Citizens Bank v. McElvain

219 S.W. 75, 280 Mo. 505, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 209
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 2, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 219 S.W. 75 (Citizens Bank v. McElvain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens Bank v. McElvain, 219 S.W. 75, 280 Mo. 505, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 209 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

The plaintiff, a judgment creditor of Grace R. Tindle, brings this action to have declared fraudulent and void as to plaintiff, three several deeds made by Grace R. Tindle and her husband to the defendants, on the ground that the same were made to hinder, delay and defraud her creditors, including this plaintiff. Upon trial nisi the chancellor so decreed, and defendants have appealed.

The pertinent facts are Grace R. Tiudle was indebted to plaintiff upon a note due July 8, 1913, in the sum of $2000. September 8, 1913, plaintiff filed suit upon said note; summons was issued September 22, 1913, and served upon September 30', 1913. September 30th, affidavit for an attachment was filed in the case, and writ of attachment was issued and served upon Grace R. Tindle upon that day, and an abstract of the *509 levy under the writ duly filed on the same day. Two days after the filing of the petition/"by the plaintiff, i. e. September 10, 1913, Grace R. Tindle, joined therein by her husband, executed the three deeds attacked in this case, covering three tracts of land. The aggregate expressed considerations was $7500. The defendants herein were the grantees in such deeds. Those deeds were placed of record on September 17th. On December 2, 1913, the circuit court sustained the attachment and gave the bank judgment for the amount of its note and interest. Later the present suit was instituted. In it, by answer, the defendants averred that they purchased in good faith and*for value, and denied that such purchase was made by them with the intent- to hinder, delay or defraud the creditors of Grace R. Tindle.

The three deeds stripped Grace R. Tindle of every vestige of property which she then owned. Her husband was then in trouble, and was afterward sent to the penitentiary. J. M-. McElvain was a friend to the Tindles and lived just across the street from them. He was on Tindle’s bonds in the criminal eases arising from a bank failure, and on them all the time. At the date of the conveyances Mrs. Tindle was indebted in a sum aggregating more than $10,000, but McElvain says that he had no knowledge of that fact.

The consideration was paid as follows, according to McElvain wired them $1500, to Ohio, and later paid her $500 more when he visited them at their home in Ohio. She also • agreed that McElvain might retain $2500 of the purchase price to be applied on a joint note of $5000', given by her husband and McElvain to one • Mitchell, the evidence. McElvain paid the husband of Mrs. Tindle, for her, $1000, at the making of the deeds, or about that time. Two thousand dollars was to be deducted, because of a deed of trust on the property in that sum.

The Tindles left Caruthersville, Missouri, for Youngstown, Ohio, the last day of September, or the day upon which the attachment was served. • Going back to the question of the payment of the consideration, if in fact it was paid, the evidence of Mrs, Tindle is that *510 Thus the alleged consideration was made up. The money payments ($1000 and $500) were paid in actual cash instead of checks. The evidence also discloses that the transaction was carried on by Mr. Tindle for his wife. It further shows that McElvain and the Tindíos were close friends and that Tindle and McElvain had dealt in lands together. Further Tindle, whilst in the bank, had loaned money to McElvain. The agreement that $2500 was to be applied upon the joint note to Mitchell was made after the trade was closed, according to McElvain, but Mrs. Tindle says that he would not buy the property unless this $2500 was so applied, and herein a material conflict.

Mrs. Tindle says that she sold the property because she was sick and had to have money to support herself and four children. Shortly afterwards she gave birth to a child. She says that her husband was in financial troubles and could not help her. Plaintiff was forced to go to the camp of the enemy for its testimony and the facts given here came from Mrs. Tindle and Mr. Mc-Elvain. The price of $7500' is not shown to have been far from the real value. Only about $1200 below, by the best evidence.

As said, the court found the deeds fraudulent and ■void in so far as they affected the rights of plaintiff. Such are the facts of the record, leaving only details connected with the central facts for the opinion.

Grantor's Fraud. T. We can shortly determine the situation of Mrs. Tindle in this transaction. Her deeds stripped her of the last vestige of property. Under such circumstances her intent to hinder, delay or defraud her existing creditors is shown by the very act. Her words cannot controvert her acts. All property conveyed was property which was subject to execution. The homestead had been deeded in trust for the payment of her husband’s debts.

The property here conveyed was subject to the payment of plaintiff’s debt, and the very act of the conveyances hindered or delayed plaintiff in the collection of *511 its debt. The statute, Section 28-81, Revised Statutes 1909, so far as applicable reads:

“■Every conveyance ... of any estate or interest in lands . . . made or contrived with the intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors of their Lawful actions, damages, forfeitures, debts or demands . . . shall be from henceforth deemed and taken, as against said creditors and purchasers, prior and subsequent, to be clearly and utterly void.”

The words “hinder,” “delay” and “defraud” are connected by the word “or” in the statute, and it is sufficient if either result is accomplished by the conveyance. In State to use v. O’Neill, 151 Mo. l. c. 85, we said:

“In this connection it should be borne in mind that subdivision 7 and 8 et seq. of Section 521 of the Attachment Act, Revised Statutes 1889, do not require that there should be a fraudulent intent to' ‘hinder, delay or defraud,’ in making the conveyance; it is the legal effect of that conveyance which the law looks to; it suffices, therefore, that the result of the conveyance is either of those three forbidden things. As is pertinently observed by Richardson, J., in Reed v. Pelletier, 28 Mo. l. c. 177. ‘The term fraud as understood in the statute concerning fraudulent conveyances, has the same meaning in the attachment law, and it is not necessary to show that the act originated in any meditated design to commit a positive fraud or to injure other persons. There are many acts not the result of intentional fraud which the law, nevertheless, from their tendency to deceive other persons, or from their injurious consequences to the public, prohibits as being within the same reason and mischief as actual fraud. And whatever, by the judgment of the law, is denounced as fraudulent must be regarded in the same light in reference to an act or transaction which is made the ground of an attachment; and if the act charged to have been committed is fraudulent, actual or constructive, it will be inferred that the party intended its natural and ordinary results should follow.”

*512 Not only so, but the intent is gathered from the effect of the particular transaction.

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Bluebook (online)
219 S.W. 75, 280 Mo. 505, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-bank-v-mcelvain-mo-1920.