Drake v. Ellman

80 Ky. 434, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 83
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 12, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 80 Ky. 434 (Drake v. Ellman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drake v. Ellman, 80 Ky. 434, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 83 (Ky. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion of the court.

Peter Constans died in the county of Campbell, leaving a last will by which he devised the whole of his estate, charged • with the payment of his debts and certain legacies, to his Two sons, Louis and August Constans. The clause of the will is as follows: “I give and bequeath to my two sons f (naming them) my entire estate that I may be possessed of or entitled to at my death, to have and to hold the same, . including all real and personal property and choses in action, • rights and credits, to them and their heirs and assigns forever; but they are to take the same subject to all my debts and liabilities, and the bequests hereafter made, all of which are to be paid out of my estate. ” The devisor then proceeds to make certain bequests to his other children and kindred, to be paid out of his estate. He gives fifty dollars per month to his son Charles as long as the latter lives. His son, Louis Constáns, qualified as his executor, but it seems made no inventory of the estate, or any settlement of his : accounts as such. The testator, at the time of his, death, -was the owner of a large brewery in the city of Newport, of [436]*436great value, and constituted the principal part of his estate. His two sons, the principal devisees, took charge of this, brewery,- and continued to run it on' their own account as ■ partners until they became not only involved but went into bankruptcy.

The testator was also greatly in debt at the time of his. death, and the two sons, during the period they were in business, paid large sums of money due by his estate.

They made an assignment of all their estate before going into bankruptcy, but prior to the making of this assignment, they committed an act of insolvency by executing a mortgage to one William Stitchenath to secure a large sum of money for a preexisting debt, bringing the case within thestatüte against fraudulent preferences, and it was so adjudged, in the present case in the action of Jones and others against. Stitchenath and others. Many actions were instituted by creditors and all heard together, and out of the consolidated, causes arise the question to be determined on this appeal.

The mortgage to Stitchenath having been adjudged to-be constructively fraudulent, and the case going to the commissioner for settlement, the controversy ’arises between the-creditors of the two devisees and the creditors of the testator, Peter Constans,' as to the distribution of the assets belonging; to the two estates.

The creditors of the devisor, Peter Constans, maintain that, by the provisions of his will, they have a lien on the..estate-devised to his two sons for the payment of their debts, and. that, in the distribution of the assets claimed to belong to-Louis and August Constans, the proceeds of that portion! ■of the estate devised to them by their father must be applied, in tha't way. The creditors of the two sons insist that the provisions of the will create no lien upon the estate devised [437]*437-in behalf of creditors, and that the provision of the will in ■. reference to the payment of debts can have no greater meaning than the words ordinarily used in wills, “after the pay- , merit of my debts, I devise,” &c., when it has been held that ■the devisee would take an absolute title free of any charge, ; such as the heir could take in case of intestacy. It is evi- • dent that the language contained in the clause of the will ■ referred to was intended as. something more than the mere form usually followed in writing wills. The testator not only provides that his two sons shall hold the property - devised subject to the payment of his debts, but further provides that these debts are to be paid, out of my estate, showing ■ his purpose to create a charge in express terms. He was > making bequests of. money also to some of his children, and his plain intention, gathered from the language used, was to .-secure his creditors and legatees by making his estate first ■liable to the payment of debts and legacies, and the residue • to his two sons. It may be that, because the devise or trust -is for the payment of debts generally, a purchase in good : faith -from the devisee would hold the property as against ■ the .creditors of the devisor, and this whether the trust -directs the land to be sold for the payment of debts gen- ■ erally or is only' charged with their payment. This rule was recognized by this court in the case of Grotenkemper v. Pigeon, MS. Opinion, and is the established equitable ■•'doctrine on the subject. (See Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, vol. 2, page 408.)

But has this doctrine any application to the case' before ’ us, the mortgage to Stitchenath operating as an assignment •only for the benefit of the creditors of the two devisees? Is such a mortgagee to be regarded as a purchaser in good .■faith, and does he. acquire a greater right to the property [438]*438devised by the testator than the parties (the devisees) who ■ mortgaged the property had ? This, it seems to us, is the important inquiry in the case; for, if Stitchenath is a purchaser for value, he has priority over the creditors of Peter ■ Constans.

That the mortgage to Stitchenath was made in contem- • plation of insolvency, and with the design to prefer him over the other creditors of the two devisees, is not seriously questioned by counsel on either side; and such being the case, it must be maintained, in order to defeat the claims of the testator’s creditors, that the mortgage to Stitchenath, constructively fraudulent as to the creditors of Louis and August Constans, operated not only to make Stitchenath a purchaser for value, but all the other creditors of the devisees, for the reason that the act of insolvency inured to their benefit. The act to prevent conveyances in contemplation of insolvency, with the design to prefer one or more creditors to the exclusion of others, is an equitable statute, and courts of equity alone control the disposition of the debtor’s • assets so as to produce equality in the distribution, except as • to those given priority by the express provision of the statute, or as to those who have created bona fide liens prior to the ■ act of insolvency. The statute makes the fraudulent preference operate as an assignment for the benefit of creditors, and the debtor’s estate is distributed as if no conveyance ■ or mortgage had been made, subject to the exceptions contained in the statute. The assignment made subsequent to • the act of insolvency, by reason of the mortgage, passed' nothing, as the debtor’s entire estate had already gone, by - operation of law, to his creditors; and even if the assignment had any vitality, we are not prepared to say that the - mere designation of a trustee or assignee by the debtor,. [439]*439selected by him for _ the purpose of administering upon or distributing the debtor’s assets, would occupy any better position with reference to the claims of creditors or of third parties than the debtor himself did. He could distribute-the assets according to priority, and nothing more.

It is not important, however, to determine this question, as, in our opinion, the assignment did not take hold of the-property, as it had already gone to creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Ky. 434, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drake-v-ellman-kyctapp-1882.