John T. Hardie's Sons & Co. v. Scheen

34 So. 707, 110 La. 612, 1903 La. LEXIS 684
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 16, 1903
DocketNo. 14,440
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 34 So. 707 (John T. Hardie's Sons & Co. v. Scheen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John T. Hardie's Sons & Co. v. Scheen, 34 So. 707, 110 La. 612, 1903 La. LEXIS 684 (La. 1903).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

In April, 1898, Louis E. Sebeen, who was carrying on a commercial [614]*614business at Coushatta, La., failed. A number of suits were filed against him by his creditors. Some were attachment suits. Others were revocatory actions directed against .sales and mortgages alleged to have been in fraud of creditors. Among these creditors were the plaintiffs in the present suit, John T. Hardie’s Sons & Co., commission merchants in the city of New Orleans. They put in the hands of local attorneys for suit two •claims, one for $3,416.67, and one for $8,-497.62, both standing on open account. Before suit could be filed on these claims, an understanding was come to between the attorneys of Hardie’s Sons & Co. and of the •debtor, Scheen, by which the former were to be paid in full their claim, one-third at once, and the remainder by means of two notes of equal amount, falling due in one and two years, respectively, and security was to be given for the deferred payments. Later, however, the attorneys of Scheen concluded that it would be better that Hardie’s Sons & Co. should institute attachment and revocatory suits similar to those which had been filed by the other creditors, in order that their claims might share in the fruits ■of the revocatory actions in ease these actions proved successful. At the time Hardie’s Sons & Co. filed these suits, which were approximately for $12,000, they had on hand for the debtor, L. E. Scheen, a large quantity of cotton, which, when sold, would go towards payment of the debt for which suit was filed. There is some evidence that the filing of the suits had the further purpose in view of creating the impression that Scheen’s indebtedness was larger than it in realty was; thereby to induce the other creditors to grant more favorable terms in a compromise, or settlement at a reduced figure, which was to be proposed to them. But the testimony does not show positively that the attorneys of Hardie’s Sons were parties to this further or ulterior purpose. Pending the ■suits the attorneys of Scheen made a list or .schedule of the creditors of Scheen, and of the amounts due them, and prepared, also, a written instrument of compromise, by which the creditors were made to agree to accept 33% cents on the dollar in full of their claims. At the head of this list they ■put Hardie’s Sons & Co. They put them ■down for the amount claimed in the suits, although the cotton had in the meantime been sold, and the debt reduced to $3,385.32. Hardie’s Sons & Co. signed the instrument of compromise for this inflated claim of $12,000, and thereafter Scheen settled with his creditors on a reduced basis, some creditors signing the compromise, and others settling without signing, and still others exacting 50 per cent.; but all of them knowing of the compromise, and the majority, if.not all, being influenced by the fact that Hardie’s Sons & Co., who appeared on the schedule for more than one-half of the entire indebtedness, had signed. The instrument of compromise was thus signed by Hardie’s Sons & Co. in October or November, 1898. In the spring following, Scheen made the cash payment to Hardie’s Sons & Co. according to agreement, and delivered to them as collateral security a policy of insurance on the life of one Teer. Later, in July, 1899, he executed his two notes for the deferred payments, each for $1,128.44. At the maturity of the first of these notes, Hardie’s Sons & Co. instituted the present suit.

Originally the only demand of the suit was for $1,128.44 and interest, alleged to be due on one of the notes, and for $102.20, alleged to be due for a premium paid on the pledged life insurance policy. To this demand the defendant answered by a general denial, and by an allegation that the policy, of insurance had been delivered to the plaintiffs in full payment of the notes. This answer was filed in April, 1900. In October following, the plaintiffs filed a supplemental petition, instituting a revocatory action aimed at the same mortgage which had been attacked in the suits of April, 1898, and also against a conveyance which L. E. Scheen had made of the mortgaged property after he had compromised with all his creditors. To this revocatory action the defendants therein, Lisso & Bros, and Mrs. M. A. Scheen, answered, alleging the good faith of the assailed transactions, and alleging further that the plaintiffs were estopped from contesting same, because part of the money derived from same had gone to them in the cash payment made to them by their debtor, L. E. Scheen; also that the plaintiffs had not been injured by these transactions, their debt being secured by the life-insurance policy. Before the case came to trial, all the., defendants [616]*616joined In filing a peremptory exception based on the fact of Hardie’s Sons & Oo. having signed the instrument of compromise, agreeing to accept 33% cents on the dollar in full of their claim.

The district court sustained this peremptory exception, and dismissed the suit. The Court of Appeal reversed the judgment and remanded the case for further trial, and thereupon the present application for a writ of review of the judgment of the Court of Appeal followed.

That part of the suit involving the revocatory action has not yet been tried, nor the main demand on the merits. The only matter to be reviewed, therefore, is the point made by the peremptory exception.

The law on this subject is stated in Story on Eq. Juris, p. 370, par. 378, as follows:

“There are other cases of constructive frauds against creditors which the wholesome moral justice of the law has equally discredited and denounced. We refer to that not unfrequent class of cases in which, upon the failure or insolvency of their debtors, some creditors have by secret compositions obtained undue advantages, and thus dissuaded other innocent and unsuspicious creditors into signing deeds of composition which they supposed to be founded upon the basis of entire equality and reciprocity among all the creditors, when in fact there was a designed or actual impositioh upon all but the favored few. The purport of the composition or trust deed, in case of insolvency, usually is that the property of the debtor shall be assigned to trustees, and shall be collected and distributed by them among the creditors according to the order and terms prescribed in the deed itself. And in consideration of the assignment, the creditors, who become parties, generally agree to release all their debts, beyond what the funds will satisfy. Now, it is obvious that in all -transactions of this sort the utmost good faith is required, and the very circumstance that other creditors of known reputation and standing have already become parties to the deed will operate as a strong inducement to others to act in the same way. But if the signatures of such prior creditors have been procured by secret arrangements with them, more favorably to them than the general terms of the composition deed warranted, those creditors really act, as has been said by a very significant though homely figure, as decoy ducks upon the rest. They hold out. f alsecolors to draw in others to their loss or ruin.
“In modern times the doctrine has been acted upon in courts of law, as it has long been in courts of equity, that such secret arrangements are utterly void, and ought not to be enforced, even against the assenting debtor, or his sureties, or his friends.

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Bluebook (online)
34 So. 707, 110 La. 612, 1903 La. LEXIS 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-t-hardies-sons-co-v-scheen-la-1903.