Evans v. Sparks

150 P. 372, 170 Cal. 532, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 431
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1915
DocketL.A. No. 3490.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 150 P. 372 (Evans v. Sparks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. Sparks, 150 P. 372, 170 Cal. 532, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 431 (Cal. 1915).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

Defendants appeal from an order of the superior court denying their motion for a new trial.

During the lifetime of H. S. Sparks he made a deed of trust of certain property to his son J. P. Sparks and later he *533 assigned to his wife, Grace C. Sparks, a number of shares of the capital stock of a corporation. Annie E. Evans, who-was-a creditor of H. S. Sparks, sued to set aside the assignment and the trust-deed upon the ground that each was made by H. S. Sparks in contemplation of insolvency with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud his creditors and that the trustee and assignee accepted the purported trust and alleged assignment, respectively, with like fraudulent intent.

The court found that H. S. Sparks died on the fifteenth day of May, 1911; that the allowed and approved claims against his estate, including that of Annie E. Evans for something over five thousand dollars, amounted to more than eleven thousand dollars, while the assets were slightly in excess of one thousand dollars; that on the sixth day of August, 1908, H. S. Sparks, in contemplation of insolvency and with intent to delay and defraud his existing and subsequent creditors, including the plaintiff, conveyed to J. P. Sparks certain personal and real property, part of which the latter had sold for prices aggregating more than one thousand dollars; that certain described parcels were still held by the said J. P. Sparks; that the conveyance was accepted by- J. P. Sparks with knowledge of the fraudulent intent of H. S. Sparks; that the conveyance was made without consideration; and that it left the said H. S. Sparks insolvent and without sufficient property to pay his then, existing creditors. The court also found that although .the conveyance purported to transfer the real and personal property for trust purposes this was done as a pretext to aid in the fraud; and that it was not true, as alleged in the answer, that the purpose of the conveyance was to reimburse the children of said Sparks by his first wife for moneys received by him from their mother and invested by him.

The findings with reference to the transaction between H. S. Sparks and his second wife were, in brief, that he had made a purported transfer to her of thirty thousand shares of the capital stock of the Mutual Laundry Company (a corporation) on April 21, 1910, but that such assignment was “not completed, or made in fact, until the 12th day of May, 1911”; that at the time of said transfer the stock had been pledged as security for a loan of nearly three thousand five hundred dollars; that the transfer was made by him and received by his wife with the intent to defraud his creditors; *534 that it was made while he was insolvent and left him without sufficient means to pay his creditors; that subsequently Grace C. Sparks sold the stock for ten thousand dollars, applying three thousand five hundred dollars of such sum to the discharge of a mortgage indebtedness on her separate real property; that the loan secured by said mortgage had been used by H. S. Sparks in his business, but had all been repaid except the said sum of three thousand five hundred dollars prior to his death; that said transfer was made partly for the purpose of reimbursing Grace C. Sparks on account of said loan and for her maintenance and support, but also for the purpose of defrauding creditors.

Appellants contend that the findings are not supported by the evidence in that Sparks was not insolvent when he made the trust-deed to his son and the transfer of stock to his wife, and that the intent on his part to defraud his creditors was not shown by the facts adduced at the trial.

We will first examine the transaction of H. S. Sparks with his son. When he made the trust-deed his nominal assets remaining after its execution were far in excess of his liabilities, hut Recording to respondent’s contention, the real assets omitted from the deed were of such a character that the court might well have concluded that Mr. Sparks knew them to be virtually valueless. This fact, coupled with the circumstance that without consideration he created a trust in favor of adult children is sufficient, say respondent’s counsel, to sustain the burden of proof which was placed upon their client, to establish fraud affirmatively. -It is perfectly true, as appellants insist, that conveyance of property to a kinsman is not, in itself, a badge of fraud (Gray v. Galpin, 98 Cal. 635, [33 Pac. 725]), but by a transaction of this sort in which a father, largely indebted, conveys property to a son, without any consideration, the “watchful scrutiny” of the court is invited. (2 Bigelow on Fraud, 192.) The note upon which plaintiff bases her claim was executed July 1, 1908, although the money had been loaned at times prior to that date. Before that time, H. S. Sparks had been engagedt in loaning money in small sums for large interest and without security. On the date which the note bears, H. S. Sparks had due and owing to him by reason of notes covering such loans more than eleven thousand dollars. In December, 1907, he had loaned eleven thousand dollars to one Robert A. Brown. *535 This sum was secured by a bond executed by the Metropolitan Surety Company. In June, 1908, H. S. Sparks had attempted to realize on this bond, but both Brown and the Surety Company had refused payment. Subsequently a suit in his behalf was successfully prosecuted to judgment against the Surety Company but that corporation went through insolvency and the judgment was never satisfied. Mr. Sparks also had a claim against one Housel for two thousand dollars for commissions and he owned certain shares of the Pasadena Heights Tract. Of these shares the witness J. P. Sparks said ‘‘I think they were considered worth $6,000.00,” but there was no other statement of their value. Including the Evans note the liabilities of H. S. Sparks on August 6, 1908, amounted to $8,910.00. His apparent assets not included in the trust-deed of that date were :

Promissory notes representing loans which he had made and against which the statute of limitations had not run amounting to..............$11,555.00
The bond of the Metropolitan Surety Company, securing the Brown debt................. 11,000.00
The claim against Housel...................... 2,000.00
The 30 shares of Pasadena Heights Tract valued by J. P. Sparks at........................ 6,000.00
Making a total of.........................$30,555.00

Respondent contends that H. S. Sparks must have known the worthlessness of the notes (none of which has since been collected), of the bond (on which nothing has been since realized), and of the claim against Housel, (which has not been settled), and while she admits that the stock in the Pasadena Heights Tract was subsequently exchanged for the stock that was sold by Grace C. Sparks for ten thousand dollars, her counsel argue that this fact does not show that it was worth anything at the date of the execution of the trust-deed and that the opinion of J. P. Sparks placing the value at six thousand dollars was entitled to no weight. We cannot agree with this contention.

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Bluebook (online)
150 P. 372, 170 Cal. 532, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-sparks-cal-1915.