Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
The appellants, Ben Williamson & Co., Central Wholesale Grocery Co., Williamson Grocery Company, Persinger Hardware & Furniture Company and the Gold Camp' Mill Co., each of whom was a creditor of the appellee, By-Products Cannel Coal Co., sued the debtor and the appellees, Goodwin & Waller, James Blackburn, Sidney May, T. J. May, Jr., B. IT. Blackburn, Bud Blackburn, Freeman May, Willard Blackburn, William May, Ballard Blackburn, J. D. Webb and Allen Smith, in the circuit court of Pike county. Each of the plaintiffs set out the separate indebtedness of the By-Products Cannel Coal Company to it, and its right to recover thereon, and, further that each of the appellees who were defendants, was, also a creditor of the By-Products Cannel Coal Co., and that each of them had sued the debtor in a justice’s court for the amount of his claim, and had procured an attachment and caused the same to be levied upon the property of the debtor, and had procured an order for' the sale of the property levied upon, which was directed to the defendant, Allen Smith, who had levied the attachments as a constable. The prayer of the petition was for an injunction restraining the appellees from executing the orders of - sale made in the justice’s court, and for the appointment of a receiver for the property of the By-Products Cannel Coal Company, and that its assets, be collected and distributed among its creditors. Without any notice to the By-Products Cannel Coal Company, a receiver was appointed for its assets, and an injunction granted restraining the creditors, who had sued in the justice’s court and the constable, who had levied the attachments from executing the orders of sale made in the cases in the justice’s court, but, appointing the constable a special commissioner of the circuit court, and directing’ him to sell the property levied upon under the advertisement which he had already made for the sales, and to report his actions to
However, thereafter, on the 17th day of February, 1919, the appellants, by an amended petition, substantially averred, that the By-Products Cannel Coal Company, was insolvent and knew •■such to be a fact at the time of the institution of the suits in the justice’s court against it, which were instituted in the latter part of the month of November, 1918, and for the purpose, and with the intent to prefer the appellees, as creditors to the exclusion of the appellants, and other creditors, and to enable the appellees to secure substantially all of its property in satisfaction of their debts, and thus to de
The appellants, then moved the court to order the actions of the appellees, which had been instituted in the justice’s court, to be transferred to the circuit court in accordance with the provisions of section 210 Civil Code. The appellees objected and filed an answer in which they denied that the attachments of the appellants had been levied upon any part of the property, upon which their attachments had been levied, and supported the denial by the affidavit of the officer who levied the appellants attachment, and the affidavit of the attorney for appellees. The court sustained the motion and ordered the action of the appellees in the justice’s court transferred to the circuit court. It, also, ordered the appellee, Smith, to report to the circuit court his actions in regard to the sale of the property, upon which the attachments from the justice’s court had been levied, and the disposition of the proceeds. No denial was made of any averment of the petition as. amended, except as above stated. From the affidavits filed in opposition to the motion to transfer the appellees’ causes from the
(1) Section 210, subsection 2, of the Civil Code, by the authority of which it is insisted that the transfer of the causes from the justice’s to the circuit court was authorized, provides only that such transfer may be made when attachments issued from different courts have been levied in whole or in part upon the same property, Howe v. Stevenson, 84 Ky. 576; Turners v. Howard, 2 Duv. 112, but it is not necessary to determine in this case, whether that section applied, where a cause of action under the provisions of the statute of 1856 is pending as was stated in the petition as amended, since the causes in the justice’s court had terminated before the filing of the amended petition, and the orders with reference to the transfer of the actions from the justice’s
(2) The petition as amended, however, stated a cause of action in favor of appellants and against the debtor and the other appellees, under section 1910, Kentucky Statutes. The language of that statute, which in part is as follows.: “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 property and effects of such debtor and shall inure to the benefit of all his creditors ... in proportion to the amount of . their respective demands . . . ” seems to embrace such a device as is stated in the petition as amended. If with the knowledge that it was insolvent and with the design to prefer the creditors, who sued in the justice’s, court, it procured or entered into an arrangement with those creditors, to have them sue it and attach its property, and to suffer judgment in their favor, with a purpose to have them to secure the benefit of its property in payment of their claims to the exclusion of its other creditors, the By-Products Cannel Coal Company committed an act which operated as an assignment and' transfer of all of its property for the benefit of ail of its creditors, whose debts were of equal dignity. Although the proceedings to a judgment and sale may appear regular, a creditor, who obtains the property of a debtor under and by means of such a device, it amounts to a fraudulent preference, and such creditor is in no better condition than if the debtor had turned over the property to him in payment of his debt, without the intervention of any apparent legal proceedings; and under the averments of the petition as amended, when not denied, the court should have required the appellee creditors to have refunded the sums received by them, and to have added to it the sum for which the property sold,
The judgment is therefore reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
