Allen v. Smith

129 U.S. 465, 9 S. Ct. 338, 32 L. Ed. 732, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1702
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 5, 1889
Docket14
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 129 U.S. 465 (Allen v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Smith, 129 U.S. 465, 9 S. Ct. 338, 32 L. Ed. 732, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1702 (1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blatchford

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by Thomas H. Allen and two other persons, partners under the 'name of Allen, Nugent & Co., and Thomas IL Allen individually, from a decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Arkansas, dismissing their bill in a suit in equity brought by them against Benjamin H. Smith and the'heirs-at-law-of William H. Todd, deceased, and Levi IT. Springer, administrator of, Todd, to set aside, as fraudulent and void as against the plaintiffs, as creditors of Todd, -a"judgment recovered by- Smith against Todd, and the sale of certain lands of Todd to Smith on execution on that judgment, and for a sale of those lands under judgments obtained by the plaintiffs, and the payment of those judgments out of the proceeds of such sale.

The substance, of the bill is, that, in January, 18T5, Todd executed three promissory botes,’ payable in one, two and three years respectively from their date, in favor of one Cohen, each for $1666.66, with 10 per cent interest; that Allen, Nugent & Co..became the owners of those notes, and brought *466 suit on the first 'two of them which fell due, in the Circuit Court of Chicot County, Arkansas, by attachment against Todd, and levied on his interest in certain land in Chicot County on the 18th of June, 1877; that, on February 2, 1878, they obtained judgment in that suit, against Todd, for $4341.-64, with- 10 per cent interest from that date, the judgment declaring that it was a lien upon the property attached; that like proceedings were had by them by attachment of the same, land in a suit on .the third note, in the Circuit Court of the .United States for-the Eastern District of Arkansas, and a judgment was recovered by them against Todd, in that suit, on the 19th.of A]i>ril, 1878, for $2206.47, with 10 per cent interest from that date, the judgment declaring that it was' a lien on the land; • that in both of those suits Todd was personally summoned ; that on the 13th of July, 1876, Todd made another note in Jayor of Thomas H. Allen. & Co., of which firm Thomas H. Allen was a member, for $1507.58, payable thirty days from date; that a judgment was recovered by them on that note, against Todd, in a- court in Pennsylvania, on July 17, 1877,’ for $1637.33 ; that that .judgment was duly assigned to Allen, and he brought suit on it in the Circuit Court of Chicot County, against Todd, by attachment ;• that the interest of Todd in the land before mentioned was attached in that suit, and personal service, was also had upon Todd, and Allen recovered judgment in the suit, against Todd, on February 2, 1877, for $1683.83, with interest from that date; and that the judgment declared that it was a lien on the land attached.

The bill, further alleges, that at the time of the execution of the four notes, and afterwards, and up to and after the 1st of August, 1876, and at the “time of the levy of the three attachments, Todd was the owner of a.n undivided half interest- in a plantation called the Bellevue plantation, in Chicot County, with certain exceptions, which plantation contained the land mentioned as having been so attached,. and other 'land; that at the July tgraa, 1876, of the Circuit Court of Chicot County, judgments were obtained against Tódd in .favor of J. McMurray & Co. and "of Jurey & Gillis; that a decree in favor of. one Halliday,- enforceable by execution. *467 already existed against him in that court, and other creditors of his were pressing him; that, finding himself thus in failing circumstances, he conspired with the defendant Smith, who was his son-in-law, to transfer to Smith a large and valuable part of his property, to save it from' his creditors; that, in pursuance of that design;- notwithstanding’ Smith was largely indebted to Todd, after January, 1869, for unpaid purchase money for the half interest in -the Bellevue' plantation, which Smith had purchased from Todd, and although Smith resided on that plantation, and controlled the crops raised on it, and his services had been taken into account in the adjustments and. payments from time to time between the parties, and Smith had kept another manager almost the entire time on a plantation of Todd’s called Yellow Bayou, and there was in fact nothing due from Todd to Smith for services, Smith, in' pursuance of such fraudulent purpose, brought suit against Todd in the Circuit' Court of Chicot County, on the 4th of •August^ 1876, for the sum of $8000, for pretended services not paid for, which had been rendered by Smith for Todd, in managing his Yellow Bayou plantation and his half interest in the Bellevue plantation, from January, 1869, to that date, at $1000 a year and interest, and caused an attachment to be issued, which’was levied, on August .8, 1876, by direction of Smith, on all the personal property of. Todd on the two plantations ; that on .the 14th of August, 18.76, the Yellow Bayou plantation was sold, to' satisfy. Hallidáy’s decree; that after, applying its proceeds a balance still remained due to Halliday; that such balance and the McMurray judgments amounted to $1285; that executions were-issued on those judgments, and for the balancp due ITalliday, a,nd on September 28, 1876,. to satisfy them, the half interest of Todd, in 1200 acres of the Bellevue plantation, being its most valuable part,- was sold, and bought in by Smith at less than $3 an acre for an entire interest, when the same was at the time reasonably worth from $20 to $80 an acre; that Todd, in pursuance .of his fraudulent scheme, did not redeem the lands from the sale, and Smith afterwards received deeds-therefor; that afterwards, on December 19, 1876, Smith directed the sheriff to release to Todd' *468 115' bales of cotton, on which the attachment of Smith had been levied on August 8, 1876, and to attach the interest of Todd in that part of the Bellevue plantation which had been attached in the suits of the plaintiffs, and also to attach some 60 other, acres of land which Smith claimed was a part of the Bellevue plantation; that no steps were taken in the attachment suit of Smith against Todd at the January term, 1877, of the Chicot Circuit Court, the judgment' in favor 'of Jurey & Grillis having been in the meantime paid off by money raised from the sale of the cotton so released by Smith; that at the July term, 1877, of the Chicot Circuit Court, and after the levy, on June 18, 1877, of the attachments in the suits by the plaintiffs, an appearance was entered by Todd in the suit, and a pretended answer was filed for him to the complaint; that one Mole, in whose charge and custody the property attached in the suit was left, was at the time in charge of the Yellow Bayou plantation, and he and others, as agents of Todd, had for years been in charge of itthat five of the eight years’ services charged for by Smith were barred by limitation; that nevertheless no defence was in good faith put in tq the suit, the answer not being sworn to and no issue made; that the case was submitted to a jury, and a verdict rendered, and a judgment entered for $8000 against Todd, which declared that it was a lien upon the- property levied on under the attachment in the suit, from the date of the levy; and that, on April 1, 1878, the said property was sold and bought in by Smith for the nominal sum of $4055.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 U.S. 465, 9 S. Ct. 338, 32 L. Ed. 732, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-smith-scotus-1889.