McFarland v. Garber

10 Ind. 151
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 10 Ind. 151 (McFarland v. Garber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McFarland v. Garber, 10 Ind. 151 (Ind. 1858).

Opinion

Worden, J.

This was an action by the appellants [as executors of Barbara Forbes, deceased,] against the appellee on a bond for the payment of 500 dollars. The complaint alleges that in the lifetime of said Barbara, to-wit, on the first of May, 1848, at the county of Blair in the state of Pennsylvania, the defendant executed and delivered to said Barbarra his writing obligatory, (a copy of which is filed) whereby he bound himself to pay to said Barba/ra the sum of 500 dollars, as specified therein, in consideration of said Barbara executing a certain release of a claim held by her against said defendant, which claim she held as legatee of one Christian Garber, deceased; that on the first day of June, 1848, the said Barbara did, in consideration of the written obligation aforesaid, execute, by signing, sealing and delivering, the said release to said defendant, whereby, &c. The bond set out is as follows, viz.:

“ Whereas William Dorris, executor of Christian Garber, [152]*152deceased, claims to recover of me moneys said to be owing by me to G. Garber deceased, which I say are not owing justly or legally; and whereas Barbara Forbes claims to be the legatee of the one-sixth of the said C. Garber's■ estate — and whereas the rest of the legatees, with the exception of the said Barbara and one other, have released all claims against me on the terms contained in the release, which terms were on my part fulfilled, and the said Barbara has heretofore declined to sign said release; now, in order to obtain her release also, but not admitting that there is one cent due by me to said G. Ga/rber's estate, know all men by these presents that I do hereby agree and bind myself to pay to the said Barbara Forbes the sum of 500 dollars, as a full consideration of her alleged claim and releasing it. Two hundred dollars, with interest from this date, on or before the first day of May, 1850, and the remaining three hundred dollars with interest thereon from this date, on or before the first day of May, 1852, without defalcation, for value received.
K Witness my hand and seal, this first day of May, 1848.
[Signed] M. C. Garber, seal.”

The defendant filed an answer of several paragraphs, embracing — 1. A denial of each and every allegation in the complaint. 2. Want of consideration. 3. That on the 22d day of October, 1844, one Charlotte Hanks and Jarvis Hanks, her husband, Michael Garber, said Barbara Forbes and one Mrs. Rutter, who were devisees of said Christian Ga/rber deceased, pretended to have, as such devisees, a claim against the defendant for a large sum of money, which claim was a lien on certain real estate and other property of the defendant; and for the purpose of compounding the same with the defendant, and to effect a general composition of said claim between the defendant and said devisees, the said Hanks and wife, and the said Michael Garber, executed the release aforesaid, for the consideration therein expressed and no other. And afterwards, on the first of Jume, 1848, the said Barbara Forbes signed and sealed the said release, for the consideration therein expressed, and for the further consideration that the defend[153]*153ant had executed and given to her the said bond now sued on. That said bond was given without the knowledge or consent of the other compounding creditors, and was a fraudulent preference of the said Barbará over them, as an. additional inducement to said Barbara to come into said composition, and execute said release, and for no other purpose or consideration whatever; wherefore, &c.

Issues were formed, and the cause was tried by the Court. The Court found for defendant, overruled a motion for a new trial, and rendered judgment on the finding. Exception was duly taken to the decision, and the evidence is set out. It appears from the bill of exceptions, that the Court found for the defendant on the ground that the release mentioned was, in effect, a composition deed among the creditors of said Garber, and that the bond sued on was a fraud on said creditors. "

The plaintiffs gave in evidence the bond sued on, and the release in question. The release offered relinquishes all claims which the legatees of C. Ga/rber, deceased, held against the defendant, except such portion of said claims as they could make out of property then held by him. It is signed by all of the legatees except Mrs. Rutter. It was signed by some of the legatees in October, 1844, but not by Mrs. Forbes until June 1st, 1848.

On the part of the defendant, it was proven by one Joseph Kemp that, some time in 1844 or 1845, the defendant failed in business, and that the heirs and devisees of Christian Garber, deceased, claimed a considerable debt of the defendant — Mrs. Forbes, the plaintiff’s testator being one of said devisees. "Witness had been acting as agent, and, in some instances, as an attorney for defendant, and after his effects had been sold by the sheriff, a movement was got up by some of the heirs of C. Garber, deceased, and by the defendant, to obtain a full release and discharge of defendant from all the debts which he owed them as heirs of C. Garber, deceased. Some of them had signed the release. Mrs. Forbes who was entitled to one-sixth of the whole, under the will, refused to sign without some new or fresh obligation by the defendant to pay her. This delayed the [154]*154matter some time, as the rest were to g'et nothing for so doing.

Finally, William McFarland, who acted for Mrs. Forbes in the matter, told witness that 700 dollars would be her share of the debt if he paid it all. Witness suggested that he had better modify the amount a little. Something was said about 500 dollars, for which amount defendant subsequently agreed to give her an obligation. This was finally agreed upon, and it was also, at the same time, agreed that the rest of the heirs of C. Garber, deceased, were not to know anything of this arrangement. Mrs. Forbes refused to sign the release until she got the bond, when she signed it, and so far as witness knows, she did not tell any of the rest what she got for signing the release. The bond sjied on was given to get the release signed by Mrs. Forbes.

It is admitted by counsel for the appellants, that if the paper in question called a release, the execution of which being the consideration of the bond, in suit, be a composition deed, the bond in suit is void, as being a fraud upon the other parties to the release. In the case of Kahn v. Gumberts, 9 Ind. R. 430, involving a similar question, the Court say that, “ In transactions between a debtor and his creditors which result in a deed of composition, the utmost good faith is required. The debtor professes to deal upon equal terms with all the creditors who enter into the settlement, and they are supposed to stand in the same situation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Ind. 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfarland-v-garber-ind-1858.