Bamberger v. Schoolfield

160 U.S. 149, 16 S. Ct. 225, 40 L. Ed. 374, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2352
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 9, 1895
Docket48
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 160 U.S. 149 (Bamberger v. Schoolfield) 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
Bamberger v. Schoolfield, 160 U.S. 149, 16 S. Ct. 225, 40 L. Ed. 374, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2352 (1895).

Opinion

Me. Justice White,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

In the discussion at bar the plaintiff in error has devoted much of the argument to demonstrate that the trial court erred in declining a request by him made to instruct the jury to’ render a verdict in his favOr, if they believed the testimony, but this request was manifestly rightly refused. . It involved a finding by the court as to weight of evidence and practically asked it to usurp the province of the jury, by determining the proper inference to be drawn, from the evidence and deciding on which side lay the preponderance of proof. In so far as this request asked the court to instruct that under any hypothesis of fact, as a matter of law, the attaching creditor was entitled to a verdict, it can be more properly considered in reviewing the exceptions taken to the instructions given at the request of *158 the one* and the consequent refusal- to give the converse , propositions asked by thg other party. It would lead only to confusion and repetition to follow the various assignments of error and review them separately. They group themselves under six headings: First, assertion of error in the charges given as to the legal effect of the sale to the Memphis firm; second, error in the instructions as to the general assignment; third, error as to the ruling with reference to the burden of proof to establish fraud; fourth, error in the charge as to the effect of the employment of Warten after the sale and the resale to Mrs. Warten ; fifth, error as to the effect of having included - in the debt for which the sale was made the note dated June 10 for $2500; andj sixth, error as to the bearing on the rights of the parties, of the letter written by the Memphis firm to the Louisville.firm, and the settlement had by the latter with Warten ‘after the letter was received. - The consideration of the controversies under, these various headings will embrace all the errors assigned, and will dispose of every question in the-case, except the twelve errors asserted to have been committed in the admission or rejection of testimony.

- First. The validity of the sale to the Memphis firm.

' The court charged that, under the law of Alabama, a debtor had the right to prefer a creditor, and that, if the sale ‘ was real and was made in good faith fór a fair price — was honestly executed to extinguish the debt, and did extinguish it, and contained no reservation of any interest or "benefit in favor of the vendor — it was valid and passed the property to the vendee; that the sale, if it possessed these enumerated qualities, would-be legal, although any of the following facts might be found by the jury to have existed: (a) that the vendor was insolvent-to the knowledge of the vendee; (b) even although there was a fraudulent intent on the part of the vendor to defeat his other creditors, because, if the sale possessed the attributes, necessary to make it valid,' as the law permitted the preference .under the conditions stated, the mere intention of the vendor to defraud his other creditors by giving a preference to one would not render .the- sale invalid; and (o) although its known effect and *159 necessary consequence was that the remaining creditors of the vendor would be unable to obtain the payment of their debts.

The- correctness of these instructions, depends necessarily upon the law of Alabama as interpreted and construed by the Supreme Court of that State, whose rulings in this regard will be followed here. Union National Bank v. Bank of Kansas City, 136 U. S. 233; Peters v. Bain, 133 U. S. 670. It was in consonance with this rule that in a given case we enforced the law of the State of Illinois, White v. Cotzhausen, 129 U. S. 329, and in another that of the State of Iowa. Etheridge v. Sperry, 139 U. S. 267. The instructions given as above recited were in direct accord with the settled law of Alabama. In Pollock v. Meyer, 96 Alabama, 172, it was held that:

“ If the property conveyed by an insolvent debtor in payment of preexisting debts does not materially exceed in value the amount of indebtedness actually owing and paid, by the conveyance, and no benefit is reserved to the grantor, the conveyance is lawful as against his other creditors, regardless of the motives of the' parties to the conveyance or of badges of fraud in the transaction.”

On page 175 the court cites approvingly from the decision in First National Bank of Birmingham v. Smith, 93 Alabama, 97, as follows:

“ An insolvent debtor may select which of his creditors, one or more, he will pay, and pay them in full, and thus disable himself to pay the others anything; arid it makes no difference if the one or more preferred creditors know the effect of the transaction will be to deprive the debtor of all means with which to pay his other debts. Nor is .the wish, motive, or intention of the debtor a material inquiry, if the requisite conditions exist. Those conditions, in a case like the present, are: First, the debt must be Iona fide and enforceable, not simulated ; second, the payment must be absolute, and, if made in property, must not be materially in excess of the debt.; , third, no pecuniary benefit or consideration of value, other than thé liquidation of the debt, must inure or be secured to the debtor. *160 . . . The true inquiry at last is, did the creditor bargain for and receive overpayment, or payment in excess of his just demand ? ”

The court further observed, on page 176, as follows:

“ The principle of law settled by the decisions of this court is, that the payment of an antecedent debt by an insolvent debtor, by a conveyance of his property, rests upon entirely different grounds than when a cash or present consideration is'paid. It matters not whether the grantor alone, or grantor and grantee both, devised and intended to get the advantage of other creditors, if, in fact, the effect of the transaction was solely to pay a debt honestly due, and the property was received by the creditor in payment of his debt at a fair and adequate price, and no interest or benefit reserved to the grantor debtor. ‘ If the transaction is not assailable on- one of these grounds, fraud has no room-for operation.’ As was said in Hodges v. Coleman, 76 Alabama, 103: ‘What injury can the motive do to a non-preferred credito r The act, as we have seen, is lawful. Can human tribunals set aside a transaction, lawful in itself, because the actors had an evil mind in doing it ? Can there be fraud in doing a lawful act, even though it be prompted by an evil malice or badges of fraud ? ’ ”

Second. The effect of the general assignment.

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Bluebook (online)
160 U.S. 149, 16 S. Ct. 225, 40 L. Ed. 374, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bamberger-v-schoolfield-scotus-1895.