Farmers' Bank & Trust Co. v. Peters

11 S.W.2d 103, 226 Ky. 403, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 110
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 23, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 11 S.W.2d 103 (Farmers' Bank & Trust Co. v. Peters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers' Bank & Trust Co. v. Peters, 11 S.W.2d 103, 226 Ky. 403, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 110 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas—

Affirming.

The appellee and a defendant below, A. E. Manning, is the son by her first marriage of another appellee and defendant below, Lizzie Peters, whose present husband, 5. H. Peters, is the third appellee and defendant below. In 1919 Mrs. Peters became indebted, by note, to the appellant and plaintiff below, Farmers’ Bank & Trust Company, in tlie sum of $3,000, and to secure it she simultaneously mortgaged a tract of land in Nelson county, to which she held title, containing 238 acres, and which at that time was thought to be and was worth considerably more than the amount of plaintiff’s debt. Mrs. Peters also owned a small cottage in Bardstown, in which she and her husband resided, and it, with the lot upon which it stood, was worth, according to the proof, about $2,500, $1,000 of which was exempt under our homestead statute, leaving.its value in excess thereof available for the payment of Mrs. Peters’ debts. The note to the bank ran along, with no. payments made on the principal, but the interest was paid up to December 18, 1924. On June 27 of that year the mortgaged farm was sold to one Purdom, who agreed to assume the debt to plaintiff as part consideration therefor, and to pay the balance of the consideration in a manner not material to this case. He paid six months’ interest on plaintiff’s debt, and then seems to have abandoned the place, and Mrs.. Peters, through her son, A. E. Manning, as her volunteered agent, took •charge of the farm and ran it for perhaps a couple of years, with little, if any, profit. In the meantime its worth, because of shrinkage in land values and other causes, was reduced,' but the proof does not show that it was not worth plaintiff’s debt.

*405 The record discloses that there were some conversations had between the cashier of plaintiff and defendant Manning, with reference to the bank’s dissatisfaction with conditions, which resulted in the sale of the land to Purdom, and which was done with the bank’s knowledge and consent. There is also testimony in the record, given by the cashier, that some little time prior to July 8,1925, he notified Manning that, unless the debt was paid or materially reduced, the bank would be compelled to foreclose its mortgage, and it is inferable that such information was communicated to Mrs. Peters. However, before any effort in that direction was made by plaintiff, and on July 8, 1925, Mrs. Peters conveyed to her son her residence cottage in Bardstown for the recited consideration of “one dollar and other valuable considerations.”

Plaintiff brought its foreclosure action on September 4,1925, and obtained a default judgment against Mrs. Peters, and on November 5 thereafter this suit was filed, attacking the conveyance of the residence in Bardstown as having been made in fraud of creditors, including plaintiff, under the provisions of sections 1906 and 1907 of our present statutes, and plaintiff sought the establishment of a lien on that property in its favor and a sale of it in satisfaction thereof. The answer of defendants was a denial of the averments of the petition, with an additional paragraph alleging that the son, during a period of about 10 years preceding the execution of the deed to him by his mother, made advancements to her for her support and maintenance, including physicians’ and hospital bills (she during that period being to a considerable extent an invalid), and that such advancements amounted to at least $4,600, and that the conveyance was made in partial satisfaction thereof. That affirmative part of the answer was denied, and after proof taken, and submission of the cause, the chancellor dismissed the petition, and to reverse it plaintiff prosecutes this-appeal.

It is strenuously argued in brief for plaintiff that the chancellor erred (1) in his finding of' fact that there was a valuable consideration for the attacked conveyance, although it was a past one; (2) in determining that, although there was a valuable, but past, consideration, no actionable fraud, as contemplated by section 1906, was proven; and (3) an,intimation in brief that, if the court was correct in its finding of facts (1) and (2), then it *406 erred in dismissing the petition, since the undisputed facts showed a preference entitling plaintiff to the remedy given by section 1910 of the statutes. We will determine those questions in the order named.

1. In disposing of error (1) but little need be said. The testimony in the record, without contradiction by any witness or by any circumstance, conclusively shows that S. H. Peters, the husband, was for some cause unable to earn a support for himself and wife; that the latter was ill for a large portion of the time during a period of 10 years immediately prior to the attacked conveyance, during which time she underwent one or more operations in a hospital, and incurred considerable medical and hospital bills, all of which were paid by her son, the defendant A. E. Manning, who was not only industrious and earned a respectable salary, but who was also affectionate and dutiful to his mother. In addition to such expenses, he also contributed, as occasion required, considerable amounts to the support and maintenance of his mother, all of which was testified to by those two, and corroborated by plaintiff’s cashier, who handled the son’s checks issued to his mother. The son was able to conclusively show that he had contributed in that manner for his mother upwards of $4,100, and stated that the amount so contributed by him was considerably larger than that sum, but that he did not have the documents to establish it. The 'Court, therefore, did not err in holding that there was a past valuable consideration for the attacked conveyance.-

2. The disposition of error (2) is more difficult. Section 1906, as consistently and frequently construed by us, does not limit the right óf a creditor, in an action brought by him thereunder, to have the conveyance set aside and the property or its proceeds appropriated to his debt, only to cases where there was no valuable and adequate consideration for the attacked conveyance, since the relief will be given, notwithstanding such valuable consideration, if the other elements in the statute are proven, and which are, an intent on the part of the grantor “to delay, hinder or defraud his •creditors,’'’ and the grantee had knowledge thereof. Summers v. Taylor, 80 Ky. 429; Beadles v. Miller, 9 Bush 405; Huffman v. Leslie, 66 S. W. 822, 23 Ky. Law Rep. 1981; Walters v. Akers, 101 S. W. 1179, 31 Ky. Law Rep. 259; Shive v. Merritt, 104 S. W. 368, 31 Ky. Law , Rep. 978; Allen v. *407 Ligon, 175 Ky. 767, 194 S. W. 1050; Stewart v. Wheeler, 220 Ky. 687, 295 S. W. 991, and. many others referred to in those opinions. Some, if not all, of them, ,and .particularly the Ligón opinion, state what constitute “badges of fraud” in the law, among which are (a) close relationship of the parties; (b) misrecital of the true consideration; (c) insolvency of the grantor and a knowledge of it by the grantee, and perhaps others found in those opinions; and it is argued that such “badges of fraud” are found in this record, and which, at least for the purposes of the case, we might accept as true. However, the cases in which they are discussed do not hold that the existence of such “badges of fraud” conclusively

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.W.2d 103, 226 Ky. 403, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-bank-trust-co-v-peters-kyctapphigh-1928.