Micou v. National Bank

104 U.S. 530, 26 L. Ed. 834, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2042
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 16, 1882
Docket66
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 104 U.S. 530 (Micou v. National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Micou v. National Bank, 104 U.S. 530, 26 L. Ed. 834, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2042 (1882).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a bill in equity, filed by the First National Bank of Montgomery, to subject to the payment of a judgment recovered by it against Benjamin H. Micou, Thomas M. Barnett, and Nicholas D. Barnett, partners, as Barnett, Micou, & Co., certain lands the legal title to which had been transferred to Henry C. Semple, in trust for Lucy B. Micou, and Clara E. Boykin, wife of Frank S. Boykin, all of whom, together with Benjamin H. Micou, were defendants below, the conveyance being, as charged, in fraud of the complainant’s rights as a creditor.

The indebtedness on which the judgment is founded existed *531 at the time of the occurrence of the transactions which form the subject of the controversy.

The fraud charged in the bill is that Benjamin H. Micou, being at the time guardian in the Probate Court of Tallapoosa County, Alabama, of his daughters, Clara E. Boykin and Lucy B. Micou, confederated and colluded with them, and with Frank S. Boykin, husband of Clara, to procure judgments and decrees to be entered up against himself by said Probate Court in the matter of said guardianships, and to have all of his property liable to sale under legal process, except ouch personal property as they might aid him to fraudulently convert to his own use, and excepting some property bought by another creditor, sold and transferred to his said daughters, with the intent on the part of all of said parties thereby to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of the said Benjamin H. Micou, he being at the time insolvent.

By virtue of this conspiracy, it is alleged that settlements and decreés were caused to be made in said Probate Court, whereby it was falsely and fraudulently made to appear that on Feb. 10, 1874, the said Benjamin H. Micou was indebted to Clara E. in the sum of $88,300, for which sum a decree was rendered in said court in favor of Clara and her husband against him; and that on Feb, 24, 1874, said Micou was indebted to Lucy B. in the sum of $88,031.77, for which sum a decree was rendered in said court in her favor. Copies of the proceedings in the Probate Court are exhibited. At the time of the settlement with her, Lucy was a minor over the age of. nineteen years.

It is chai’ged in the bill that in making said settlements Micou “ did not contend for or desire fair and proper settlements, and that there was no real effort on his pal't to introduce, as he had it in his power to do, or inform his attorney of evidence to show that he was not, as your orator avers he was not, chargeable with the amounts and sums he permitted to be found against him by collusion ” with his daughter and son-in-law.

The bill further states as follows : “ Orator is without any means of showing in this bill the particular items and amounts improperly and collusively charged against said Benjamin *532 H. Micou, and items for which he should have received credit in such settlements, further than is herein shown, the facts upon which said settlements ought to have been made being peculiarly within the knowledge of said B. H. Micou and the other defendants hereto and not of your orator; but orator charges that the item of ninety-one thousand six hundred and forty-,eight and ^-¡5- dollars with which the said Benjamin H. allowed his account to be surcharged on said settlement was not, and.was known to the said Benjamin H. and to the said Clara E., Frank S., and Lucy B., not to-be, legally and justly due from him ; that each item of negro hire, of which said sum. is partly made up, was, if said Benjamin H. was rightly chargeable with any part thereof, charged at too high a rate, and that said sum of ninety-four thousand seven hundred and ninety-nine and dollars was- too much by a large sum, of, to wit, fifty thousand dollars, and that this could have been shown to the court by testimony, if he, the said Benjamin H., had desired to make' a fair and valid settlement.

“ Orator further charges that said Benjamin H-. was not, and he and his said daughters then well knew that he was not, chargeable with the large sums, or any part thereof, shown in Exhibit A and B to have been charged against him for negro hire and land rent, for that, as orator charges, the said B. H. Micou was, by orders of said Probate Court, made as shown by the full and true copies thereof hereto attached, and marked Exhibit D, and prayed to be taken as part of this bill of complaint, authorized to keep his said daughters’ property together, and he was only liable to account for the profits arising from the same, which were small.”'

■ The decrees ■ referred to were rendered in February, 1874, and by the law of Alabama (Code of Ala., sect. 2794) it is provided that “ all final decrees against guardians have the force and effect of judgments at law, upon which execution may issue against them and the securities on their bonds.”

The two brothers Barnett, who were partners of Micou, were also his brothers-in-law, uncles of Clara E. and Lucy, his daughters and,wards, and were sureties on his bond as their guardian. The decree in favor of Lucy, who at the time of *533 its rendition was still under age, was rendered in the name of H. A. Garrett, who had been appointed her guardian ad litem for that purpose.

Executions were issued upon both decrees to the sheriff of Montgomery County, who also at the same time held some other executions against the same defendants, under which all the real estate belonging to the Barnetts and Micou were sold, and conveyed by the sheriff to Henry C. Semple, who was the attorney for Lucy B. and Clara E. and her husband, except one parcel bought in by one Pittman, plaintiff in one of the other executions, under an arrangement made with him by Semple on behalf of his clients. Each of the executions in favor of Mrs. Boykin and Lucy B. Micou Avas credited with $19,540.36 as the proceeds of these sales.

Executions were also issued upon the decrees to the sheriff of Macon County, Avhere Benjamin H. Micou owned a plantation, which he cultivated, and on which, it is alleged, there was a large amount of personal property belonging to him, consisting of a crop of corn, cotton, grain, and plantation tools. The executions first issued to this county, it is charged, were returned Avithout levy upon the personal property, under instructions from the plaintiffs to that effect, in order to enable Micou to dispose of it otherwise, which it is averred' he did, and thereafter a levy was made on the real estate, Avhich was^ sold and conveyed to Micou himself as trustee. These lands, it is charged, were worth $6,000, but were sold for $1,250.

Executions on the decree were likeAvise issued to Elmore County, under Avhich real estate belonging to Micou, and also to the Barnetts, was sold to Semple. It is charged that there was a large amount of personal property belonging to the defendants on these lands, Avhich was not levied on, in order that the defendants might convert it to their own use by some other disposition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 U.S. 530, 26 L. Ed. 834, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2042, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/micou-v-national-bank-scotus-1882.