a.man of high character and was very prompt in meeting 1 is obligations. By reason of his promptness and his high character he seemed ■ to have unlimited credit among those who knew him. He was careful to protect Ms paper, and was always on hand when it fell due to arrange matters. When people whom he owed wanted money he made it a point to get it for them. The payments above referred to were made by him in the usual course of his business, just as he had been making payments for years. Théy were evidently made in good faith and for the purpose of preserving his credit and carrying on his business. He was then feeding a large number of cattle which he wished to get *290into the market. A payment of money in the usual course of business will not be regarded as a violation of the statute, where it is done in good faith and with no intent to prefer one creditor to another, but simply in honest effort by the debtor to meet his obligations. Were the rule otherwise, many men who are seriously involved and who by successful management pay off their obligations and accumulate quite a fortune, would be obliged to suspend business and bring ruin'upon themselves. It is true a payment of money made with the intention to prefer one creditor to another and in contemplation of insolvency is within the statute. But a payment of money in good faith by an involved debtor to maintain his credit and preserve his estate is not within the statute, .where tlifere is in fact no intention to prefer, and the circumstances show that a preference was not contemplated.

4. R. T. Marshall was a son of Charles Marshall. Charles Marshall owned the land above referred to, and devised it to his wife and three children. One of his daughters, Mrs. Taylor, was devised a certain part of the land, and it was provided in the will that R. T. Marshall should have the right to purchase her interest for the sum of $8,000. R. T. Marshall exercised the option thus given him and purchased Mrs. Taylor’s interest for $8,000. He paid Mrs. Taylor ail of the purchase money but $2,120, prior to February 16,1901. She then wanted the rest of her money. Marshall not having the money to pay her, made an arrangement with the Fleming County Farmers’ Bank by which it paid her the $2,120,. and she executed a deed to the bank for her interest in the land, it being agreed between Marshall and the bank that the bank would not record the deed, and would hold it as security for the money paid Mrs. Taylor, and for *291anything that Marshall might owe the bank. Things stood thus until March 25, 1907, when Marshall paid •the bank $3,192, about $300 of this being money he owed the bank, and the remainder being the money which the bank had advanced Mrs. Taylor with interest. It is insisted that the deed held by the bank was, in substance, only a mortgage, and not having been recorded in 30 days, the payment of the money to the bank in March, 1907, was within the statute. But it will be observed that the legal title to the land was in the bank. There was no title of record in Marshall to the land. His only right was by virtue of the side paper which he held to redeem the land from the bank. The purpose of the statute in requiring the mortgage to be recorded in 30 days is to give notice, but here the record gave notice; for on the record there was no title in Marshall. The transaction had by the bank with Marshall in 1901 was simply a lending of money upon the security of the land. It was not within the statute. There was no purpose in that transaction to prefer the bank, and the bank had a lien on the land, both for the money which it paid Mrs. Taylor, and for the money which it advanced to Marshall. The fact that the bank afterwards advanced $300 to Marshall on the security which it held is immaterial. The conveyance by Mrs. Taylor to the bank not being within the purview of the first part of the statute, it is entirely immaterial under the proviso of the statute that it was not recorded within 30 days.

5. On October 25,1906, Marshall borrowed of A. H. Calvert $3,000 and to secure the debt executed simultaneously to Calvert a mortgage upon his horses and hogs. The mortgage was not recorded until after Marshall’s death and is attacked because held unrecorded for more than 30 days. The money was bor*292rowed and the mortgage executed simultaneously to secure the debt then created. It stands just as the mortgage upon the cattle to secure the debt for $3,000 to the Deposit Bank above referred to, and, for the reasons there given, cannot be assailed under the statute. The circuit court properly dismissed the plaintiff’s petition as to all the matters above referred to.

6. W. W. Ball was cashier of the First National Bank of Maysville, and he was also the secretary of the Union Trust & Savings Company. He and Marshall were intimate friends and members of the same church. For years Ball had been lending Marshall money as cashier of the bank. About December 22, 1906, Marshall was in Maysville, and stayed all night with Ball, telling him then that he had concluded to consolidate his indebtedness and wanted to make a loan through Ball for a sum covering it. He told Ball what property he had, and that he had bought out one sister and still owed the other, Mrs. Ambler. At this time he was expecting to get a deed from Mrs. Ambler, and in order to do this would have to pay her $4,000. To get the title from the bank to which Mrs. Taylor had conveyed her interest he would have to pay that bank about $3,000. He explained to Ball how he wanted to perfect his title to the-land and then give a mortgage on all the land for the amount of money that he needed and Ball was to get the money for him at 5 per cent., whereas he was then paying 6 per cent. They separated without anything definite being done; Ball telling him that it could be arranged. In January he saw Ball again and told him that he would need some money before he could get the Ambler title, something like $1,200 or $1,500. On January 4th, he and his wife executed to the Union Trust Company, of which Ball was the secretary, a mort*293gage for $15,000, and the Trust Company was not to have the mortgage recorded but wait until the title was perfected, and .then have the mortgage for the larger sum which he wished recorded. The trust Company then paid him $10,000 with which he paid off the Deposit Bank of Pearce, Pant & Company on January 5th as above referred to. The Trust, Company had a debt at the time of $2,000 which was deducted from the $15,000, and the remainder of the $15,000 was paid him in money. Before they had gotten a deed from Mrs. Ambler, she suddenly died and this delayed the preparation of the larger mortgage longer than was anticipated. After talking the matter over with Marshall, Ball agreed to let him have $40,000 on the land, and to pay him $36,000 of it and hold back $4,000 to pay the Ambler heirs. Some time in March and before the mortgage had been given, Ball lent Marshall $1,500 for the Trust Company without security, and he had previously lent him without security as cashier of the Maysville National Bank about $10,000. On May 6th the mortgage to the Union Trust & Savings Company for $40,000 was put to record and bonds for $40,000 were signed by Marshall. Four thousand dollars of the bonds were held by the Trust Company to pay the Ambler heirs. The remaining $36,000 was disposed of as follows:

Union Trust & Savings Company.......$16,-822 50

First National Bank of Maysville........ 10,150 85

Union Trust & Savings Company........ 400 00

W. F. Taylor.......................... 2,043 00

Martha Bramel ....................... 1,585 00

Mary R. Wells ........................ 6,108 35

Total...............................$37,109 70

The surplus above $36,000 was in -part lent on that day to Marshall by Ball, and in part was paid by him *294out of other funds which he had. When they had done this Logan Marshall, a 'cousin of R. T. Marshall, who was about to go to Texas, came to Marshall and said that he wanted $3,000 which he owed him. Marshall went to Ball saying that he had rather die than disappoint that boy and Ball then lent him $3,000, as cashier of the Maysville National Bank, taking as collateral security $4,000 of notes which Marshall held on others. R. T. Marshall paid the $3,000 to Logan Marshall. About the same time Marshall gave to James N. Kirk a check for $2,165 to pay a debt he owed him. Kirk did not present the check on that day, but it was, it seems, paid the day after Marshall died. Marshall was apparently in perfect health, but went home the night of May 6th, and died of apoplexy before morning. He had $35,000 of insurance on his life which was paid after his death; $20,000 of it being for the benefit of his wife, and $15,000 for the benefit of his estate. He had borrowed on the insurance policies up to their loan value, and when these loans were deducted from the face of the policies the net amount that remained was about $32,000. The policies had no cash value in his lifetime. By his will he directed his-debts to be paid and devised his property, subject to his debts, to his wife, with minute directions as to the management of the estate.His wife renounced the will and this litigation followed.

The transaction of January 4th between Marshall and the Trust Company is not difficult to understand under the facts shown by the record. The clerk had seen the president of the bank about’the recording of the mortgage, and the president had declined to consent that it should remain unrecorded, leaving *295the responsibility on the clerk. The clerk was unwilling to carry the responsibility, and it is evident from the circumstances that Marshall saw that this mortgage must be recorded or the $10,000 debt must be paid. So he applied to his friend Ball to help him and Ball mot only lent him the $10,000 to pay the bank, but also let him have $3,000 more which he then needed, taking a mortgage which was not recorded, for the reason that the parties soon expected the larger mortgage to be given and this amount to be then deducted. The preparation of the larger mortgage was delayed by the unexpected death of Mrs. Ambler, but there was nothing in this transaction between Marshall and the Trust Company evidencing any intention on his part to prefer any of his creditors to others. It was simply an effort of a struggling debtor to maintain his credit and so manage his property as to save himself from ruin. It is said the Trust Company included a $2,000 debt it then had against Marshall in this mortgage. This is true, but that this was not done to prefer the Trust Company and in contemplation of Marshall’s insolvency is shown by the fact that after this the Trust Company lent him, without security, $1,500, and the National Bank of which Ball was cashier continued to carry about $10,-000 of his paper without security. We therefore conclude that the transaction of January 4th between Marshall and the Trust Company was not within the statute.

This brings us to the pivotal question in the case: Was the mortgage of May 4th or the payment of the money on May 6th which was obtained under the mortgage, within the statute? The letters of Marshall, his will, and the other proof in the record leave no doubt in our minds that .he did not in fact contem*296plate being insolvent, or in fact intend to prefer the creditors whom he paid off on May 6th to his other creditors, and if the case is to be determined on what he in fact intended, the mortgage should be sustained. On the other hand, the proof is equally clear that Marshall was in fact insolvent and that the necessary effect of this mortgage and the payment of the money on May 6th was to prefer these creditors to the others. He then owed $85,000. He had mortgaged his horses, his cattle, and his land ,and he had pledged the greater part of the notes which he held. When these transactions were concluded on May 6th, he had nothing which a creditor could reach for his debt. Practically everything that he had was mortgaged or pledged, and at least $40,000 of his debts were left unprovided for. Not only so, but in this arrangement he secured the First National Bank of Maysville and the Union Trust & Savings Company, both of whom were managed by Ball, and he paid off the debts of W. F. Taylor, Martha Bramel and Mary R. Wells, all of whom Ball represented in lending their money. Ball had made these loans to Marshall, and had. looked after them from time to time. Ball was his particular friend, and so in this transaction he secured all the persons whom Ball represented, and left Ms other creditors unsecured. While the proof in the record is clear that Marshall valued his land at from $70,000 to $80,000, no witness who testified in the case values it so high. On the contrary, according to the uneontradicted testimony in the record, it was not worth at that time as much as it afterwards sold for, $47,000, and out of this his mother’s right of dower and his wife’s potential right of dower must be deducted. Deducting these, we have the value of his estate in land and visible property, not exceeding $50,000; and if *297we put the notes which he held at $7,000 his whole estate amounted to at least $28,000 less than his debts. He was a careful business man and a man of intelligence. His will, no less than his declarations in the record, show that he knew what he owed. He knew the amount of his debts and he knew just what property he owned. If he had valued "his land as its. value is shown by all the proof in the record, he would have known that he was insolvent by $28,000.

We have steadily maintained under the statute that when an insolvent debtor makes a transfer to one of his creditors with a knowledge that he is insolvent, the design to prefer will be presumed, unless the circumstances attending the act repel the presumption that the debtor’s design was to prefer one creditor to the exclusion of the others. Grimes v. Grimes, 86 Ky. 511, 6 S. W. 333, 9 Ky. Law Rep. 694; Baker v. Kinnaird, 94 Ky. 5, 21 S. W. 237, 14 Ky. Law Rep. 695; Northern Bank of Ky. v. Farmers’ National Bank, 111 Ky. 350, 63 S. W. 604, 23 Ky. Law Rep. 696. The purpose of the statute is to secure equality between creditors, and to prevent the debtor from preferring one creditor to another. When a preference is in fact given, the debtor must be held to intend the natural consequences of his act. To say that he may fix an extravagant value upon his property and thus prevent the operation of the statute, by deceiving himself as to its value, would be to emasculate the statute. The law requires of men to exercise ordinary care; and when a failing debtor would shield himself from the statute by his estimate of the value of his property, it must appear that he had reasonable ground for the valuation. The law holds a man to know what a person of ordinary prudence, situated as he was, would know. The property of a failing debtor *298must not be estimated at a fanciful price which, he may set upon it, but upon its reasonable, fair value; and where he knows his property and knows his debts, he cannot be said not to contemplate the necessary effect • of his acts. When the transaction of May 6th was done, Marshall had secured his creditors who were represented by his friend, W. W. Ball, and he had practically left half his creditors unprovided for. To say that these transactions were not within the statute would be to destroy its usefulness, and to hold out a premium to debtors not to exercise ordinary care to learn whether or not they were insolvent in transactions of this sort. It would open a'wide door by which preferences could be made and the manifest purpose of the statute would be defeated. We therefore conclude that the court properly held the mortgage of May 4th, and the payments on May 6th, within the statute. But the Union Trust & Savings Company is entitled to be paid out of the mortgage the $10,000 which it paid Marshall on January 4th to pay the Deposit Bank and the $3,000 which it then lent him. Its $2,000 debt was not paid until May 6th, and as to this debt the mortgage and payment were within the statute. But it furnished the $13,000 upon a lien given on the land and’this lien was brought over into the mortgage and is valid. The court erred in not so adjudging. The court properly held the payment tos Logan Marshall and James M. Kirk within the statute.

The pledging of the collateral notes to the National Bank of Maysville on May 6, 1907, was to secure a debt created on that day simultaneously with the pledge of the notes. This transaction was not within the statute. The circuit court erred in holding that it *299was, and in requiring the National Bank to turn over lo the receiver this collateral.

On the appeal of the Union Trust & Savings Company of Maysville, and the First National Bank of Maysville, the judgment appealed from is reversed as lo them, and'it is affirmed as to the other appellants. On the appeal of J. P. Taylor, etc., the judgment appealed from is affirmed.

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