Hoffman v. Kiefer

19 Ohio C.C. 401
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedOctober 15, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio C.C. 401 (Hoffman v. Kiefer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoffman v. Kiefer, 19 Ohio C.C. 401 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Parker, J.

George W. Hoffman filed his petition in the court of common pleas against Lottie A. Kiefer, and afterwards an amended petition- — and the question here is upon the amended petition — setting forth that she was the wife of one Charles Kiefer; that Charles Kiefer was deceased; that in his lifetime he became indebted to the plaintiff fox a certain amount stated in the petition, and that he had purchased certain real estate, paid for it with his own money and funds, but caused the same to be conveyed to his wife; and the plaintiff seeks to have a trust declared, i. e. holding - that the wife is trustee for the benefit of himself and all other of the creditors of the deceased. He also sets forth in the petition that in his lifetime Kiefer paid insurance premiums on life insurance in f'avor of his wife, and he ¡seeks to reach these insurance premiums, claiming that the payment thereof under the circumstances of Kiefer at that ■.time, was fraudulent as to creditors.

To this amended petition a demurrer was filed and sustained by the court below, and the plaintiff, not desiring to plead farther, a judgment was entered dismissing his petition, and upon that judgment he prosecutes error here. 'The ground of the holding of the court below, (as agreed 'by counsel), was that such an action might not be prosec¡uted by a creditor of the deceased; that to obtain a setting ¡aside of this conveyance, or to have this trust declared, or ¡to reach these premiums, an action, must be brought by an .administrator, under section 6139 of the Revised Statutes.

It is cle'ar that under that section an administrator may, -on behalf of the creditors, prosecute such an action, if it appears that without this property he would not have suffi-cient assets to discharge the indebtedness of the intestate — - in other words, that the estate is insolvent.

On behalf of defendant in error, it is insisted that that is 'an exclusive remedy; and that seems to have been the view of the court below. Counsel for defendant in error seem to rely chiefly upon two cases decided by our supreme court: one, being the case of Bustard v. Dabney, Adm’r et al., 4 Ohio Reports, 68. But we do not find that that case is at all in point. The action there was not to set aside a fraudulent conveyance; it was not for the purpose [403]*403of reaching asséts which were hidden, so that they might be administered for the benefit of creditors; but it was a bill in equity by a creditor to subject real estate the title to which was in the decedent at the time of his decease, which had descended to his heirs — so that there was no fraudulent conveyance, or any occasion for setting aside a conveyance or of having a trust declared. By the simple and ordinary process provided by the statute, this land could have been reached and sold and the proceeds administered by and through an administrator; and the court held, as we think very properly, that under such circumstances that course must be pursued, and that it i§ not permissible for a creditor, by a proceeding in equity in, effect to have the estate administered, taking the matter out of the hands of the administrator and out of the hands of the probate court. The other case is Davis v. Corwine et al. 25 Ohio St., 668, which was an action by heirs to recover specific personal property, or the value of it, and not to set aside any fraudulent conveyance; and we think the court very properly held that such an action could not be prosecuted in the name of or by the heirs; that the title to this personalty went to the representative of the deceased, for . the benefit of creditors first and the heirs afterwards.

Now, we find that this remedy through the administrator is under and by virtue of the statute. We have not traced this statute back any farther than 1840. Whether there was a statute in the state upon this subject, or giving this form of remedy, previous to that date, I am not prepared to say. Before the statute confered this authority upon the administrator, the only means of reaching such assets or property of the decedent was by an action by a •creditor or creditors — such an action as the plaintiff in error has undertaken to prosecute here. So that the question is not settled when we find that the remedy is given by the statute to the administrator; the question still remains: Is that the exclusive reme'dy? That the administrator could not have proceeded in this way, except by virtue of the statute conferring the power, is decided in Benjamin v. LeBaron’s Adm’r., 15 Ohio Rep. 517, and at page 526; in that decision there is a very plain intimation by the court that the creditor might sue. The right of the administra[404]*404tor to sue in that case was found not to exist, because the statute was not broad enough to reach the case. One of the arguments made, giving the reason why the administrator should be allowed to prosecute was, that unless it were permitted the creditor would be without remedy. The court says, it will be time enough to raise that question when it comes to it, but intimate very strongly that the remedy could be found by a creditor in a court of equity.

To the same effect is the case of McCall, Adm’r. v. Pixley, 48 Ohio St. 379, in the course of the decision of which the court says that the statute “advances” the remedy of the creditor. There is no intimation in any of these cases that the statute gives the exclusive remedy, or takes from the creditor the remedy theretofore existing, The law generally upon this subject is stated in Wait on Fraudulent Conveyances, at §§112, 113. I read a part of section 113:

“Ordinarily an executor or administrator will not be allowed to impeach the fraudulent conveyance of his testator or intestate. Like the heirs, he is bound by the acts of the deceased. ‘As a party to a fraudulent conveyance cannot allege its illegality, with a view to its avoidance, so neither can his heirs nor representatives, coming in as volunteers, and standing, as it were, in his shoes.’ Statutory changes, supported by the tendency of the courts to prevent the confusion incident to splitting up the administration of estates between creditors and personal representatives, have led to the general establishment of the practice of permitting and imposing the duty upon executors and administrators to sue for property fraudulently alienated' by the deceased in his lifetime. Thus, in New York, executors and administrators, who could not formerly impeach the conveyances of the deceased on the ground of fraud against creditors, are now enabled to do so by statute. This remedy,, however, is not exclusive.
“The personal representative may render himself individually liable to creditors for a failure to recover property fraudulently alienated by the testator or intestate, and he should include such property in the inventory, unless, of' course, he has no knowledge-of it. The personal representative, as he stands for the creditors when so acting,can only [405]*405attack fraudulent transfers in cases where the estate is insolvent, and with a view to recover a sum sufficient to satisfy the creditors. ”

This was distinctly held in the case of McCall v. Pixley, 48 Ohio St., 379.

The remedy of the administrator is not as broad or complete, or extensive as that of the creditor.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio C.C. 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-kiefer-ohiocirct-1899.