Krippendorf v. Hyde

28 F. 788, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2362
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana
DecidedOctober 4, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 28 F. 788 (Krippendorf v. Hyde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krippendorf v. Hyde, 28 F. 788, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2362 (circtdin 1886).

Opinion

Woods, J.

The chief question here is whether or not Krippon-dorf’s purchase of certain goods of Prey & Maag was made in good faith on his part. He claims to have taken the goods in payment of demands to the amount of $22,000 which he held against Frey & Magg for moneys loaned and other considerations. The goods consisted of two stocks of shoes, — one at Indianapolis and the other at Chicago. At or near the time when these were delivered to Krippendorf a third stock, at Fort Wayne, was turned over to a Mrs. Ghaso, in discharge of an indebtedness of Frey & Maag to her, and Maag also conveyed away certain real estate, neither lie nor Frey retaining any property subject to execution. The respondents at once instituted a suit in attachment in this court against Frey & Maag, and caused the goods at Indianapolis to be seized, the alleged cause for attachment being that tne defendants had disposed of their property with intent to defraud their creditors. On the final hearing the attachment was sustained, and the goods ordered to be sold to satisfy the demands of the plaintiffs, (respondents here,) amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $21,947.60. In order to retain possession of the goods ponding the attachment suit, Krippendorf gave the statutory delivery bond, and, after the determination of the suit, in lieu of the goods, brought the appraised value thereof into court, and filed a petition or ancillary bill, (see Krippendorf v. Hyde, 110 U. S. 276; S. C. 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 27,) claiming the money as his own, on the ground that he had bought the goods for value, and without notice of the fraudulent intent of Frey & Maag. This claim the master has sustained, and, in addition, has reported that the respondents were themselves censurable for having given credit to Frey & Maag.

A careful study of the evidence has led me to the conclusion that this report ought not to he confirmed.

I do not deem ii necessary to consider whother or not the judgment in the principal on so establishes, for the purposes of this procedure, the fraudulent intent of Frey & Maag; because if it be conceded that, as against .Krippendorf, it is now essential to the case of the respondents that, .in addition to the general charge of fraudulent intent contained in the affidavit for attachment, the sale to Krippendorf should be shown to have been fraudulent on their part, the evidence leaves no room for doubt of the fact, and, with hardly less certainly, in my judgment, excludes every reasonable pretense that Krippendorf purchased in good faith,, and in ignorance of the fraud of the sellers.

The evidence discloses many circumstances, the details of which need not he stated here, which excite grave suspicion of the truth of the transactions between Froy & Maag, and between them and .Krip-pendorf, as explained by them and by him; but if it be conceded, as asserted, that, in 1881, Krippendorf gave Maag credit for $4,800 worth of shoes, sold for the use of Frey; and that he indorsed for Frey, first in the sum of $2,000, and, again, for $5,000, and after-[790]*790wards assumed and paid both debts, and that, about the first of September, Maag went into partnership with Frey in the tobacco business at Cincinnati, (a business which, having continually absorbed large sums, had yielded no returns, and by April, 1882, had been practically abandoned as worthless;) and that in January, 1882, Maag admitted Frey into the shoe business at Indianapolis, (giving him an equal interest in property worth six or eight thousand dollars,for which, if their testimony is to be credited, Frey paid and promised to pay nothing;) and if it be further granted that these separate individual liabilities (Frey’s for $7,000 and Maag’s for $4,300) were assumed by the firm upon such an agreement and consideration as made them partnership obligations as against any who thereafter should give credit to the firm in the due course of business, — it remains true— indeed, the facts assumed make it true — that Frey & Maag, in the beginning, not to mention their tobacco liabilities, of which Krippen-dorf could hardly have been entirely ignorant, were indebted to Krip-pendorf alone in a sum greater by three or four thousand dollars than the value of all they owned, both in partnership and individually, and in this situation were proposing to push, or, as Krippen-dorf has expressed it, “to boom,” a scheme of business which, by the very terms of the agreement for starting it, was made insolvent, and unworthy of that commercial credit which was essential to its prosecution. It is therefore not to be supposed that Frey & Maag, or Krip-pendorf, believed it reasonably possible for them to conduct their enterprise upon a considerable scale with advantage, to themselves, or with safety to him, as their “confidential creditor,” without a strong probability — they could not well have deemed it less than a certainty — of inflicting losses upon others of whom they should obtain credit.

It was in this condition of their affairs, the essential facts of which, it cannot be doubted, he well understood, that, instead of demanding security for or payment of the large amount already due him, and instead of supplying them with goods of his own firm’s manufacture, Krippendorf, besides indorsing for $3,000 at Chicago, consented to advance to Frey & Maag such sums of money as they should need between April and September, 1882; they promising that the proceeds of sales meantime should be paid to him, and that, if they became embarrassed, they would pay him in preference to other creditors. In his last examination Krippendorf denies any recollection of this promise for a preference, though by his testimony in the attachment case he seems to have admitted the fact. But whatever the primary understanding between them was, it is claimed that loans were made prior to September 20th, when the sale of goods in question took place, to the amount of $13,500 or more, and in excess of repayments to the amount of $11,000; making his entire demand at that time, aside from the Chicago indorsement, about $22,000, in payment of which the goods in the stores at. [791]*791Indianapolis and Chicago wore sold and turned over to him. It is to be noted that no appraisement was had, and that, without seeing the goods, Krippendorf agreed, upon the statements of Frey & Maag, to take them in full discharge of his demand. It appears, too, that these loans of money were made in most instances, if not always, by cheek or draft, sent by mail from Cincinnati, where .Krip-pendorf resided, to Indianapolis; and it is shown that notes, checks, and drafts were frequently sent in that way by him to thorn, and by them to hi'm, during the period or the transactions in question; and yet not a letter or line of correspondence, though called for, is in evidence. Krippendorf’s testimony is that there was'no correspondence; his explanation being that none was necessary, because of Frey’s frequent visits to him at Cincinnati. Maag, I believe, says he did not preserve letters.

It is impossible to believe that all these checks and drafts, covering large sums of money, wont by mail, unaccompanied by any communication or statement which, if produced, would show the real character and purpose of the several transactions; and for this and other reasons there must arise doubts on tho subject of which the respondents may fairly claim the benefit.

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Related

Krippendorf v. Hyde
110 U.S. 276 (Supreme Court, 1884)

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Bluebook (online)
28 F. 788, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krippendorf-v-hyde-circtdin-1886.