Groetter, Weil & Co. v. Norman Bros.

107 Ala. 585
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 107 Ala. 585 (Groetter, Weil & Co. v. Norman Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Groetter, Weil & Co. v. Norman Bros., 107 Ala. 585 (Ala. 1894).

Opinion

BBICKELL, C. J.

The purpose of the original bill filed by the appellants, creditors of a partnership, known as Norman Brothers, is to vacate because of alleged fraud, a sale and conveyance of property real and personal, the debtors had made to their mother, the appellee, Elizabeth A. Norman. The conveyance purports to have been made in payment of a debt due from the grantors to the grantee.

The principles of law by which the validity of the transaction is governed, have been the subject of such frequent discussion and consideration, that the mere statement of them is all that is now necessary or proper. A debtor in failing circumstances, or actually insolvent, his property not being subject to liens or encumbrances, may by a sale añade in good faith, devote his entire property, or any part thereof to the payment of one or more creditors to the exclusion of all others. Failing, or insolvent debtors, have the power and the right to prefer the payment of one creditor to another. If they had not, as has been often said, they could make no payments at all, for whoever was paid would receive a preference. The real motive and intent being the payment of a just debt, the amount of the debt being the reasonable equivalent of the value of the property taken in payment, the transaction is unaffected by the statute of frauds, though its known effect -may be the delay or disappointment of other creditors equally meritorious, or may prevent them from receiving any payment whatever. The statute of frauds is directed against intentional fraud of legal injury to creditors. The payment of a just debt is not a fraud, and cannot be of legal injury to a creditor who is not paid — it is but the satisfaction of a legal obligation, and the discharge of a moral-duty. The principle proceeds on the hypothesis that there is a just debt, and the real intent is its payment; the two must coexist — of course, if there is a secret trust, or a reservation of a benefit to the debtor, the element of good faith is wanting, and an unlawful intent intervenes which vitiates the transaction, however just may be the [592]*592debt, and however it may approximate the value of the property.

The controversy in this case resolves itself into the inquiry, whether the debt in j>ayment of which the sale and conveyance was made, was a real and subsisting-debt, or was it feigned and simulated to give color to the sale and conveyance, for there is no room for doubt that the debt if real, exceeded the value of the property conveyed ; nor is there room'for the just and- reasonable imputation that there was a secret trust, or the reservation of a benefit to the debtors, attending the transaction. The inquiry involves largely only matter of fact. The city court after a consideration of the testimony, reached the conclusion that the debt was real and supported the sale and conveyance. We have examined and considered the evidence, and we are not satisfied to disturb that conclusion.

A discussion of the testimony would serve no useful purpose. Each case of this character depends upon its own particular facts — numerous as are the cases, it can scarcely be said that any two are twin brothers. Upon questions of fact never exactly alike, it is but seldom that precedents are of practical value ; and they are often overworked in the effort to apply.them to other cases of varying facts, circumstances and conditions. It is enough to say, we must pronounce a volume of testimony proceeding from grantors, the' grantee, and others corroborating them, having full opportunity to know the facts to which they testify, as absolutely untrustworthy, or we must affirm the conclusions and decree of the city court.

The relationship of the grantors and the grantee, and the’fact that they lived together under the same roof, prove nothing unless connected with other facts and circumstances having a just tendency to prove fraud. — Troy Fertilizer Co. v. Norman, 18 So. Rep. 201: Teague, Barnett & Co. v. Lindsay, 17 So. Rep. 538. The law does not prohibit persons who are sui:juris, standing in the nearest relations of consanguinity or affinity, or the most intimate of business relations, from dealing with each other — from lending and borrowing, from buying or selling, or from entering into any contract or engagement into which they could enter if they wrere strangers. If they stand in confidential relations, as between themselves, courts of [593]*593equity will not permit an advantage to be derived from a breach of the confidence of the relation. But as to others, there is no limitation or prohibition of contracting between themselves. As the law permits a failing or insolvent debtor to prefer creditors, it is difficult to assign any real, substantial reason,’for regarding with suspicion a preference given to a relation. It was well observed in Micou v. National Bank, 104 U. S. 543, as the law confers upon an insolvent debtor the right of choice among his creditors, it does,not require that in the exercise of the right, he should “discriminate against his own flesh and blood.” In Coley v. Coley, 14 N. J. Eq. 352, it was observed by Ch. Green : “A debtor in failing circumstances has an undoubted right to prefer any creditor, as well a parent or other near relative as a stranger, and if the debt were bona fide clue-, the strongest considerations of duty may prompt a son to give preference to the claims of a widowed mother, who had given credit upon the faith of the son’s integrity over the claims of mere strangers.” In Schultz v. Hoagland, 85 N. Y. 468, it was said: “The relation of assignor and assignee, and their intimacy and friendship, and the preference given to the latter as a creditor prove nothing by themselves. They are consistent with honesty and innocence, and become only important when other circumstances, indicative of fraud, invest them with a new character and purpose, and transform them from ambiguous and equivocal facts into positive badges of fraud.” In the cases of Hubbard v. Allen, 59 Ala. 283, and Harrell v. Mitchell, 61 Ala. 270, which are supposed to assert a contrary proposition, the relationship was accompanied, by positive indicia or badges of fraud, which it was declared ought to be neutralized or removed by clear and convincing evidence; by a higher degi*ee of evidence of the consideration, than would be exacted if the relationship had not ex-; isted. The proposition must be accepted in connection with the particular facts of the cases, and when so accepted, we do not doubt its correctness. And it maybe observed, Harrell v. Mitchell was not a sale and conveyance in .payment of debts; but a sale and conveyance for money paid, and was not controlled by the principles which govern sales and conveyances to pay debts. When a preexisting debt is established — when it i's [594]*594shown that in payment of it, property Hot more in its fair and reasonable value than an equivalént for the debt has been taken, all badges of fraud are neutralized. Falsehood and fraud are not to be lightly imputed ; they must be proved, not presumed. It is but seldom they are the matter of direct, positive testimony. Most often, they are the matter of deduction or inference from tangible facts and circumstances, naturally and logically indicating their existence. “Such facts, nevertheless, must be of a character to warrant the inference. It is not enough that they are ambiguous, and just as consistent with innocence as guilt. That would substitute suspicion as the equivalent of proof.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Consolidated Placers, Inc. v. Grant
151 P.2d 48 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1944)
First Nat. Bank of Mobile v. Burch
188 So. 859 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1939)
Wade v. Brantley & Crawley Const. Co.
161 So. 101 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1935)
Rogers v. Conaway
147 So. 152 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1933)
Buell v. Miller
141 So. 223 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1932)
Federal Land Bank of New Orleans v. Rowe
133 So. 50 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1931)
O'Neill v. City of Birmingham
130 So. 87 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)
Federal Land Bank v. Southmont Mfg. Co.
122 So. 426 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1929)
Snodgrass v. Snodgrass
101 So. 837 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1924)
Giddens v. Reddoch
92 So. 848 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1921)
Watters-Tonge Lumber Co. v. Knox
89 So. 497 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1921)
Hess v. Hodges
78 So. 85 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1918)
Wells v. Parker
75 So. 914 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1917)
McCrory v. Donald
68 So. 306 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1915)
Hawkins v. Damson & Abraham
62 So. 15 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1913)
Farrow v. Sturdivant Bank
61 So. 286 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1913)
Hood & Johnson v. Sitz & Co.
59 So. 767 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1912)
Wertheimer v. Freiberg
57 So. 708 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1912)
Chandler v. Johnston Lumber Co.
169 Ala. 495 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1910)
Town of New Decatur v. Scharfenberg
41 So. 1025 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 Ala. 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groetter-weil-co-v-norman-bros-ala-1894.