Bradley v. Claflin

132 U.S. 379, 10 S. Ct. 125, 33 L. Ed. 367, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1886
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 9, 1889
Docket110
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 132 U.S. 379 (Bradley v. Claflin) 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
Bradley v. Claflin, 132 U.S. 379, 10 S. Ct. 125, 33 L. Ed. 367, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1886 (1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from the Circuit Court of the. United States for the Eastern District of Louisiana.

Julius Lisso and John H. Scheen constituted a mercantile partnership engaged in business in the town of Coushatta, Louisiana. Horace B. Claflin, Edward E. Eames and others, constituting the firm of H. B. Claflin & Co., of the city of New York, were, creditors of Lisso and Scheen, and on the 1th day of December, 1878, they commenced, in the proper state court of Louisiana, a suit with an attachment against Lisso and Scheen and their wives; Clara Eorcheimer and Nancy A. Bradley, and others, in accordance with the law and practice of Louisiana. The attachment was levied upon property, réal estate mainly, which is the subject of controversy in this case. The suit'was afterwards, removed into the Circuit Court of the United States. The record of the case in the Circuit Court commences with a bill in chancery filed on the 13th day of November, 1879, in that court, by H. B. Claflin et al. against Julius Lisso et al. To this suit Lisso and Clara Eorcheimer, his wife, and John H. Scheen and Nancy A. Bradley, .his wife, are made defendants. This bill, after giving the names of the *381 persons composing the partnership of plaintiffs, who are citizens of New York, and of the defendants, who are citizens of Louisiana, alleges that the defendants Lisso and Scheen are indebted to the plaintiffs in the sum of $9580;14'on promissory notes, which are described in the bill and on an. open account. It then sets out the commencement of the suit and attachment of December 4, 1878, and that certain property was seized under that attachment as the partnership and individual property of Lisso and Scheen, a schedule of -which is said to he annexed to the bill. The plaintiffs further allege that by said seizure they have acquired a just and valid lien upon the property seized under the laws of Louisiana. They allege that said Lisso and Scheen obtained the goods sold by complainants to them by false representations as to their solvency made to plaintiffs in New York, and in contemplation of the fraud and insolvency hereinafter set forth. “Among other assets they reported the real estate herein mentioned, which they declared to be and which is justly worth upwards, of $20,000:”

“ That thereafter, and on or about the 23d November, 1878, being entirely insolvent and largely indebted not only to your orators but to others, the said Julius Lisso and John H. Scheen did conspire and collude with their said wives and their said wives with them, to cheat, hinder, delay and defraud your orators, by making a pretended, simulated- and fraudulent transfer of all the real estate of the said Lisso and Scheen unto their said wives, respectively, including alike'the partnership and individual real property of said Lisso and Scheen in the town of Coushatta and parish of Bed Biver, and also the interest in the telegraph line described in the deeds.

“That said pretended, simulated and fraudulent transfers were made on the 23d day of November, 1878, and recorded in the office of the parish recorder at Coushatta, and were by acts before D. H. Hayes, notary public, and for greater certainty your orators annex -hereto and réfer to said acts as a part of this bill.

“Now your orators aver that said acts purported .to be dations en pcdemeni, but they allege and charge that they and each of them was and is illegal, fraudulent, simulated and void, *382 and worked and still work great injury to your orators; that they were and each of them was made when the transferors were insolvent'; that after such transfers the transferors had not property enough left to pay orators’ claims; that the said transferees and each of them knew of the insolvency of the said Lisso and Scheen, and was a party to and colluded in said fraud. They further show that the price named in said pretended dations enjoaiement or transfers was wholly inadequate and fraudulent; and they show that even if the said acts or transfers had and have any reality in law they gave • and give an unjust and unlawful preference and are null and void; but they expressly aver and charge that the said Lisso and the said Scheen owed their said wives nothing whatever at the time of said pretended transfers, whether on paraphernal account or otherwise.

And your orators exhibit this their bill as well in aid of' the proceedings in said suit No. 8883 as for such discovery and relief as they may be entitled to in the premises.”

The prayer of the bill is, that defendants may be required to answer, “ and that the said transfers, or dations en paie ment, passed before D. IT. ITayes, notary public, on the 23d November, 1878, may be declared to be simulated, fraudulent, injurious, illegal, null and' void, and all the property therein described subjected to the just claims of and debts due your •orators as aforesaid, and sold to pay the same; and that the debts due and owing to your orators may be duly liquidated by proper decree as to the said defendants, Lisso and Scheen,. as well as to the other defendants.”

Other proceedings of a similar character were instituted against the same defendants at about the same time by Henry Bernheim et al. Simon August et al. and Charles F. Claflin et al. Bills identical in their language with those of Claflin & Co. were filed against defendants. They were afterwards, by an agreement of counsel and the order of the court, consolidated and tried together as one cause. In these cases thus-consolidated there was, by consent of all the parties in open court, as shown by the record, entered a decree on January 22, 1883. This decree declared—

“ That as to the act of conveyance, or dation en joaiement,, *383 recited in the bills of complaint herein made by the defendant, John EL Scheen, unto the defendant, Nancy A. Bradley, his wife, by act passed before D. EL Hayes, notary, parish of Bed Biver, November 23d, 1878, and filed for record and recorded in said parish in conveyance and mortgage books the same day, and whereof a certified copy has been filed as an exhibit herein November 26th, 1879, and. is now annexed hereto as part hereof, be, and the same hereby is, in all things revoked, annulled and set aside, and the property therein described and purporting thereby to be conveyed to said Mrs. Nancy A. Bradley, wife of John H. Scheen, declared to have been the property of said John H. Scheen at the time the bills of complaint herein were filed, to wit, November 13th, 1879, and is. hereby subjected to the just claims, demands, and judgments of the complainants herein, subject to provisions hereinafter made, which judgments of complainants herein against said Julius Lisso and John H. Scheen in solido are as follows :

H. B. Claflin & Co. v. Lisso & Scheen, No. 8883 of the docket of this court, $9580.14, with interest as therein set forth.
“H. Bernheim & August v. Lisso & Scheen, No. 8880, $655.38, with interest as therein set forth.

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Bluebook (online)
132 U.S. 379, 10 S. Ct. 125, 33 L. Ed. 367, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-claflin-scotus-1889.