Clerihew v. West Side Bank

52 N.W. 967, 50 Minn. 538, 1892 Minn. LEXIS 354
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 52 N.W. 967 (Clerihew v. West Side Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clerihew v. West Side Bank, 52 N.W. 967, 50 Minn. 538, 1892 Minn. LEXIS 354 (Mich. 1892).

Opinion

DicKinson, J.

In February, 1891, Mues, an insolvent debtor, made an assignment to the plaintiff for the benefit of creditors. This action relates to a transaction which took place three days prior to the assignment. Mues was then indebted to the defendant bank, which indebtedness was in part evidenced by several promissory notes of Mues held by the bank amounting to $2,500, with some accrued interest. In the complaint in this action it is alleged that at that time, with the view of preferring the defendant, Mues paid $2,500 to the bank in payment of such notes, and that the bank received the same and delivered up the notes. This action is prosecuted to recover that amount of money because of such alleged preferential payment to the defendant, which, if made, was confessedly, under the circumstances, invalid under the insolvent law. At the trial the plaintiff produced evidence going to show that Mues, owning a certain lot of land, agreed [542]*542with one of the officers of the bank (Lawton) that the latter might sell the lot for $2,500, and that the proceeds should be paid to the bank on such indebtedness; that Lawton procured a purchaser, one Marti, at that price, to whom Mues conveyed the land by deed; that Marti executed to the defendant bank his promissory note for the same amount, which the bank discounted and credited to him; that he gave to Mues his cheek on the same bank for the purchase price, $2,500, which Mues deposited to his own credit in this bank, and gave his own check to the bank for $2,529, and took up his notes to that amount. More briefly stated, this evidence may be deemed to have shown that Mues sold the land to Marti, received the price, and therewith paid his indebtedness to the bank to the extent before stated.

The defendant alleged that the transaction was of a different nature, it being an agreement carried into effect for a,sale of the lot to the bank in satisfaction of the notes, the title being conveyed to and held by Marti in trust for the bank. The defendant also averred a tender by it of a reconveyance of the land from Marti to the plaintiff, and that it still held the deed of conveyance for delivery, to the plaintiff. It is claimed that a restoration to the assignee of the specific property conveyed by the debtor to his creditor in payment of the debt would satisfy the requirements of the law.

Evidence was presented on the part of the defendant, which, however, the court refused to consider, going to show, by parol, that the agreement and intention of the parties to the transaction were substantially as alleged by the defendant; that it was really a purchase of the land by the bank from Mues in satisfaction of his notes, the title, however, being taken by Marti for the benefit of the bank, in order that other creditors might not discover the preference thus effected; that Marti acted in the matter merely for the benefit of the bank, it being agreed that the note given by him to the bank was not to be paid. The evidence also tended to show that when Mues gave his check to the bank, and took up his notes, he had no considerable amount standing to his credit, aside from the $2,500 check of Marti given at that time. The question is whether such evidence was admissible to vary the effect of the transaction evidenced by the [543]*543deed and other instruments referred to, and as to this we think that the appellant must be sustained.

There is no claim of fraud except such as is involved in the payment of a debt under circumstances which made such payment an unlawful preference of one creditor (the bank) over others. The insolvent owed the bank, and it is not shown that the property conveyed by him, and by means of which, as the offered evidence went to show, he paid his notes, exceeded in value the amount of the debt "thus paid. It is only by force of the insolvent law of 1881 that the transaction was made subject to impeachment. Section 4 of that law declares that “conveyances and payments made, and securities given,” under circumstances such as existed in this case, “shall be void, * *' * and the assignee may, by action or other proper proceedings, have all such conveyances, payments, and preferences annulled and adjudged void, and recover the 'property so conveyed, or the value thereof, and recover the payment so made.” It is obvious that in the case of a preferential conveyance of real or personal property by an insolvent debtor to a creditor in payment of the debt, contrary to the provisions of this law, a recovery by the assignee of the specific property thus conveyed is the proper remedy contemplated by this statute where the property can be so recovered, the right to recover “the value thereof” being given as an alternative remedy where the specific property is not recoverable. The language of the statute and the plain purpose of it — to recover the property improperly conveyed — lead to this conclusion. It provides for the annulling of such conveyances. Such conveyances are good as between the parties. They are only voidable by creditors, or by the assignee representing creditors, in case insolvency proceedings shall have been instituted within a specified time after the conveyance. If the assignee seeks to avoid the conveyance or transfer of property, the statute does not indicate that he has a right to elect whether he will take back the property, where that remedy is open to him, or refuse that and sue to recover its value. Hénce the evidence should have been received if it was • competent to thus prove by parol that, back of the forms and device adopted for the purpose of concealment, the transaction was [544]*544really a conveyance of the land to the bank in payment of the notes. Any evidence competent to prove the real nature of thó transaction should have been received. Notwithstanding the forms or appearances under which Mués and the bank and Marti may have shrouded their dealings, the bank is not now estopped from showing what was really done; for neither the plaintiff, nor the creditors whom he represents, have so acted or relied upon such appearances as to enable them to invoke the principle of estoppel.

The respondent, denying the competency of the evidence referred to, states and relies upon propositions which although familiar, and in their general application unquestionable, are not applicable here. It is true that the conveyance to Marti made him the legal owner of the property, and that no valid trust is shown to have been created in favor of the bank. If he had chosen to keep the land, the bank could not have prevented his doing so. So, too, the bank might have sued Marti on his note, notwithstanding the oral agreement not to do so. But this is not a proceeding by the bank against Marti to have a trust declared or enforced, nor does the latter appear in this action as a party asserting his title or legal rights. The parties to the deed are not here contending as to its legal effect, nor is one of such parties seeking, as against the other, to show that their real agreement was different from that which the law declares to-result from the written instruments by which they chose to express and carry into effect their intentions. Only as between the parties to an instrument and their privies is it conclusive and unimpeachable by parol evidence. Van Eman v. Stanchfield, 10 Minn. 255, (Gil. 197;) Sanborn v. Sturtevant, 17 Minn. 200, (Gil. 174;) National Car & Locomotive Builder v. Cyclone Steam Snow-Plow Co., 49 Minn. 125, (51 N. W. Rep. 657;) Buxton v. Beal, 49 Minn. 230, (51 N. W. Rep. 918;) Lee v. Adsit, 37 N. Y. 78; 1 Greenl. Ev. (14th Ed.) 279.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 N.W. 967, 50 Minn. 538, 1892 Minn. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clerihew-v-west-side-bank-minn-1892.