Harmon v. Perry

175 A. 310, 133 Me. 186, 1934 Me. LEXIS 70
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 9, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 175 A. 310 (Harmon v. Perry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harmon v. Perry, 175 A. 310, 133 Me. 186, 1934 Me. LEXIS 70 (Me. 1934).

Opinion

Sturgis, J.

This is a bill in equity in which the Trustees of the bankrupt estate of Albert G. Perry of Wells in the County of York and State of Maine seeks to set aside certain conveyances alleged to have been made with the intent to hinder, delay or defraud his creditors and prevent the properties from being distributed under the Bankruptcy Laws of the United States.

It is alleged and admitted that on October 11, 1928, Albert G. Perry transferred and conveyed to his son, Elwin E. Perry, a defendant in this action, a parcel of land in Wells, containing about three’acres and subject to a mortgage to the Sanford National Bank of Sanford, Maine. On November 1,1928, he conveyed to his wife, the defendant Annie M. Perry, his homestead also situated in Wells and subject to a mortgage to one Fred H. Bridges. He owned no other property of any substantial value at that time.

It is further alleged that, when the bankrupt made these conveyances, he was insolvent, contemplated bankruptcy and intended to defraud his creditors, as his grantees then had reasonable cause to believe. It is denied that either Annie M. Perry or Elwin E. Perry were bona fide purchasers for value or that the holders of the titles to the equities of redemption in the properties are bona fide holders for value.

On November 7,1930, Albert G. Perry was adjudicated a bankrupt in the United States District Court for the Southern District [189]*189of Maine, and this complainant, as Trustee of his estate, instituted this proceeding. The defendants, in their several answers, deny the charges made against them. The sitting Justice hearing the cause sustained the bill and ordered the defendants to convey their interests in the properties in controversy to a master appointed to make a sale, pay the outstanding mortgages and turn the proceeds over for distribution among the bankrupt’s creditors. The case comes forward on appeal.

The Trustee brings this action under U. S. Statute 1898, Chap. 541, Sec. 70 e, U. S. C. A. Title 11. That clause of the Bankruptcy Act gives the Trustee authority to avoid any fraudulent transfers of his property by the bankrupt “which any creditor of such bankrupt might have avoided,” but whether a particular transfer is or is not fraudulent as to creditors depends not upon the Bankruptcy Act, but upon the laws of the state where the transfers are made. Woodman v. Butterfield, 116 Me., 241, 101 A., 25; Holbrook v. International Trust Co., 220 Mass., 151, 154, 107 N. E., 665; Small v. Gilbert, 56 Fed. (2d), 616.

The burden of proving that the conveyances in question were fraudulent is upon the complainant. Fraud is never presumed. It must be always established by clear, full and convincing proof. Grant v. Ward, 64 Me., 239; Frost v. Walls, 93 Me., 405, 45 A., 287; Small v. Gilbert, supra. The charge of fraud is a serious one, and it is well settled that to sustain an allegation of fraud there must be more than surmise, suspicion or conjecture, which are not substitutes for proof. Bartlett v. Blake, 37 Me., 124, 127; Minott v. Johnson, 120 Me., 287, 113 A., 464, 465; Adams v. Ketchum, 129 Me., 212, 151 A., 146; Thibodeau v. Langlais, 131 Me., 132, 159 A., 720.

In support of his essential allegations, the complainant called the bankrupt and his wife, the defendant Annie M. Perry, and made them his witnesses. They testified that the conveyances in question were made in good faith, for valid and adequate considerations, and at a time when bankruptcy was not contemplated. There is no convincing evidence to the contrary. The defendant, Elwin E. Perry, testifying for the defense, denied that either his transactions with his -father, Albert G. Perry, or his subsequent dealings with his mother, Annie M. Perry were fraudulent, and the few disinterested [190]*190witnesses who testified had no direct knowledge of the facts and circumstances attending the conveyances. Under the general rule, the complainant, in making the parties to the transactions his witnesses, is bound by their statements, except as they are contradicted by credible evidence of probative value. Kirby v. Canal Co., 46 N. Y. S., 777; Voorhees v. Unger, 135 N. Y. S., 113, 115; Dunmore v. Padden, 262 Pa., 436, 105 A., 559; Entwisle v. Seidt, 115 Fed., 864.

Albert G. Perry formerly operated a garage with his brother in Boston. Sometime prior to 1919, he came to Kingfield, Maine, and went into the lumbering business. In 1919-20, he was a foreman on a logging job in Amherst, Nova Scotia. In 1921, he ran a store in Newport, Maine, and in 1922 came back to Wells and bought a farm from one Fred Bridges, paying $6500 for it subject to a mortgage for $4500 which he assumed. This Bridges farm was his homestead and is the property which, after he had sold off two lots to one Souther, he conveyed to his wife on November 1, 1928, as here alleged. Mr. Perry later bought a piece of woodland from Arthur Littlefield, a house from Fred Pinkham and a parcel of land with the buildings'thereon known as the Susan Jacobs place. He disposed of the Pinkham and Littlefield lots and sold off part of the Jacobs lot with the buildings on it. Sometime in 1927, Mr. Perry sold his brother his interest in the garage in Boston and received $10,000 for it. This he used, as he says, to reduce his mortgages and pay for or improve other properties he had previously acquired.

It does not appear to be necessary to go into the details of his other business ventures. He traded in real estate somewhat extensively and, as a side issue, carried on a grain business. He operated at a loss and finally in 1928, had used up his money and owned no property of any value except his homestead and a part of the Jacobs lot, so-called. He admits that at the time he could not pay his debts on demand or in the usual course of business, but shows that he was not heavily in debt and was not being pressed by his creditors. Except for a note for $800 due his uncle, Edward S. Larrabee, who is the largest unsecured creditor proving his claim in the pending bankruptcy proceedings, he has since paid practically all his then outstanding bills. According to Schedule A-3-4 [191]*191of his petition in bankruptcy, his unsecured indebtedness, outside the Larrabee note and a few small items, amounts to about $700, which has been contracted since he conveyed these properties.

The first transfer to be considered is that made to the defendant, Elwin E. Perry. He testifies without contradiction that on August 3, 1926, his father agreed to sell him what remained of the Susan Jacobs property, which was then vacant land, for $1,000, and he paid the purchase price with money borrowed from one Fred Pink-ham on his note indorsed by his father. He then built overnight camps with money he was earning and $1,000 which he borrowed from the Sanford National Bank on a mortgage which his father, who still held title to the property, gave in the first instance, and he later assumed. Albert G. Perry, the father, confirms this statement and denies that he had any title or ownership in the camps built upon the Jacobs lot. They both testify that, when on October 11, 1928, Mr. Perry conveyed this property, his son had already paid the full value of the land and built and paid for the buildings on it. The son denies that he knew that his father was in financial difficulties or that his purchase was in any way tainted with fraud.

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Bluebook (online)
175 A. 310, 133 Me. 186, 1934 Me. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harmon-v-perry-me-1934.