Gustlin v. Whitham

292 F. 782, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1349
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedSeptember 1, 1923
DocketNo. 56
StatusPublished

This text of 292 F. 782 (Gustlin v. Whitham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gustlin v. Whitham, 292 F. 782, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1349 (N.D. Ohio 1923).

Opinion

SCOTT, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The foregoing statement of issues and proceedings are I think sufficient ás a basis for the disposition of all disputed questions of fact and law raised on the submission. Analysis of the bill discloses that five general contentions or propositions are put forward as grounds for relief by the plaintiff. I will state these, not in the order pleaded in the bill, as I think they may be considered chronologically to better advantage:

(1) Were the conveyances of May 2, 1921, and the conveyances of July 18, 1921, all executed in pursuance of a general scheme and conspiracy for the purpose of defrauding creditors?

(2) Did the conveyances of May 2, 1921, merge in the conveyances of July 18, 1921 ?

(3) Do the conveyances of July 18, 1921, constitute a general assignment with preferences, in contravention of section 3071 of the 1897 Code of Iowa?

(4) Are the conveyances of July 18, 1921, invalid, because executed with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud creditors, within the meaning of section 67e, or section 70a, or section 7Oe, of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898 as amended ?

(5) Would the conveyances of July 18, 1921, if enforced, effect a preference, within the meaning of section 60 of the Bankruptcy Act?

Other subsidiary questions are involved both within the issues and the proof, but they are all put forward as a basis for some one of the above general propositions. They will therefore be discussed in connection with the five propositions above set forth.

The first proposition, “Were the conveyances of May 2, 1921, and the conveyances of July 18, 1921, all executed in pursuance of a general scheme and conspiracy for the purpose of defrauding creditors?” brings one to a consideration of the only challenge made in the bill to the validity of these mortgages when executed. The second proposition, relative to merger, from its very nature assumes the original va[788]*788lidity of the mortgages of May 2d. The special master returns no finding directly involving the first proposition, and no exception is taken to his failure so to do. Indeed, the findings, taken as a whole preclude the inference that the instruments of May 2d were executed in pursuance of any general scheme to defraud. They were executed to secure valid and subsisting indebtedness. The special master finds that at the time of their execution the mortgagees and beneficiaries did not know of the bankrupt’s insolvency, and this finding is not challenged by exception. The only finding excepted to. which relates to this transaction, is finding 29:

“That the increase in the amount of the indebtedness owing by Carl Sparboe to the Hamilton County State Bank, from the sum of $7,900 to $11,300, was not a present advance of $3,400 to Carl Sparboe, but was a mere shifting of indebtedness from the Kandall Savings Bank to the Hamilton County State Bank, such that it would not appear that the Randall Savings Bank had loaned Carl Sparboe an amount in excess of the legal limit imposed by the laws of the state of Iowa.”

It appears that when the mortgages of May 2d were about to be prepared the Randall Savings Bank was carrying'the bankrupt for $12,-620.65. This was trader the statute of Iowa an excessive loan. The Randall Savings Bank insisted on its reduction, and the Hamilton County «State Bank which was carrying' the bankrupt for $7,900, and accrued interest was willing to carry the bankrupt for an additional amount to relieve the Randall Savings Bank in this respect. Accrued interest on all of the indebtedness was computed and the Hamilton County State Bank advanced the bankrupt for the purpose of taking up and shifting a part of his indebtedness to the Randall Savings Bank, $3,000, or approximately that sum, and in drawing the new notes one for $11,300, was drawn to the .Hamilton County State Bank to evidence its previous debt, accrued interest and the advance in behalf of the bankrupt to the Randall State Bank. This was not a mere shifting of book entries or of indebtedness for a colorable purpose, as implied in the twenty-ninth finding of the special master, but was equivalent to a direct, loan to the bankrupt. I think, therefore, the exception to finding 29 of the master is well taken and should be sustained, and that finding set aside; and it is so ordered.

I think there is no substantial evidence tending to show that either of the mortgages of May 2d were tainted with fraud. These mortgages were evidence of valid and subsisting security. Something is said in the last section of paragraph 9 of the bill as to these mortgages being void and of no effect as against plaintiff, fop the reason that their record did not give constructive notice to the trustee or subsequent creditors on account of the acknowledgments having been taken before officers of the defendant banks. This contention is not well taken. But one of the instruments was executed before an officer of any of the banks, and such officer was not a stockholder or personally interested in the transaction. The acknowledgment of an instrument running to a corporation before an officer of such corporation does not invalidate the acknowledgment, unless such officer is a stockholder or otherwise personally interested in the transaction. Bardsley v. German American Bank, 113 Iowa, 216, 84 N. W. 1041; Bartlett v. [789]*789Bolte, 193 Iowa, 1063, 188 N. W. 814. I therefore find these instruments legally acknowledged and their record sufficient under the recording act of Iowa. The pleadings raise the further question indirectly of the mental competency of the bankrupt’s wife to execute the instruments of May 2d, but no evidence is offered tending to support such contention, nor is there any finding of the special master thereon or exception to the absence of such finding. For the purposes of further discussion I therefore assume the entire validity of the mortgages of May 2d.

The second proposition, and the only other question involving the mortgages of May 2d, is: Were they merged in .the instruments of July 18th? The plaintiff contends for such merger, for the apparent purpose of annihilating these instruments and thus leaving the security carried therein to be supported only by the instruments of July 18th. As to whether these instruments merge with the instruments of July 18th is a question of the intent of the parties concerned, as disclosed both by the subsequent instruments, the interests of the parties, their acts, and other surrounding circumstances. It appears very clearly, from the master’s findings and from the testimony, that the transaction of July 18th was not one of the defendants’ seeking. The bankrupt and his wife having mortgaged their homestead, upon subsequent consideration and consultation with their attorney, determined to undo that part of the transaction of May 2d if possible. They approached the defendants, and after much controversy proposed a substitution of security for the homestead. The proposition did not appeal to the defendants. The bankrupt, through his attorney, resorted to so-called "'‘argument,” which involved threats and pressure little short of absolute duress. It was clearly intimated that bankrupt would raise the question of his wife’s mental and physical capacity to execute the instruments of May 2d. There were, apparently, threats of immediate resort to bankruptcy, and there at least confronted the defendants the prospect of protracted and expensive litigation. Considerations of sympathy and humanity were not overlooked, and finally the arrangement of July 18th was agreed to.

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Bluebook (online)
292 F. 782, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gustlin-v-whitham-ohnd-1923.