Matthews v. Lloyd

13 S.W. 106, 89 Ky. 625, 1890 Ky. LEXIS 28
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 27, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 S.W. 106 (Matthews v. Lloyd) 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
Matthews v. Lloyd, 13 S.W. 106, 89 Ky. 625, 1890 Ky. LEXIS 28 (Ky. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

JUDGE HOLT

delivered the opinion of the court.

June 21, 1887, E. L. Harper made an assignment for the benefit of his creditors. A few hours before doing so he directed the brother of the appellant, Hattie A. Matthews, to get John Otten to go to an officer of the Fidelity Loan Company, and get from him his (Harper’s) “pass-book,” evidencing his ownership of twenty shares of stock in the company, then worth from four to five thousand dollars, and draw the value; [627]*627of it by a withdrawal from the company, and pay it over to the appellant, Hattie A. Matthews. Otten got the pass-book, but found he could not draw the money without an assignment of the stock from Harper. He was selected to do so because it was supposed that his relations with the company would enable him to readily get the money. Not succeeding, he took the pass-book to the brother, who filled up an assignment of the stock upon a leaf of it, in Otten’s name, and procured Harper to sign it. It was then delivered to her brother for the appellant, Hattie A. Matthews. He then gave it to Otten, in order that he might draw the value of it from the company and pay it to her. The company declined, however, to comply with the request, as when it was made Harper had made the assignment for the benefit of liis creditors. The transfer of the stock did not show that it was for the benefit of Hattie A. Matthews, but this was the understanding, at the time, of all the parties, as is indisputably shown by the evidence. It, aside from that of the appellant, Hattie A. Matthews, and Harper’s wife, whose testimony was objected to because he was then in the penitentiary, and one of them was his wife, also shows that at the time of the transfer he was indebted to the appellant, Matthews, in a sum greater than the value of the stock, and that it was made by way of part payment. It is, therefore, unnecessary to determine the competency of the appellant and Harper’s wife as witnesses, or whether any portion of their testimony is competent.

It appears that the appellant received from her [628]*628father’s estate, in 1880, about one thousand dollars. She then resided with Harper, who was her brother-in-law, and continued to do so up to the time of his failure, and perhaps longer. She turned the money-over to him for investment. He was then a wealthy man, and continued to be so regarded until shortly before his failure. He was utterly wrecked financially, and became an inmate of a prison through reckless speculation, which, ignis faiuus-]ih.e, led Mm on even to the commission of crime. The investment for her by him resulted in great gain in a short time, and in settlement of what was coming to her through it, he, on August 8, 1881, executed to her his note for five thousand dollars,' no part of which had been paid at the time of his failure, save the interest to January 1, 1882. June 24, 1887, certain of Ms creditors sued out attachments in the Campbell Chancery Court, and attached the interest in the Loan Company that had been transferred to the appellant, but in the name of Otten, for the purpose of collection for her. September 16, 1887, she, by answer and cross-petition against the trustee of Harper under the deed of assignment, became a party to the consolidated suits of these creditors. She claimed the stock, her pleading setting forth the grounds of her claim, and Otten joining with her in it. January 4, 1888, the trustee, in answer to her cross-action, set up a claim to the stock under the deed of assignment.

The creditors are not parties to this appeal, nor are their pleadings made a part of the record before, us. In the consideration of the matters involved, we will [629]*629waive the question of the right of the trustee to assert in a suit a claim to the stock, when the assignor in the voluntary, assignment could not do so..

The evidence fails to show that the appellant’s debt was a fraudulent. one, nor is a state of circumstances shown from which we are authorized to presume it. This is also true as to her claim to the stock in the Loan Company, based upon the transfer in. Otten’s name. . No fraudulent purpose is shown even by inference. It was, however, undoubtedly intended as. a preference of the appellant as a creditor by Harper as a.debtor. Indeed,, this is. expressly admitted by her pleadings’. The parties: all resided in Ohio, and the entire transaction occurred there. Its validity is, therefore, to be tested by the law in force there. The deed of trust was also made there. At common law a debtor had a right to prefer a creditor either by a payment or an express preference in a deed of assignment. He has a right to pay his debt, and it is only by.virtue of statutory law that such a payment can be held invalid, and the creditor be compelled to surrender his advantage. In the absence of any-showing of the existence of such a statute in another State, it must be presumed that the common law is in force there. (Miles v. Collins, 1 Met., 308; Honore v. Hutchings, 8 Bush, 687.)

The appellee has, in his pleadings, set out a section of an Ohio statute, which reads thus: “All assignments in trust to a trustee or trustees, made in contemplation of insolvency, with the intent to prefer one or more creditors, shall inure to the equal benefit of all creditors in proportion to the amount of their [630]*630respective claims, and the trusts arising under the same shall be administered in conformity to the provisions of this chapter,” and which he claims invalidates a preference like this one. We are unable to judge of it by its title, and its other sections, as the entire statute is not before us. It does not appear to us, however, to embrace a case like this one, but to relate alone to preferences made in deeds of assignment to trustees for creditors generally. Certainly, no such trust was created in the transfer of the stock, as this statute contemplates. None was intended. Otten was not named as trustee for the appellant. He was but an agent to draw the value of the stock for her, and then at once pay it over to her. The preference was a bona fide one. It was made by the assignment and delivery of the written evidence of the ownership of the stock The prex>onderance of the testimony shows that the transfer was made in the morning, and the assignment not until the evening of the same day. In any event, they were not made, or even prepared, at the same time. It was not one transaction, and the written transfer of the stock and the assignment can not, upon the evidence, be regarded as really constituting but one instrument. If they could be, then the transfer of the stock would perhaps fall within the interdiction of the statute as being, in fact, a part of the deed of assignment. The rules of the common law govern the transaction, and, when so considered, it is not invalid, because a payment of a pre-existing debt in view of coming insolvency is not forbidden by them. It is urged that such a preference is contrary to the statute of this [631]*631State, and will not, therefore, be upheld by its courts. It is true comity does not require one State to violate its own laws to enforce those of another. Such a preference is not fraudulent or void, however, under our statute. Upon the contrary, it operates as an assignment, not only of the particular property embraced by the preference, but of all the debtor owns for the payment of his debts pro rata, provided advantage be taken of it in the manner and within the time prescribed by the statute.

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69 S.W.2d 1056 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1934)
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17 S.W. 795 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1891)

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.W. 106, 89 Ky. 625, 1890 Ky. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-lloyd-kyctapp-1890.