Graves v. Davenport

50 F. 881, 1892 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 201
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 8, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 F. 881 (Graves v. Davenport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graves v. Davenport, 50 F. 881, 1892 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 201 (N.D. Ill. 1892).

Opinion

Blodgett, District Judge.

This is a bill in equity by the assignee of Theron Davenport, a bankrupt, seeking to set aside certain conveyances of real and personal property made by the bankrupt to the defendants Josephus Davenport and Deborah Davenport, on or about the 6th day of November, 1877. It appears from the proof that on the 6th day of November, 1877, the said Theron Davenport, who was then, in fact, insolvent, made to his son, the defendant Josephus Davenport, a conveyance bf a farm situated in Kane county, Ill., containing about 348 acres of land, for the nominal or expressed sum of $13,928, and that he also at the same time, made to the said Josephus a bill of sale of most of the live stock and fanning implements upon said farm, for the expressed consideration of $3,800. The assignee seeks by this bill to set aside this conveyance, on the ground that it was fraudulent as against the creditors of Theron Davenport, the bankrupt.

The evidence in the case is meager, in many respects fragmentary, but the following facts may be said to be clearly established by it: The bankrupt, Theron Davenport, had been, for several years prior to the transfer in question, in possession of the farm. His son, Josephus, who at the time of the transfer was about 32 years old, had resided with him from the time he reached his majority, had devoted himself faithfully to managing and conducting the affairs of the farm, with no special understanding between himself and his father as to the amount which he was to receive for his services, except that the father had frequently assured Josephus that he would do well by him if he would stay with him and carry on the farm. For 10-or 12 years before the transaction the bankrupt, Theron Davenport, had been engaged in buying and selling cattle, and trading in live stock generally, having given but little, if any, attention to the affairs of his farm. . He wás in good credit, and generally reputed and believed to ■be a man of ample means. But for some time before the transfer of the farto to Josephus, Josephus had been importunate to have the amount which was due him, or which he was to receive for his services, determined, and for a settlement with his father; but his ap-plicátióhb iii that regard-had been deferred and postponed by the [883]*883father by one excuse and another until finally, just previous to the transfer, he proposed to Josephus to convey to him the farm, which was their subject to a mortgage of §3,000, in full satisfaction of what he owed Josephus for his services, which they had adjusted a few days previously at $5,042, and that he, Josephus, should pay enough money to liquidate and pay a claim which was held by the defendant Deborah Davenport, the wife of the bankrupt, against her husband, amounting, including interest, to $5,885.83, and mat he would assume and pay the $8,000 incumbrance upon the farm; thus making the purchase price for the farm, as above slated, $13,927.83, which was equivalent to about §40 por acre for the land. At the same time the bankrupt made a bill of sale to the defendant Josephus of most of the live stock and farm implements upon the farm, the consideration for which was an agreement on the part of Josephus to pay certain indebtedness of his father’s, for which he, Josephus, was hoi den as surety, amounting to $3,800.

The bankrupt law, as it stood at the time of this transaction, required that, in order to eniille the assignee to recover back any payments or property transferred on the ground that it was a fraudulent •preference or a fraudulent transfer, the person receiving the preference or transfer should know that the grantor was insolvent, and that the conveyance or payment was made in fraud of the provisions of the bankrupt act.

hi support of the allegations of the bill the complainant relies mainly upon the testimony of the bankrupt and the two defendants Josephus and Deborah Davenport. He has called upon them to testify, and made them his witnesses in that behalf. The dolendant Josephus testifies that he did not know a1 the time he received this property that his father was insolvent, or that he owed any other debts than those which were canceled1 or provided for under this transaction. That he supposed that by this transaction his father virtually provided for the payment of all his indebtedness; that his father kept no books, and that he was not aware that he was involved in debt. The defendant Deborah Davenport testifies that she did not know that her husband was involved in debt. She supposed that all the indebtedness be had was what he owed to herself and her son, and she had no idea of any other indebtedness. She was laboring under the belief that he was in prosperous and independent circumstances, aside from his interest in the farm. This testimony is attacked by the complainant’s counsel upon the ground that it is improbable and incredible that these two witnesses, bearing the close relation they did to the bankrupt, should not have kuown more about his affairs than they testified they actually did. I do not think, in the light of the testimony of these witnesses, that their ignorance in regard to the exlent to which he was involved in debt is improbable, or unworthy of belief. The bankrupt was a trader, engaged in the buying and selling of live stock away from his farm, kept no books to which cither his wife or his son had access, and made no disclosures, as the proof show's, to them of his financial condition. [884]*884The son was employed upon the farm, took no part in the ';sding in live stock by his father, and had no occasion, therefore, to become familiar with the financial condition of his father growing out of his dealings. There, is no presumption that the bankrupt disclosed his financial condition to his wife, and nothing in the record contradicts her denial of the fact that she did not know of his insolvency. The' only testimony which complainant has introduced, aside from that of the defendants Josephus and Deborah, which tends to charge either of them with any knowledge of the insolvency of the bankrupt, is that of oneFarren, who testified to a conversation had with Josephus about the time of the adjudication of bankruptcy, in which Josephus said, or in which he says that Josephus stated, that his father had been insolvent three or four years. This witness is wholly contradicted by Josephus Davenport, and, with the improbability of his having made such a statement to a comparatively entire stranger, I am inclined to believe that Davenport’s statement is true. Aside from this, however, this testimony of Farren, it seems to me, should be excluded from the consideration of the court on the ground that this complainant, having called Josephus Davenport to testify, cannot be allowed to impeach his testimony. In this connection I may also add that the complainant, having called both Josephus and Deborah to testify in the case, and presented them as.reliable witnesses, is bound by what they say, and cannot ask the court to disbelieve them, or to infer that they have testified'falsely, and that they must have had, as is insisted by .complainant, actual knowledge of Theron Davenport’s insolvency. I am therefore quite clear that the complainant has failed to prove that either of these defendants knew of the insolvency of Theron Davenport at the time they received payment in full upon their respective demands against him.

The complainant insists further, however, in regard to this feature of the case, that the bankrupt was not indebted to his wife, Deborah Davenport, and that, therefore, the payment to her was fraudulent.

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Bluebook (online)
50 F. 881, 1892 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graves-v-davenport-ilnd-1892.