Gaff v. Stern

12 Mo. App. 115
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 18, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 12 Mo. App. 115 (Gaff v. Stern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaff v. Stern, 12 Mo. App. 115 (Mo. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs sued Solomon Stern and John Albert, wholesale liquor dealers in St. Louis, by attachment, on the ground of conveyance and assignment of their property with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud their creditors. Mayer Stern and Isaac Stern, of the firm of M. Stern & Company, were in this proceeding summoned as garnishees. The plaintiffs denied the answer of the garnishees ; and set up that Stern and Albert had been engaged, since January 15, 1879, in a systematic plan to swindle their creditors, and that the garnishees were confederated with them in the perpetration of the fraud; that in pursuance of this plot, on March 5, 1879, Stern and Albert assigned to the garnishees accounts and bills against customers, to the [117]*117aggregate amount of $10,000, on which the garnishees collected $2,600. The garnishees traverse this denial. They deny all fraudulent combination with the original defendants. They admit the assignment to them of certain claims ; but say that these claims were assigned to them by Stern and Albert for moneys lent by them to the firm, and to secure them against certain liabilities which they had incurred for the firm.

The cause was tried by the court, a jury being waived ; and there was a finding and judgment for the garnishees.

The garnishees are brothers of Solomon Stern, one of the defendants in the attachment. The witnesses examined were the defendants in the attachment, the two bookkeepers of the firm, and Mayer Stern, one of the firm of garnishees. The testimony is contradictory. The statements of the witnesses are of such a character that it is manifest there was false swearing in the case. Albert, a witness for plaintiff, claims to have been defrauded by Solomon Stern, his former partner, and is manifestly not friendly to him. It is not for us to weigh the evidence. There was testimony from which the trier of the fact might have found a conspiracy to defraud creditors to which Mayer Stern was a party, and the main features of which were suggested by him. But if Mayer Stern is to be believed, there was no such conspiracy to his knowledge, and the trier of the fact had a right to believe Mayer Stern and reject the contradictory statements of Albert.

There was testimony tending to show that, in the spring of 1879, Stern and Albert were engaged together in the wholesale liquor business in St. Louis. Solomon Stern then owed several thousand dollars to Mayer Stern & Co., for moneys borrowed of them, and which had gone into the business of Stern & Albert, as he says. Mayer Stern & Co. were- also sureties in bank for Stern & Albert for a large amount. Steni & Albert, knowing themselves to be hopelessly insolvent, bought liquors to a large amount, not [118]*118expecting to be able to pay for them. A day or two before their failure, Stern & Albert raised about $4,000 in bank on warehouse-receipts, and with the proceeds paid notes of theirs, held by Mayer Stern & Co., to the amount of $1,500, and a note of $2,500 on which Mayer Stern & Co. were indorsers for their accommodation. Stern & Albert failed on March 8th. They owed about $26,000, and had on hand about $1,000 of liquors.

Four days before their failure, they assigned to Mayer Stern & Co., book accounts of the face value of $10,000, and bills receivable of the face value of $950, on ivhieh Mayer Stem & Co. subsequently collected about $3,100, which is less than the debt of Stern to them. The assignment states that Solomon Stern is indebted to various persons : To M. Stern & Co., $4,843; to H. Stern & Co., $1,010; to Emil Wench, $484; to Jacob Schoen, $265. That the firm of Stern & Albert is liable for these demands, and has, through an arrangement of M. Stem & Co. with the Fourth National Bank, procured discounts there, and will be unable to pay the notes; and that, in consideration.that M. Stern & Co. assume the indebtedness of Stern & Albert to the creditors named and to the bank, and agree to hold Stem & Albert harmless therefrom, and release all claim that they have against the firm, the assignment is made. At the time of ,the failure, the books of Stern & Albert disappeared, and were found, after some months, in the office of a lawyer. Appellants claim that the evidence shows that Mayer Stem was engaged in the attempt to conceal these books ; respondents contend that no such inference can fairly be drawn from the testimony. Appellants claim that there is an admission that the accounts to Mayer Stern & Co. were for goods sold by Stern & Albert in the month of March, 1879, the month of their failure. There seems to be such an admission as .to one account. But even that is not clear. We see no such admission as to the remainder of the accounts .

[119]*119An instruction was asked by the plaintiffs, and refused by the court, to the effect that if Stern & Albert made the assignment in question with the intent of hindering, delaying, or defrauding the creditors of Stern & Albert, other than the said garnishees, and that the garnishees knew this at the time, the finding ought to be for plaintiffs.

This instruction was properly refused. A conveyance, made in good faith, for the purpose of paying one or more creditors, though its natural effect, and, therefore, the intention of the parties making it, be to.hinder and delay other creditors of the assignor, is not void on that account. The State to use v. Laurie, 1 Mo. App. 371.

A second instruction to the same effect, but on the hypothesis that plaintiffs had enough ground for suspicion to put them on their guard as to the. intent of the assignors, was properly refused for the same reason.

A third instruction, embodying the same erroneous proposition, was also refused.

The fourth instruction refused, is to the effect that, if the garnishees had reasonable cause to believe that Stern & Albert were insolvent, and unable to meet their obligations in the regular course of maturity, or were on the point of failing, and were making arrangements to place the property, or a portion thereof, beyond the reach of their creditors ; and if the garnishees, having the means of knowledge of such facts and intents, induced said firm to assume liabilities which Solomon Sternj one of the members of the firm, was under, to said garnishees or their friends, or to pay to them notes which were not yet due, and if this assignment formed a part of such scheme or plans, then such assignment is void as against the creditors of Stern & Albert.

This instruction is also erroneous. A person in failing circumstances has a right to prefer a creditor. He cannot, of course, place the property beyond the reach of all his creditors without fraud. But he has a right to make an assignment for the purpose of paying one creditor, or of [120]*120securing one creditor whose claim is not mature, and in doing so, if he places the property beyond the reach of some creditors, he does not place it beyond the reach of his creditors,— that is, of all his creditors, as this instruction assumes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 Mo. App. 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaff-v-stern-moctapp-1882.