First National Bank v. Sanders Bros.

172 S.W. 689, 162 Ky. 374, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 81
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 27, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 689 (First National Bank v. Sanders Bros.) 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
First National Bank v. Sanders Bros., 172 S.W. 689, 162 Ky. 374, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 81 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

[375]*375OPINION OF THE CoUBT BY

JUDGE IÍUBT

Affirming.

On the 11th day of February, 1914, the appellant, First National Bank, filed its petition in equity in the Allen Circuit Court against Charles Sanders and Sanders Bros., and in the petition alleged that Charles Sanders was indebted to it in the sum of $100.00, and with interest from September 24th, 1913, by reason of a promissory note which he had executed to the appellant on the 24th day of May, 1913, and further alleged that the firm of Sanders Bros., which was composed of Charles Sanders and Bernie Sanders, had made the firm of Sanders Bros, liable upon said note by writing the name of Sanders Bros, across the back of the note with the intention of indorsing the same, and that Charles Sanders had left the State for the purpose of cheating and defrauding his creditors, and that the defendants were then selling their property with the announced intention of quitting business, and removing their, property from the State, and were disposing of their property with the fraudulent intention of cheating and hindering their creditors in the collection of their debts, and that Charles Sanders was then a non-resident of the State and prayed for a judgment against Sanders Bros, for the amount of the note sued on and for a general order of attachment against the property of the defendants, and that enough of it be sold to pay the appellant’s debt, interest, and cost. On the same day the appellant filed another suit in the clerk’s office of the court against the same parties, in which it alleged that it held a promissory note for the sum of $50.00 against Charles Sanders, executed on July 5th, 1913, and due two months thereafter; and that, furthermore, during the month of October, 1913, at various times, Charles Sanders had drawn checks upon it for various amounts, in all amounting to the sum of $180.00, which appellant had paid and charged same to Charles Sanders, who, it seems, had no funds in bank to satisfy the checks, and that they also had an overdraft charged to Charles Sanders for $47.22, and that this indebtedness was made while he was a member of the firm of Sanders Bros.; that since said time the firm of Sanders Bros, had pretendedly made á dissolution of their partnership, and that their partnership effects had been taken over by Bernie Sanders withr out any consideration, and for the purpose of defrauding the creditors of Charles Sanders; that Charles [376]*376Sanders liad left the State, and asked the conrt to adjudge that the pretended dissolution of the said partnership was a fraud, and to set it aside, and for a general order of attachment against all of the defendants, and that the assets of the partnership of Sanders Bros., and the interest of Charles Sanders, be subjected to the payment of its debt, interest and cost. The appellant procured a warning order to he made against Charles Sanders in the first named suit, but failed to do so in the last named suit. The two petitions contain sufficient allegations, all of which we have not enumerated, to entitle the appellant to a general order of attachment in each case, and the petitions were’ sworn to by H. P. Gardner, the cashier of appellant hank. Whether appellant had a summons or an order of attachment issued upon these petitions we do not know, or whether the attachment was eyer levied, or summons ever executed upon Bernie Sanders, we do not know, since there is no summons nor order of attachment copied into the record. We can only infer that there was an order of attachment in one or the other, or both of said cases, from the fact that on February 18th, 1914, B. Sanders, with A. Sanders, W. C. Goad, Sr., and Francis B. Goad as sureties, executed a forthcoming bond to the appellant in accordance with Section 214 of the Civil Code, in the presence of the sheriff of the county. The order of attachment, if there was one, and the return thereon, not being in the record, we are unable to say upon what it was that the attachment was levied.

The attorney appointed in the warning order for the non-resident defendant, Charles Sanders, in the first-named case, filed a report on the 21st day of April, in which he alleged that he had been unable to find the whereabouts of Charles Sanders until a few days before that time, and that he had direct information from him that he did not desire any defense made for him by the non-resident attorney in the suit.

Bernie Sanders filed an answer in each of the suits, in which he denied any obligation upon his part for the indebtedness of Charles Sanders, and denied the authority of Charles Sanders to bind the firm of Sanders Bros., by endorsing the note mentioned in the first suit, and denied all of the grounds of the attachment against him, and further denied all allegations of any fraudulent conduct upon his part, and alleged that previous to the filing of said suits that the firm of Sanders Bros, had [377]*377been dissolved on account of the prodigal and extravagant habits of Charles Sanders; that the firm of Sanders Bros, owed no debts at the time of its dissolution, except what it owed A. Sanders, and that the money furnished Charles Sanders by appellant was for his individual use, and upon his individual credit, and that at the time the suits were filed and the attachment levied, he was the individual owner of the stock of goods, which had been previously owned by Sanders Bros.; that they gave public notice of the fact that the partnership was dissolved at the time of its dissolution; that the indorsement of the name of Sanders Bros, on the back of the note mentioned in the first suit was done by Charles Sanders without any authority from the defendant, Bernie Sanders, or the partnership of Sanders Bros., and was for a personal obligation of Charles Sanders, and that none of the proceeds of the note was used or came into the business of Sanders Bros.

The answers of Bernie Sanders were controverted by replies filed by the appellant. By agreement of Bernie Sanders and the appellant, the two suits were consolidated and tried as one suit. Bernie Sanders also filed a written motion to discharge the attachments because the affidavit upon which they were issued was made by H. P. Gardner, who was only the cashier of the appellant bank, when A. G. Braswell, president of the bank, was in, and not absent from the county.

It seems that the evidence in the suits was given orally by the witnesses before the court, and that all the questions raised by the pleadings were submitted together, and upon a hearing of all of the evidence and a consideration of the entire case, the court adjudged that the petitions be dismissed, to which appellant excepted, and prayed, and was granted an appeal to this court.

The court below heard all of the evidence offered by the appellant and Bernie Sanders as to whether or not Charles Sanders had any interest in the attached property at the time of the bringing of the suits.

It seems from the evidence that the partnership debts of the firm of Sanders Bros, far exceeded the assets belonging to the Sanders Bros., and that the assets were all used in discharging the partnership obligations, and left a balance of several hundred dollars of the partnership obligations unsatisfied. In this state of case there would have been nothing of the partnership assets for [378]*378the court to appropriate to the discharge of the individual indebtedness of Charles Sanders.

The appellant, by counsel, insists that the court erred in not giving it a personal judgment against Charles Sanders for his indebtedness to it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 689, 162 Ky. 374, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-sanders-bros-kyctapp-1915.