Burgoyne v. McKillip

182 F. 452, 104 C.C.A. 590, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4939
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 12, 1910
DocketNo. 3,313
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 182 F. 452 (Burgoyne v. McKillip) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burgoyne v. McKillip, 182 F. 452, 104 C.C.A. 590, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4939 (8th Cir. 1910).

Opinion

HOOK, Circuit Judge.

The firm of McKillip & Swallow were local loan agents in Nebraska of the Union Central Rife Insurance Company of Cincinnati, Ohio. Patrick E. McKillip, the senior member, without the participation or knowledge of his partner, converted to his own use a large sum of money intrusted to them by the company for the purpose of making loans on farm property. His conduct being discovered, the company sent Harry R. Burgoyne, its representative, to Nebraska, and McKillip conveyed to him, as trustee, some real and personal property. At the same time an agreement was executed, showing the conveyances were as security for the repayment of the money misappropriated. Swallow relinquished whatever interest he had in the property, and the company released him from further responsibility. Within four months after this transaction, other creditors of McKillip instituted proceedings in bankruptcy against him, he was adjudged a bankrupt in due course, and Royal P. Drake was selected as trustee in bankruptcy. Afterwards Burgoyne, trustee under the mortgage agreement, and the insurance company, as co-complainants, commenced suit against McKillip, his wife, and Drake as trustee in bankruptcy, for the enforcement of the agreement, the sale of the property, and the exclusion of defendants from all interest therein. Drake set up in defense that the transfers of property to Burgoyne for the company were void as preferences under the bankruptcy act (Act July 3, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 544 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3418]). The trial court found that McKillip was insolvent when the transfers were made, that lie was aware of his financial condition and intended to prefer the company over his other creditors of the same class, and also that the company through its representatives had reasonable grounds to believe a preference was intended. Complainants’ bill was therefore dismissed upon the merits, and they prosecuted this appeal.

It is sufficient to say, without reciting the evidence in detail, that we think it fully supports the conclusions of the trial court. There can be no real question about the insolvency of McKillip, or of his intention to extricate himself from his embarrassing position by making good’ the claim of the company at the expense, of his other creditors. And the facts and circumstances of the transaction, including the declarations of McKillip at the time, were well calculated to create a belief in the minds of those who were present as participants that he intended just what naturally resulted from his act. On such an occasion the representatives of a creditor seeking security cannot stop their ears and close their eyes to the obvious significance of things, and then say they did not hear or see and did not understand.

It is contended by complainants there was no preference, because the relation between the company and McKillip was not that of creditor and debtor, the demand of the former was not one provable in bankruptcy, and also that there was a present consideration to sustain the transaction. In case of embezzlement or misappropriation of funds, the person defrauded may at his option assert a demand as upon implied contract to repay, and such a demand is provable in bankruptcy. When the company took from McKillip what was ■ in substance a mortgage upon his property, it clearly did so as a creditor, [454]*454and it cannot retain it and at the same time abandon the position then assumed. This is not a case of following trust funds. The property was not conveyed to Burgoyne as the property of the company in which its funds had been invested. It was accepted as the property of the debtor, and as security for the payment of money due the company. The funds of the company were not traced into the property, and there was no reclamation of them as trust funds. Though a demand may be founded on a breach of trust, the entire estate of the recreant trustee is not thereby necessarily impressed with a trust. The holder of the demand cannot, as an ordinary creditor, take and hold transfers of property from the insolvent defaulter free from the provisions of the bankruptcy act respecting preferences. Richardson v. Shaw, 28 Sup. Ct. 512, 209 U. S. 365, 52 L. Ed. 835, is relied on, but it is not in point. It rests upon the peculiar relation between broker and customer in their dealings in stocks, and, under the facts of the particular case, it was held not to be that of debtor and creditor.

There is another matter. The funds of the company were entrusted to McKillip & Swallow, and, though it was McKillip who misappropriated them, the company was entitled to hold the firm and both partners civilly responsible. McKillip alone was adjudged bankrupt, and Blake, the trustee, represents only his individual creditors. Various contentions are made because of this situation; but they are disposed of by the fact that the property transferred to the company belonged to McKillip individually, not to his firm. We approve the finding of the trial court that the property was not partnership assets and that Swallow had no interest in it, though an attempt was made to show he had. It is also contended there was a present consideration for the transaction which prevents its being a preference, in that Swallow, having an interest in the property transferred, abandoned it, and also because the company released him from his civil liability for the money misappropriated by his partner. There is no such consideration in these things as the law contemplates. The property was not Swallow’s, nor had he an interest in it, and surely a creditor of a firm, who receives a transfer of the individual property of a partner who is insolvent, cannot, by releasing the other partner from liability, create a consideration that will save the transaction from being a preference, voidable at the' instance of the trustee representing individual creditors. By such a contrivance the individual estate, in which the individual creditors have a direct interest, instead of being augmehted or maintained at its gross value, would be depleted to their detriment.

The decree is affirmed.

. NOTE. — The following is the opinion of W. H. Munger, District Judge, in .the co.urt below:

W. H. MUNGER, District Judge. Sufficient of the facts may be briefly stated as follows: The Union Central Life Insurance Company of Cincinnati, Ohio, hereafter called the “insurance company,” appointed one W. N. Leonard, 'of Lincoln, its Western agent, who had charge of its loaning business in Nebraska. Leonard appointed local agents, who solicited and received applications for loans upon real estate, which were forwarded to Mr. Leonard and by him to the insurance company for approval. If the loans were approved [455]*455by the insurance company, abstracts of title were procured, mortgages executed to the insurance company, and a draft for the amount of the loan forwarded to the local agent, with directions to pay off all prior Hens, if any, out of the proceeds of the loan; the balance to be paid to the mortgagor. Among the local agents were Patrick E. McKillip and Charles H. Swallow, of Humphrey, Nebraska, doing business as McKillip & Swallow, and who did a large amount of business for the insurance company, extending oyer a period of several years. Upon the receipt of the draft for the mortgage loan, they would discharge prior liens and at once forward the evidence of such prior liens being released.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 F. 452, 104 C.C.A. 590, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgoyne-v-mckillip-ca8-1910.