Hayes Green & Co. v. Moore

5 Ohio N.P. 220
CourtClark County Probate Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. 220 (Hayes Green & Co. v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Clark County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes Green & Co. v. Moore, 5 Ohio N.P. 220 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

ROCKEL, J.

The evidence in this ease fails to disclose any property in the possession of the defendant to which he claims ownership, or any property in the possession of others belonging to him,but what the person in possession claims ownership.

The evidence however, does disclose the fact that after the indebtedness of the plaintiff was incurred, that the defendant took out stock in various corporations in the name of his daughters, and that for a nominal consideration he sold some of his property to other persons. The question therefore is, whether the-evidence adduced is sufficient to warrant the appointment of a receiver to recover the property thus claimed to have been fraudulently transferred,and convert the same into money and apply it to the satisfaction of the plaintiff’s judgment.

Judge Okey, in White v. Gates, 42 Ohio St., 112, lays down the law very succinctly to govern this kind of a proceeding when he says: “And the claim of Mrs. White, that the money was a valid gift from her husband, was one which she was entitled to have tried, in regular form,by a court, of equity,clothed with authority to hear and determine as. to the rights of the respective parties, and to enforce the decree in the manner usual in such courts. The proceeding in the Probate Court was not such suiti or a substitute for it, but a proceeding in rem,designed to appropriate the property of the judgment debtor in the hands of a third’ person, to the payment of the judgment, where the person having possession of the property asserts no claim to it,and voluntarily assents to such appropriation. -

And while the judge may order the-person having the property, to deliver the same to a receiver,although the person so having possession claims to own it,the judge has no power to enforce the order ás contempt, however plain it may seem to him that such claim of ownership is wholly unfounded; but the receiver must resort to the ordinary remedy by action. In so holding, we are supported by Union Bank v. Union Bank, 6 Ohio St., 254; Edgarton v. Hanna, 11 Ohio St., 323.

This court therefore having no right to enforce any order except by action at law, that might be made herein upon persons claiming; property in their possession, and having no power to adjudicate-upon the rights existing therein between them and the defendant,D. E. Moore,the-[221]*221question presents itself whether the evidence adduced in this court, in order to warrant the appointment of a receiver in such cases, must he such that if presented to a court of competent jurisdiction having power to adjudicate and determine the rights in and to the property existing between the said D. E. Moore, defendant, and his said daughters to others, would warrant such court of competent jurisdition in finding that such property was fraudulently transferred, and rightfully as to these creditors belonging to the defendant: Or whether it would be sufficient if the evidence showed a strong possibility that such transactions were fraudulent.

It seems to me that a strong probability will he sufficient. Of course, the order ought not be lightly made. The court ought to believe that if the receiver would pursue the persons claiming the property, in a court of competent jurisdiction, that there would be a strong probability that he would recover something which could he applied on the plaintiff’s judgment.

The plaintiffs in such cases having established the justness of their claim in a court of justice, ought to be enabled, through the receiver, to recover any property of the defendant, and apply the same to the satisfaction of their claim.

Such would seem to be the true spirit and just design of the statute under which these proceedings are brought. Is the evidence, then, in this case sufficient to warrant the appointment of a receiver?

In the latter part of January, 1891, the plaintiffs and defendants were in partnership in the fruit commission business in Springfield, Ohio. They dissolved partnership in January of that year, to take effect on the 9th of the following February.

The plaintiffs received, among some other things, as a part consideration for their interest, the defendant’s notes for some six hundred dollars, one hundred of which, being the first note due in 90 days after it was made, was paid. Some of the remainder of these notes were not paid, and constitute the foundation for the judgment in this cause.

Among other things the plaintiffs transferred to defendant, D. E. Moore, when the partnership was finally dissolved on February 9, 1892, was $1,000.00 of stock in the East Tennessee Land Company.

D. E. Moore continued in business unT til June, about four months, when he quit, $1,500.00 in debt. He says he lost the money, hut in what particular way' the evidence does not disclose.

Within a month after Moore bought out the plaintiff, he surrendered this stock of the East Tennessee Land Company and had it re-issued one-half, to-wit: $500.00 to each of his daughters, Tillie and Dora.

Moore testifies as follows, in reference to this transfer: “Q. What was done with that stock in the East Tennessee Land Company A. I let my daughters have it. Q. Now, then, what do you mean by that “I let my daughters have it? What do you mean by that, did you give it to them? A. Yes, sir. Q. What daughters did you give it too? A. To Tillie and Dora.”

It appears on cross-examination of the defendants and the daughter,made eight days, afterwards, that this stock was given to the daughters to pay them for work done at their home.

Transfers of this kind between members of the family are always closely scrutinized. It may be true that the transaction was all fair and just, hut it is suspicious.

According to their own testimony, no express contract was ever entered into as to how much per day, week or year, they were to have for such services — no account was ever made or kept by them against their father. They were still at home, as they always had been, receiving its advantages and comforts.

Tillie still has her stock; Dora, when her father asked her for her’s, without any consideration or security for its return, gave it to him, and he pledged it to secure a debt due on some fixtures he was using in his business; this adds more suspicion.

We next find that at about the middle of May, following, the defendant purchases $1,000.00 worth of stock in the Pine City Lumber Company, of Georgia. This stock is also taken out in the name of his daughter, Dora. It was paid for largely, as Mr. Painter testifies, by Mi. Moore in produce from his commission house. There is nothing in evidence to show that Dora ever paid anything for this, or that she has any claim on it other than as amere gift to her. A little while after this,we find that Moore sells the horses, wagons, etc., used in the business,and worth perhaps 8400 and $500, for one dollar, to one Bubsam, upon the understanding that Bubsam was to give them back to Moore whenever he,Moore, wanted them.

This was the boldest kind of a fraudulent transaction, and one deserving the severest censure from a court of justice. It is sufficient in itself to cast a cloud of suspicion over all the transactions of the defendant in the disposal of his property.

At the very time he thus transferred this stock to Bubsam,he knew he owed this plaintiff $500.00, with not a dollar’s worth of property remaining in his hands to pay it.

When Moore first was called in court in this ease, Bubsam still had these horses.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-green-co-v-moore-ohprobctclark-1898.