Bloomingdale v. Stein

42 Ohio St. (N.S.) 168
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 42 Ohio St. (N.S.) 168 (Bloomingdale v. Stein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bloomingdale v. Stein, 42 Ohio St. (N.S.) 168 (Ohio 1884).

Opinion

Okey, J.

Adolph, William B. and Henry M. Landaner, partners as A. Landauer & Sons, dealers in ready made [169]*169clothing at Columbus, Ohio, executed to Mark Bloomingdale, on December 5, 1878, a note for $8,000, due at one day, together with a warrant of attorney authorizing a judgment to be confessed thereon. On December 17, 1878, judgment was rendered in the court of common pleas of Franklin county, on the note and warrant, in favor of Bloomingdale, for $3,005.80, and costs, on which judgment he caused an execution to issue on December 18, 1878, directed to the sheriff of Franklin county, which execution the sheriff, on the same day, at ten o’clock in the forenoon, levied on all the goods and chattels of the defendants in execution subject to levy. And this was the first levy upon the property.

S. Stein & Co. had a valid account against A. Landauer & Sons, amounting to $1,492.02, for goods sold in August, Sep tember and October, 1878. On January 14,1879, while the property so levied on still remained in the hands of the sheriff, said S. Stein & Co. commenced an action in the court of common pleas of Franklin county, against Landauer & Sons and others, under the act of 1878 (75 Ohio L. 938, § 10), charging that the note, warrant of attorney, judgment and levy were within-that section, which provides that “ all transfers, conveyances, or assignments made with intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors, shall be declared void at the suit of any creditor.” The object of the suit was to secure the appointment of a trustee and the subjection of such property so levied on, to the payment of debts, in accordance with that section. The plaintiffs gave notice of their suit, as required by the section, but no creditor gave bond,- or deposited money, as also-therein required.

The district court, to which the cause was taken by. appeal, found, among other things, that the note, warrant of'attorney, judgment, execution and levy, in favor of Bloomingdale, were fraudulent; that the Landauers were not indebted to him; that the object of the Landauers, -who were insolvent, was to cheat and defraud their creditors, in which object Bloomingdale concurred, and the acts named, and each of them, was done in furtherance of that purpose; that the acts named •brought the case within the above mentioned section; that the [170]*170sheriff having sold the goods, by consent of all parties in interest, and having in his hands $7,817.74, the same should be distributed as follows : first, in payment of the costs, including a fee to the counsel of S. Stein & Oo. ; secondly, the claim of S. Stein & Co. in full; thirdly, to the remaining creditors pro rata, the balance, after paying the claim of S. Stein & Co., being insufficient to pay the other creditors in full.

A petition in error has been filed in this court by Bloomingdale to reverse the judgment, and certain creditors hereinafter mentioned, have filed cross-petitions in error, with the same object in view. The questions thus presented we will now consider. 1. It is said, the evidence did not warrant the finding that the note and warrant given to Bloomingdale were without consideration, and that the object in the various steps, resulting in the seizure of the goods by the sheriff, was to defraud the creditors of A. Landauer & Son. But on careful examination of the testimony, we feel that we would not be warranted in disturbing the findings, in view of the rule stated in McGatrick v. Wason, 4 Ohio St. 566; 35 Ohio St. 7; 37 Ohio St. 260.

2. It is objected that S. Stein & Co. were not judgment creditors. But in Combs v. Watson, 32 Ohio St. 228, the rule was settled that it was not necessary that the claim of a creditor should be reduced to judgment, in order to maintain such action. The same question was fully discussed, in the courts below and in this court, and decided the same way, in the Shonfeld case, which was finally reported, on other questions, sub nom. Hellebush v. Richter, 37 Ohio St. 222.

3. It is insisted that the acts, beginning with the execution of the note and warrant of attorney, and culminating in the seizure of the property on execution in favor of Bloomingdale, were not a transfer, conveyance or assignment of the property, within the meaning of the above mentioned section 10, even if the purpose was to defraud creditors, and hence that S. Stein & Oo. could not maintain such suit, even if the second objection, above stated, is not well taken. And this question is the only one which called for a report of the case.

The commissioners to revise the statutes found the follow[171]*171ing to be the principal statutes relating to fraudulent conveyances and conveyances in trust. S. & C. 606, 712; S. & S. 397. They thought best, however, not to codify those provisions, but leave to the courts the question whether the earlier provisions had been modified by the subsequent statutes, and if so the extent of such modification ; and hence, little more was done than to transfer the sections from the places they then occupied in the statutes into appropriate places in Rev. Stats. §§ 4195, 4196, 6343, 6344. With the provisions in that form, the legislature adopted the revision, after changing section 6344, so as to embrace fraudulent purchases in the name of another ; and, aside from such change, the provisions should undoubtedly be construed as before revision.

Combs v. Watson, 32 Ohio St. 228, and Shorten v. Woodrow, 34 Ohio St. 645, are in apparent conflict upon the question whether fraudulent purchases in the name of another were within the provision here under consideration. That they were not was decided in the latter case, and that decision is supported by some cases where the question arose in actions at law, and the court adhered to the mere letter of the statute. In the former case the question, though directly presented by the record, is not discussed, but as a decision supporting the view that such a case is in effect provided for, it is not only entirely in harmony with the decisions of courts of equity, but is even supported by many cases at law. Taylor v. Heriot, 4 Des. Eq. 227, 234; Whittlesey v. McMahon, 10 Conn. 138; Botsford v. Beers, 11 Conn. 370; Doyle v. Sleeper, 1 Dana, 531; Alston v. Rowles, 13 Fla. 117; Kimmel v. McRight, 2 Barr, 38; Miller v. Wilson, 15 Ohio, 108; Bump Fraud, Con. (2 ed.) 518; Wait’s Fraud. Con. §§ 57, 243; 1 Am. Lead. Cas. (5th ed.) 50. Doubtless because of this conflict, the legislature changed section 6344, as already stated, so as to be in this respect in harmony with the view constantly adopted in courts of equity, though, of course, this case is governed by the statute as it existed in 1878. We have no hesitancy, however, in saying that we would not be warranted, in this case, in placing any strict construction upon this remedial statutory provision. , On the contrary, where a debtor, [172]*172having the title and possession of property, passes the possession and apparent ownership to another, with the intent upon the part of both to defraud the creditors of such debtor, the transaction is within the provision we are considering, and it is wholly immaterial what device is resorted to for the purpose of consummating the fraud.

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Related

Booth v. . Bunce
33 N.Y. 139 (New York Court of Appeals, 1865)
Alston v. Rowles
13 Fla. 117 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1869)
Doyle v. Sleeper
31 Ky. 531 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1833)

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Bluebook (online)
42 Ohio St. (N.S.) 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bloomingdale-v-stein-ohio-1884.