Austin v. First National Bank of Morrison

47 Ill. App. 224, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 70
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 25, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 Ill. App. 224 (Austin v. First National Bank of Morrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. First National Bank of Morrison, 47 Ill. App. 224, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 70 (Ill. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lacey.

The question presented in this record is, perhaps,.more a question of fact than of law. The law is well settled that, one being indebted and insolvent, has no right to make a voluntary conveyance to a third party without consideration as against the claim of existing creditors. If such a conveyance is made as to such creditors, the law conclusively presumes it to have been done with fraudulent intent, no difference how free from such fraudulent intent the parties may in fact have been. We do not understand this principle to be controverted by counsel for appellant. Then, again, if a conveyance of real estate or other property be made with actual fraudulent intent on the part of the grantor, and the grantee have knowledge of such intent and participate in it, such conveyance will be deemed fraudulent as to existing creditors. There are two contentions in this case on the part of defendant in error by which the conveyance of Silas K. Austin to his son, Marion L. Austin, is sought to be vacated and set aside. The one is that the conveyance was made without any consideration, was voluntary and a mere gift, and for that reason, in the insolvent condition of the grantor, void in law as against the complaining judgment creditors of Silas E. Austin, whose debts existed at the time of the conveyance. The other is that, although there may have been a small consideration, though entirely inadequate, the conveyance was made with the actual intention, participated in by both father and son, to defraud, by means of the conveyance, the creditors of Silas E. Austin, and, therefore, as to such creditors void, notwithstanding there was a valuable consideration. This would be controlled by Sec. 4, Chap. 59, R. S., entitled “ Frauds and Perjuries,” which renders all such conveyances void against the creditors, purchasers or others so intended to be disturbed, delayed, hindered or defrauded.

In the latter case the insolvency of the grantor is probably not a necessary element, although it might weigh heavily as a matter of evidence in establishing the actual fraudulent intent. The appellant insists that Silas B. Austin was not at the time of the conveyance insolvent or in failing circumstances, and that he had remaining, after conveying his real estate to his son, sufficient property, subject to execution, to pay all his debts. We do not think the evidence sufficiently sustains this contention. Aside from a note of $3,000, given to him by William S. Austin, he had no property whatever except, perhaps, a $500 unsecured note on William S. Austin. The $3,600 note was secured by amortgage on 640 acres of land in Kansas, already mortgaged for $4,500. The only consideration of the $3,600 note was to secure the $500 note held by Silas or William .S. Austin, and to indemnify Silas against his securityship on the notes upon which the three judgments in question in this suit ivas rendered, and another $500 note on which he was security to another party. After conveying away his revisionary inter- • est in the 220 acres of land in question, he had nothing but the above mentioned $3,600 note on his brother, William S. Austin. It will be seen that the note, situated as it was, was very precarious security. William S. Austin was, in fact, insolvent, and made an assignment the same day of this conveyance, and was contemplating it before the conveyance, although he swears he had made it known to no one. His estate, as testified to by Hecker, his assignee, will not pay sixty cents on the dollar. The Kansas land was largely encumbered and nothing could be made out of it without advancing $4,500 to pay the prior mortgage, and then it was doubtful what the land would be worth.

We feel well satisfied from the evidence that Silas B. Austin was not in a condition financially, in justice to his creditors, to give away so considerable a part of his estate as he did by the conveyance to his son, no matter what his opinion might have been as to his financial ability. He made this conveyance, believing, as he swears, that William S. Austin was solvent and would pay all his debts on which he, Silas B., was security. .But the fact was, and it developed on the same day of the conveyance, that William S. was insolvent to the extent mentioned above, which placed Silas B. in the same or a worse condition. It mattered not what, in law, Silas B. thought about his condition of solvency at the time of his conveyance, if in fact, he was insolvent. The law would forbid his conveying away, without consideration, his property thus, in fact depriving his creditors of the means of making their claims out of his property. The condition of a debtor making a voluntary conveyance as to solvency, is what the law regards, and not his belief. The most vital question in this case, perhaps, after determining the condition of Silas E. as to solvency, is as to whether or not the conveyance was made to his son for a valuable consideration or whether it was a mere gift. We have examined the record carefully on this point and have come to the conclusion from the evidence therein and all the circumstances surrounding the transaction, that the conveyance was a gift of the interest of Silas E. Austin in the land, about three thousand to four thousand dollars being its value in excess of mortgages on it. The master finds from the evidence that the land at the time of the conveyance was worth $35 per acre, amounting to $7,700. Silas E. Austin himself swears that it ivas worth that amount, but the great weight and preponderance of evidence is that it was worth $40 per acre. The land was incumbered by two mortgages, aggregating about $4,500. The contention of Marion L. Austin, one of the appellants, is, that he purchased the land of his father for $100, and an agreement with him to pay off the mortgages then on the land, making about $4,600, possibly a little over. The deed on its face shows that the consideration was $100, subject to the incumbrances on the land. Marion L. Austin testifies that he paid to his father the $100 mentioned in the deed; but his evidence on cross-examination is very unsatisfactory about the circumstances of the payment, how and where he got the money to pay the $100, and the time he paid it and the various circumstances connected with it. He states at first that he got twenty-seven dollars of the money from the sale of cattle and the balance by the sale of other stock, cattle and hogs, and then afterwards that he borrowed fifty or sixty dollars of the money; and when his attention was called to this on cross-examination, he states that he forgot about borrowing the money at the time.

Marion L. paid the interest on one of the mortgages existing at the time of the conveyance to him, in the next fall afterward, $150, and he got this money from his father; and then it developed in his testimony that his father had owed him substantially this amount prior to the execution of the deed to him. Why he did not turn the $100 he claims to have given for the land against this indebtedness to him of $150, he fails to state. It appears also that the $100 was not paid at the time the deed was made, and perhaps for a couple of months afterward, the month in which it was paid or circumstances not remembered, and it was not paid until after this suit was commenced. It appears also that Silas E. Austin knew that the land was worth thirty-five dollars per acre, and if he had been intending to make a sale of the land at all he would have sold it for something near its value.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Ill. App. 224, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-first-national-bank-of-morrison-illappct-1893.