Davis v. Cassels

220 F. 958, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1742
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedJanuary 23, 1915
DocketNo. 7
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 220 F. 958 (Davis v. Cassels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Cassels, 220 F. 958, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1742 (N.D. Ala. 1915).

Opinion

GRUBB, District Judge.

This is a bill in equity, filed by the plaintiff as trustee in bankruptcy of the defendant Thomas M. Cassels to set aside certain conveyances made by him to the defendant Ida B. Cassels, his wife, mediately or immediately, and to divest out of her the title of certain próperty, which was conveyed by third persons to the said Ida B. Cassels, and which it is alleged was paid for by her husband for her, for the purpose of subjecting it.to the claims of the creditors of the bankrupt.

The plaintiff contends; (1) That the conveyances were voluntary and made when the bankrupt was indebted, and are therefore constructively fraudulent as to existing creditors, and that the trustee represents that class of creditors; and (2) that the conveyances were fraudulently concealed with actual intent to defraud creditors, añ intent participated in by both the bankrupt and his wife, and' for that reason void "as to existing and subsequent creditors.

There are three separate transactions assailed by the trustee, which may be designated as: (1) The two mill lots; (2) the Turrentine avenue home place; and (3) the lots and house on Harralson avenue and the 22 vacant lots in Richardson’s addition. The circumstances attending each of these transactions are in some respects different. Each requires separate treatment in some respects because of that fact. However, the plaintiff contends that, the evidence shows a general scheme to defraud creditors which infected, among others, each and all of the transactions mentioned.

[ 1 ] As I see it, the plaintiff has not made out a case as to any one ' of the assailed transactions, upon the theory that the conveyances were voluntary and voidable as to existing creditors and assailable for that reason by the trustee as the representative of existing creditors. From the evidence, as I construe it, no one of the conveyances was made [961]*961after the debts now represented by the trustee were incurred, unless it be the conveyance of the home place as to the debt of Strater Bros. It appears that their claim had accrued but had not been reduced to judgment prior to October 24, 1906, the date of the bankrupt’s conveyance of the home place to his wife. I think, however, that the preponderance of the evidence shows that there was a consideration moving to the bankrupt from his wife’s father to all but possibly $200 of that recited to have been actually paid. The fact, if it be a fact, that the $200 recited to have been paid in money was the money of the bankrupt and not that of his wife, should not operate, as I see it, to destroy the conveyance in its entirety, but only to give the trustee an interest to that extent in the transferred property.

[ 2-4] With reference to the $2,600 invested in improvements upon the Harralson avenue lot, it. seems to me that this money consisted of the $500 paid the defendant Ida B. Cassels by her father-in-law for purchasing a heating plant and the $2,100 which the defendant T. M. Cassels received after the death of his father from him and deposited to his credit with Cassels Mills in November, 1908. On April 12, 1905, T. M. Cassels conveyed to Ida B. Cassels his interest in real estate in Georgia, previously deeded to him and his brothers and sisters jointly by his father. At this date, as I construe the evidence, none of the debts of T. M. Cassels, outstanding when the petition in bankruptcy was filed, had been created. It was competent for him then to give this interest to his wife as against future creditors. On December 3, 1906, Ida B. and T. M. Cassels conveyed the same interest to Mrs. W. B. Pope for a recited consideration of $2,600. Both deeds were promptly recorded in Georgia. In view of this recital in the recorded deed, it seems to me the fair inference is that the $2,600 subsequently paid to T. M. Cassels or Ida B. Cassels by L. M. Cassels represented the recited consideration of $2,600 in the deed to Mrs. Pope from Ida B. and T. M. Cassels, which the evidence tends to show was agreed to be paid by L. M. Cassels for the transfer of the interest in the Georgia property by Ida B. and T. M. Cassels to Mrs. Pope. If this interest was the property of Ida B. Cassels, as against her creditors, through the voluntary conveyance of it to her by her husband when he was not indebted, the consideration for the transfer of it to Mrs. Pope would belong to Ida B. Cassels rather than her husband, without regard to the time it was actually paid or whether it was actually paid by B. M. Cassels to Ida B. or T. M. Cas-sels, and would not be subject to the debts of T. M. Cassels. However, it appears from the evidence that the money was used to build a house upon the Harralson avenue lot, title to which was in Ida B. Cassels only by virtue of an unrecorded deed from T. M. Cassels. If this deed was fraudulent as to creditors of T. M. Cassels because not recorded and because of a fraudulent concealment of the change of ownership, the improvements placed on the lot by Ida B. Cassels, if she participated in the fraud, would follow the fate of the lot, and so be subject to any debts of her husband which were created upon the faith of his ownership of the houses and lots, caused by the failure to record the wife’s deed to the lots.

[962]*962The other contention of the plaintiff is that the deeds were withheld from record by the defendants for the purpose of giving an apparent credit to the barikrupt, to which he would not have been entitled if they had been recorded, and that there was a fraudulent concealment of this change of ownership; that the defendant Ida B. Cassels participated in the fraudulent plan; and that the conveyances affected were therefore fraudulent in fact and void as to existing and subsequent creditors, which classes the trustee in bankruptcy represented.

[5] It is shown that the conveyances, which concerned the transferred property situated in Alabama, were in fact withheld from record for periods of varying length. This, of itself, would not suffice to show fraud. It is essential that it also appear to have been done with the purpose of falsely sustaining the credit of the grantor, and that this purpose be that of the grantee as well as that' of the grantor. It is a general principle that actual fraud is never presumed and that the burden of showing it is on the party asserting it — a principle, however, probably of less force, if applicable at all, in cases where the transactions are between husband and wife to the detriment of creditors, as is true of this case. The defendants deny that there was any purpose on the part of either of them to fraudulently conceal the change of ownership in withholding the deeds from record, and that neither of them knew, at least until the defendant Ida B. Cassels was otherwise informed by her brother, of the necessity for record. The record, however, shows that the deed from the defendants to Mrs. Pope for the interest in the Georgia property was promptly recorded in Georgia, and that the deeds to the mill lots were recorded in April, 1911, shortly after the contracts between the defendant T. M. Cas-sels and Eddins and Hunsaker were entered into. It also shows that there was no visible change of possession of any of the real estate in question from the bankrupt to his wife, accompanying any of the conveyances by him to her; that he took and continued in possession of the'real estate, conveyed by third persons to his wife; that he exercised dominion over all the tracts, treating them as his own, collecting the rents and appropriating them to his own use, and using funds from the mill business he was conducting for their improvement.

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Bluebook (online)
220 F. 958, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-cassels-alnd-1915.