Louisville Dry Goods Co. v. Lanman

121 S.W. 1042, 135 Ky. 163, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 276
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 26, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 121 S.W. 1042 (Louisville Dry Goods Co. v. Lanman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville Dry Goods Co. v. Lanman, 121 S.W. 1042, 135 Ky. 163, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 276 (Ky. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Opinion op the court by

Judge 0’Rear

Reversing.

J. "W. Lanman was a merchant doing business at Cornisbville, in Mercer county. The petition alleges: That the plaintiffs were wholesale merchants, and had sold him bills of merchandise from April to June, [166]*1661908, amounting to $473.82, and from June 23, 1908, to July 28, 1908, of $50.46; that on April 28,1908, the defendant Lanman, being then insolvent, and with the design to prefer some of his creditors to the exclusion of the others, executed a mortgage to the Union Bank of Cornishville, Ky., upon a storehouse and lot situated in Cornishville, “and the stock of merchandise now within or to be within said storeroom, consisting of dry goods, boots, shoes, notions, and whatever articles there may be therein, including furniture and fixtures,” to secure the bank in the sums of $1,-495.75 on a note due March 8, 1908, $1,323 on a note due June 4, 1908, and $148.42 overdraft then due the bank; that these debts were in existence prior to the execution of the mortgage, and were secured by a prior pledge of 30 shares of the stock of the bank as collateral; that one S. P. De Baun had since the filing of the suit been subrogated to the rights of the bank by an assignment of the mortgage to him by the bank; and that the mortgage was fraudulent, and.executed with the design to prefer the bank and De Baun. It is also alleged that De Baun was bound as surety on the original notes to the bank, and that the mortgage covers all the property of the mortgagee. The mortgage was acknowledged on April 28,1908, but was not recorded until July 28, 1908. This suit was begun by the filing of the petition and issual of summons on January 14, 1909. The summons was executed by personal service on Lanman, De Baun, and the Union Bank of Cornishville on January 16, 1909. On January 27, 1909, the day on which an appearance and answer were due, the defendants filed a joint answer which they term a “plea in bar,” stating that on January 25,1909, the defendant J. W. Lanman filed in the District Court of the United States for the Eastern [167]*167District of Kentucky Ms petition in bankruptcy, that said Lanman was thereupon on that day adjudged á bankrupt by said court, and that the affairs of the bankrupt had been referred by that court to its- referee in bankruptcy. Upon that showing they prayed to be dismissed. A demurrer was filed to the answer by the plaintiffs. The circuit court overruled the demurrer. The plaintiffs declined to plead further, and their petition was dismissed. The plaintiffs have prosecuted this appeal from the judgment.

We have concluded that the judgment is erroneous, when considered upon either of several grounds. The allegations of the petition in this case are not denied. They are confessed as true. It follows that J. W. Lanman was insolvent when he gave the mortgage, and inferentially, when he bought the goods for which he is sued in this case; that he designed by the mortgage to prefer the bank and De Baun to the exclusion in whole of his other creditors. What were the rights of-the plamtiffs when they filed this suit? Depending upon the whereabouts of the goods, they had a choice of four courses open to them: (1) To avoid the sales to Lanman, on the ground of his actual fraud in buying the goods without intention or means of paying -for them, but Mtending that they should the moment they came into his possession pass to his preferred creditor, the bank, or his favored surety at the bank, D'e Baun. This was such fraud as in law, at the election of the sellers, would have avoided the sale, and they could have regained their goods by detinue, or, what is- the same practice under . our Code, an action of claim and delivery; but perhaps the goods had been disposed of to innocent purchasers before the plaintiffs learned of the fraud. At any rate, it was at the election of the plaintiffs whether they pursued that [168]*168remedy, or (2) to proceed in an action at law to recover the value of the goods from the fraudulent vendee — not upon the contracts of sale, but upon the deceit practiced upon them. And (3) the plaintiffs might pursue the additional remedy afforded by the laws of this state to sequestrate the debtor’s property for the payment of his debts under the act of 1856 (Ky. St. Secs. 1910-1917), or (4) proceed against him in involuntary bankruptcy proceedings in the United States District Court. The last-named course would depend, for its efficacy, upon whether, at the time the plaintiff’s learned of the deceit and of the debtor’s transfer of his property, the United States court had the power, under the limitation of time prescribed by the act of Congress, to grant them full relief. These remedies are at the election of the creditors, the vendees. The plaintiffs elected to sue in the state court to pursue the second and third of the remedies outlined above. The question is: Does National Bankruptcy Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 544 (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3418), give the United States courts exclusive jurisdiction of the affairs and property of a voluntary bankrupt under the circumstances recited above? It is remarked that the existing act defines more clearly the demarcation of the jurisdictions of the federal and state courts, and shows more disposition to not interfere with the local jurisdiction of the latter than did Act March 2, 1867, c. 176, 14 Stat. 517. Certain it is that Congress did not intend to aid fraud in any of the provisions of the act. In truth, the fraudulent were placed beyond its intended benefits, and held to the strictest accountability when their acts came within the jurisdiction of the courts of the United States'.

[169]*169No debtor can be discharged in bankruptcy of a liability which grows out of his fraud. Section 17, Act 1898. It was held in Classen v. Schoeneman, 80 Ill. 304, and Ames v. Moir, 130 Ill. 582, 22 N. E. 535, that if a debtor buys goods for cash on delivery, obtains possession of them without payment and immediately ships them beyond reach of the seller, and then refuses to pay, his conduct is such' as to make the debt a fraudulent one within the meaning of the bankrupt law. It is equally fraudulent, in law and morals, for one to buy goods with a positive intention not to pay for them, for if such intention were known to the vendor he certainly would not sell. “Its suppression therefore is a legal fraud.” Benjamin on Sales, 442, and cases collected by that author. The cases hold that such design may be inferred from the conduct and circumstances of the vendee. It is admitted here that he was insolvent, and intended to set over to certain favored persons the very goods he purchased from the plaintiffs on credit, leaving nothing with which he could pay for them, or out of which they could make their debt. That is very black fraud. As the United States District Court could not have discharged Lanman from the plaintiff’s debts created by his fraud, they were at liberty to pursue him in the state courts, and obtain a personal judgment against him, even though he had been adjudged bankrupt, upon which, after the federal court had exercised its jurisdiction, the writ of fieri facias might issue; but, pending the proceedings in bankruptcy, the state court should have stayed its execution until the United States courts had finally adjudicated the bankrupt’s case.

But there is still another branch of this case, of more importance than the one just discussed. That is the [170]*170right of the state court to proceed to a judgment in rem as against the property embraced in the mortgage and as affecting the bank and De Baun.

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.W. 1042, 135 Ky. 163, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-dry-goods-co-v-lanman-kyctapp-1909.