Estes v. Spain

19 F. 714, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 46
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedMarch 3, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 F. 714 (Estes v. Spain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estes v. Spain, 19 F. 714, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 46 (N.D. Miss. 1884).

Opinion

Hill, J.

This cause is submitted to the court upon bill, answers, exhibits, and proofs, from which the following facts appear:

S. H. Gunter, a merchant of the town of Sardis, in this state, was, on the twenty-fifth day of March, 1882, largely indebted to the complainants, and other merchants,—a number of whom are made defendants to the bill,—and on that day executed a deed of general assignment, purporting to convey all [715]*715of Ms property, real and personal, and all his notes, books of account, and other assets of every description, to S. G-. Spain, as trustee, for the purpose of paying his debts, which, it is admitted on the lace of the assignment, he was unable to pay in full, reserving, however, from the conveyance tho property owned by him exempt by law from execution and sale, a soiled ule of which is given. Soon before, and about the same time, said Gunter executed another conveyance, conveying to J. 13. Boothe, as trustee, certain real estate described therein, to secure and save harmless his sureties upon a note which he owed to the Sardis Bank; and at or about the same time said Guntur transferred and delivered to a number of his clerks and employes certain notes and accounts in payment of an alleged indebtedness to them; and shortly before this time, and at a time when, from the proof, he contemplated conveying away and dispossessing himself of all his visible moans, ho delivered to his wife the sum of $900 in payment of an alleged indebtedness to her for money which it is claimed by him lie received from the estate of his wife’s grandfather, and belonging to his wife, in the year 1858. Within a short time after these conveyances were made and money paid, defendants Biekliam and Moore, and other creditors, sued out attachments in this court and caused the same to be levied by the marshal on tho goods and assets in the hands and possession of said Spain, tho trustee to whom they had been delivered under the assignment. Complainants, who are by far the largest creditors, who are preferred under the assignment, filed this bill, alleging, among other things, that the assignee was unwilling further to execute the trust conferred upon him by said assignment, and had abandoned the same; that the amount of the debts upon which attachments had been levied upon the property far exceeded its value, and that unless the trustee, or some one else interested, would give a claimant’s bond, the property would he sold at a great sacrifice; and alleged that the assignment executed to said Spain was made in good faith, valid, and a binding security for the debt due to complainants; and prays that these attaching creditors be enjoined from proceeding further with tlieir said attachment suit; that said deed of assignment be, by decree of this court, declared a valid assignment; and that a trustee or assignee be appointed to execute the trusts created by it, in the room and stead of said Spain, the assignee therein.

The answers deny that the assignment was made in good faith, and is a valid and legal transfer of the property and assets therein conveyed for the purposes expressed, as against the defendants, who were creditors of the assignor before the assignment was made, and deny that complainants are entitled to the relief prayed for in their bill. The question of the validity of the assignment is the main question to be determined. If there is any provision on tho face of the assignment, or if there is any provision wanting in it, which renders it fraudulent and void in law, or if the facts as shown by the evidence show a purpose on the part of the granter to reserve a benefit to himself, or to hinder or delay his creditors, or any of them, in the collection of their debts, then the assignment must be declared fraudulent and void and the hill dismissed. As the debt due complainants is an antecedent debt, under the well-settled rule in this state, they or the assignee do" not occupy the position of a bona fide purchaser without notice; so that if the assignment is fraudulent and void for any reason, as against the grantor, the beneficiaries under it can take nothing by it.

[716]*716- The first question to be considered is, does the assignment on its face-contain any provision, or omit any provision, which, in its effect, will or may hinder and delay the grantor’s creditors, or work an injury to them, not sanctioned by law ? The assignment was evidently drawn by a skillful lawyer, with unusual care, and most of the provisions and omissions which are most usually''relied upon and sustained in holding such conveyances fraudulent and void are in this assignment avoided, and at first view there would appear no objection to it, appearing on its face. The clause in the assignment providing for the disposition of the moneys arising from the collection of debts and file sale of property, after providing for the payment of the costs and expenses of executing the trust, and for the payment of the preferred creditors, provides that the supplies, if any, shall be paid pro rata to the unsecurei l creditors, whpse names are given and the amount due to each, as stated in a schedule annexed to the assignment, and made part of it., and to any other creditors who are omitted therefrom, but does nol mention a time in which these omitted creditors shall present their claims, nor the mode in which they shall be established. The assignee is directed to make the distribution with convenient speed, but fixes no limit of time in which it should be done. It is insisted by defendants’ counsel that these omissions leave it to the discretion of thi assignee, who is the assignor’s confidential friend, former book-keeper, and wife’s present partner, to postpone the distribution to an indefinite period, and to the delay and hinderanee of the creditors in collecting their debts.

It has been held by the supreme court of this state in the case of Mayer v. Shields & Mulhallan, 59 Miss. 107, and by this court in the recent case of Bickham & Moore v. Lake & Austin, that, whenéver, in-a general deed of assignment by an insolvent debtor, it is required that something must be done by the debtor in order to participate in the funds, that a reasonable time, not too long nor too short, must be given, in which to. do the thing required to be done, and that the want of such a provision will enable the assignee to unduly postpone the distribution to the hinderanceand delayof the creditors, and thereby render the assignment in law fraudulent and void. In this case nothing is required of the omitted creditors to be done in order to participate in the funds to be distributed, and it is a matter of some doubt whether this defect alone renders the conveyance void; but these omissions are circumstances to be taken in connection with the proof in the cause to determine whether or not there existed fraud, in fact, in the execution of the assignment. The assignment further provides that if any property or debts have been inadvertently or by mistake omitted, the assignees shall place them upon the proper schedules; and this, it is claimed, renders the assignment vqid. The indebtedness mentioned means the debts due to the assignor, and not those due by him, and this provision was right and proper, and could not in any way prejudice the.'creditors; but the contrary.

[717]

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Related

Bickham v. Lake
3 F. Cas. 332 (S.D. New York, 1847)

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. 714, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estes-v-spain-msnd-1884.