Koenig v. Oswald

82 F.2d 85, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 2904
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 14, 1936
DocketNo. 10341
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 82 F.2d 85 (Koenig v. Oswald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koenig v. Oswald, 82 F.2d 85, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 2904 (8th Cir. 1936).

Opinion

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

This suit was in the nature of a creditor’s bill brought under section 3117, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1929 (Mo.St.Ann. § 3117, p. 1946) by the receiver of the Boonville National Bank against Frank C. Oswald and his son Estil F. Oswald to set aside conveyances of lands made by the father to the son and to subject the lands to .the lien of an unsatisfied judgment obtained by the receiver against the father. There was federal jurisdiction because the suit was a step in winding up the affairs of the national banking association. 28 U.S.C.A. § 41(1); Hanna v. Consolidated School Dist. No. 1 of Henry County, Mo. (C.C.A.) 78 F.(2d) 374; Citizens’ Nat. Bank in Waxahachie v. Citizens’ Nat. Bank (D.C.) 9 F.Supp. 513. The trial of the case resulted in a decree for the defendants, and the receiver h’as appealed.

It appears that Mr. Frank C. Oswald, who. was sixty-six years old at the time of the trial in August, 1934, was reared on a farm in Cooper county, Mo., near Boonville, and had carried on stock farming there all his life. He had accumulated over 800 acres of farm land in the county, all free and clear of encumbrances and had a home place in Boonville also unencumbered, about 35 acres in extent. He “bought and sold live stock and kept the animals on his farms to graze and to feed” and he also bred and raised some livestock. His family included his wife and three sons and two daughters. His oldest son, Estil, wprked with his father in the business described, and lived upon one of his father’s farms known and referred to as the Lamine farm. It was a farm of 340 acres that Mr. Frank Oswald had bought in 1901 for $17,000, and upon which he spent upwards of $10,000 for buildings and improvements to builings in the years 1923 and 1924. The next son, Herman, lived at his father’s home in Boonville and also assisted in his father’s business. Neither of the young men assumed to be in business for himself but all of the real property stood of record in the father’s name and all the livestock was purchased and sold in his name. The only bank account for the business was the .account which the father had at the Boonville National Bank. All of the receipts from the farming and livestock business were deposited in that account and all .disbursements were checked out of it — both the young men being authorized to sign their father’s name for that purpose.

Mr. Frank Oswald had a high standing in the community and good credit at the bank. He held himself out to be the absolute -owner of the farm lands and of the livestock and equipment on them. He had never given any intimation to the bank or any of its officers that he owed either of his sons any money on any account. On the contrary, the property statements on his behalf for credit with the bank represent that he was not indebted. The statement concerning the value of his lands was that they were worth about $75 an acre in December of 1930, and December of 1931, and the value put on his home place in Boonville at the same time was $25,000. One of his brothers was a director of the bank and he was himself a stockholder and the bank had for years extended him credit on his own note and without collateral. He borrowed money constantly from the Boonville bank for running the farms and the livestock business and became indebted to the bank to the bank’s full limit .for a single customer and remained heavily indebted up to the time of the bank’s failure. He says that “while Estil was with me he made all sorts of money while times was good when he first started out, but the last, since 1929 and 1930 we all lost money on the farm. I expect our business amounted to nine or ten thousand dollars a month, buying and shipping stock and one thing and another.”

The bank failed in June, 1932, and from then on Mr. Frank Oswald was pressed for payment of the indebtedness and at first honestly endeavored to comply. He says, “I shipped all the live stock I could spare,” “shipped what I had,” and “paid closer than I should have,” and at the same time he and his sons tried to raise money by mortgage on his real estate. He sent his sons to different places to try to raise funds to pay the bank — to the bank in St. Louis where he had on occasion deposited the proceeds of cattle shipments and to a _ man in the real estate business in Boonville and to others. “I told them (the sons) that I would mortgage every thing I had to raise the money. I spent from the time the bank closed until December undertaking to raise the money. I could not borrow it.” The next year, on June, 1, 1933, the receiver of the. [87]*87bank recovered judgment against him on his past-due indebtedness in the sum of $22,316.53, no part of which has been paid, notwithstanding execution duly issued and returned unsatisfied, and nothing can be collected unless the lands he has conveyed to his son Estil are subjected to the lien of the judgment.

It appears that after the failure of the bank and while the father and his two sons were so honestly striving to raise money to pay the bank’s debt the son Herman came in contact with a lawyer in Fayette, Mo., who informed him that under the law of Missouri an insolvent debtor had the right to prefer creditors. There was a family conference of the father and sous and the two brothers of Mr. Frank Oswald at which Herman explained what he had heard from the lawyer and it was decided that Mr. Frank Oswald would transfer all his property, real and personal, to his brothers and his sons. Estil says that was the first time he heard of the plan of conveying the real estate to him, and testifies: “At that family conference Herman said he had told Mr. Spry (the Fayette lawyer) and he said that papa would prefer his creditors as far as 'his money would go and he saw that he could not pay the bank and pay us too, and he said that if that was the law he preferred to pay us.” Mr. Frank Oswald’s youngest son, Henry Oswald, was probably present at the family conference. He was living at his father’s home, but was not a stock farmer like Estil or Herman. He had worked a while in Chicago and was an accountant. After the family conference referred to, he says that his two brothers and his father and two uncles and his stepmother “went with me” to the lawyer’s office in Fayette. He went to help in making the transfers. Estil says: “He (Henry) had had more experience in things of that sort than we had ever had, Herman and I.”

So assisted by the son Plenry and the lawyer, Mr. Frank Oswald deeded two of his farms to his brothers, two parcels of land to his son Herman and all the remainder of his property, including the Lamine farm and all of the personal property thereon and the home property in Boonville, to his oldest son, Estil. The consideration recited in the transfers to Estil was $8,500 for the Lamine farm, $9,861.-06 for the home property in Boonville, and $2,930 for the personal property.

As soon as the transfers were made, the father returned to his home and continued to live there with his family as he had before. He testified, “I am still living in the same property that I was living in when the deeds were made. I think he said we could live there, that it was the understanding I should have a home there. Estil said that.” Such was apparently his unstudied first answer to questions. He made what he did conform to what he says they intended to do. Later in his testimony he qualified this by saying, “I don’t think there was any sort of an understanding that 1 would be taken care of before the deeds were made out. I am sure of that. I am just so certain that I could almost swear to it that before there was nothing said.” “But you could not quite swear to it?” “Yes, I will.

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Bluebook (online)
82 F.2d 85, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 2904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koenig-v-oswald-ca8-1936.