Dougherty v. First Nat. Bank of Canton

197 F. 241
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 26, 1912
DocketNo. 2,134
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 197 F. 241 (Dougherty v. First Nat. Bank of Canton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dougherty v. First Nat. Bank of Canton, 197 F. 241 (6th Cir. 1912).

Opinion

SATER, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The case is here both on appeal and on a petition for review. As no objection is made touching the remedies so chosen to bring the matters in controversy into this court, we need not .concern ourselves with any question of remedy or jurisdiction. Re Martin, 193 Eed. 841 (C. C. A. 6). '

The trustee in bankruptcy, to maintain his contention that the bank’s mortgage is invalid as against him as the representative of the bankrupt’s creditors, advances the following propositions:

(1) The chattel mortgage transferred to the bank the whole of Klein’s property when he was insolvent and! when the bank had reasonable cause to believe that a preference was thereby intended to be given to it, in consequence of which the bank, if the mortgage be upheld, will receive, in the order of priorities prescribed by the bankruptcy statute, a greater percentage of its claim than other creditors of the same class. The mortgage, therefore, constitutes a preference whether the date of the transfer be considered as of the date of the execution or of the filing of the mortgage.

' (2) The bank is conclusively estopped from claiming against him under such mortgage, because the mortgage, in pursuance of a concerted plan and positive agreement, was withheld from record for almost a year, on account of which others were disposed to give and did give Klein credit between the date of the execution and of the filing of such instrument.

(3) The bank’s mortgage, considered in conjunction with that of ■Clayson and the William Edwards Company, which was given at the same time, and with its withholding from record in pm;suance of an agreement which contemplated the effect such withholding would have on the debtor’s financial standing, was taken for the purpose and with the intent of hindering and delaying his other creditors.

These propositions are all controverted by the bank not only as to the conclusions of fact adduced from the evidence, but as to the law applicable to the case. The transactions involved occurred when sections 60a and 60b of the Bankruptcy Act (Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 562 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3447]), as amended February 5, 1903 (Act Feb. 5, 1903, c. 487, 32 Stat. 799 [U. S. Comp. St. Supp. 1911, p. 1506]), were in fofce.

[1] Whether the mortgage to the bank constituted a preference or not at the time it was given must be determined by the facts and circumstances then existing. The situation was such as to beget confidence in Klein and in his ability to pay his creditors in full. - As the bank was not urging payment of its original $10,000 loan, and as it from the first considered favorably his application for an increased accommodation, it must be presumed that his business relations with it for the preceding year had been satisfactory. There is no suggestion in the record that he had'ever been untruthful in his dealings, or had practiced deception, or had done aught to éxcite distrust. His apparent frankness in submitting for. inspection his invoices, bills .of cost, and a statement of assets and liabilities was such as to ¡induce reliance on his representations. In the light of subsequent events, it [245]*245appears that he magnified his investment and his monthly profits, if, indeed, there were any at all, and overstated his liabilities by $2,100 in favor of his father-in-law, Clavson, but the valuation for the test of solvency or insolvency under {he issue made must relate to the conditions affecting the hotel as a going concern when the mortgage was given, and not at its value as dead property after bankruptcy intervened. Butler Paper Co. v. Goembel, 143 Fed. 295, 74 C. C. A. 433 (C. C. A. 7); Loveland, Bank. (4th Ed.) 303.

[2] The trustee, on whom is cast the burden of proof that the mortgage constituted a preference, concedes that the cost of the_hofel equipment for which Klein specifically accounted reaches $35,500, but he did not pretend to account for all of it. Although Klein’s evidence beyond that amount is xmcertain, nevertheless, notwithstanding his valuation of assets as scheduled in the bankruptcy proceeding, considering, the aggregate of his expenditures, as evidenced by his cost bills, and of the funds which had been at his disposal for investment in his business, none of which appear to have been otherwise expended, the expense other than for mere furnishings incident to the launching of an enterprise of the magnitude of his hotel venture, wc are not prepared to say that his assets did not exceed his liabilities, or that he was insolvent, or that he did not in good faith believe he could pay his debts in full, and have a substantial sum remaining. The record does not disclose the terms on which his liabilities other than for rent and not secured by the mortgages were incurred, but the inference to be drawn is that some of them had matured. There is, however, no suggestion in the evidence that he contemplated a cessation of business, if the additional loan were not granted, nor any fact disclosed that the necessity for an increased loan to meet his obligations was due to any circumstance other than his recent embarking in a new but reported growing and prosperous enterprise in which he had made an investment in excess of what his capital warranted. He had not stopped the payment of any of his paper, nor had any of it gone to protest, nor had he been sued or threatened with suit for any debt, nor were there rumors that he was financially embarrassed, nor were any creditors, save the William Edwards Company, pressing for payment or security. He proposed, it is true, to mortgage the whole of his property and did not intend to pay from the additional loan his arrearage of rent, about which there was a dispute, or the whole of his floating debt, but, if his investment was as much as Loichot, as cashier acting for the bank, found it to be from the submitted partial list of bills of cost, or as Klein represented it to Eoichot to be, his equity in the mortgaged property was from two to four times the amount of his remaining unsecured debt, and this he could easily pay, as he agreed to do, out of his earnings, if they were as represented. The trustee seeks to draw an inference prejudicial to Klein and the bank from the withholding of the wife’s property from the mortgage, but the argument is without merit. The law didi not cast on her the duty of subjecting her property to liability for her husband’s debts, and under the facts then known it did noi appear that any necessity for her so doing existed.

[246]*246The property mortgaged, excepting a small amount intended for consumption, was not of the character of a stock of goods, subject to. sale and requiring replacement. It was more in the nature of a permanent investment and akin to that of a manufacturing plant, which is replaced only when worn out. Its incumbrance would not.necessarily cause a stoppage of his business. Loichot was not an expert on the value of hotel equipments, and did not cause an appraisement to be made, nor did he conduct an exhaustive examination into Klein’s, affairs, but he verified his statement as to liabilities, and found it, as submitted, to be correct, and as to assets he examined far enough to learn that Klein’s equity in the property was substantial. He thus entitled himself to the benefit of the rule that reasonable cause to believe that a transfer and the effect of its enforcement will operate as a preference does not exist where the creditor examines the debtor’s books, which do not reveal insolvency. Loveland, Bank. (4th Ed.) 1006,1007.

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Bluebook (online)
197 F. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dougherty-v-first-nat-bank-of-canton-ca6-1912.