Millington v. Hill, Fontaine & Co.

47 Ark. 301
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 47 Ark. 301 (Millington v. Hill, Fontaine & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Millington v. Hill, Fontaine & Co., 47 Ark. 301 (Ark. 1886).

Opinions

Cockrill, C. J.

This appeal grows out of the ' successful effort of certain judgment and mortgage creditors of Seth W.. Bolton to subject á plantation in Deshacbunty, which he had conveyed to his sister, Mrs. Millington, to the-payment of-their respective claims. The suit was begun by a creditor’s bill filed by W. B. Galbreath, a judgment creditor, to' which the other judgment and mortgage creditors, Mrs. Millington and her husband, and the administrator of S. W. Bolton, were made parties. ' Cross-bills were filed by the defendant creditors to settle the priorities of their liens, and by Mrs. Millington.» to assert the priority over all, of her claims. The plantation was unoccupied and not in cultivation when the bill was filed, and a receiver was appointed by the court to lease the place and collect the- rents. Upon the hearing, the court found that Mrs. Millington’s purchase was a fraud upon the rights of Bolton’s creditors, marshalled the liens, made a distribution of the fund raised by the receiver, and condemned the, lands to be sold to pay off ,the residue of the claims charged against them. Mrs. Millington and her husband alone appeal.

The history of the transactions connected, with the purchase of the plantation,- is as follows:

In 1876, Seth W. Bolton resided in Desha county, and-was the owner of the plantation in dispute. He was, at that tibie, indebted beyond his ability to pay. One or more -judgments had been rendered, and two actions for the recovery of money were pending, against him. One of these was Galbreath’s, to collect a debt of something more than $5000, to which there was no defense. Bolton expressed a willingness to secure this debt, if security was insisted upon; and, at this juncture, left home with the avowed object of conferring with Galbreath about the security and the extension of the time of payment of the debt; but, instead of calling upon Galbreath, he went direct to the home of his sister, Mrs. Millington, the appellant here, in Shelby county, Tennessee, and there, upon a Sabbath night, and -with much haste, considering the importance of the transaction, concluded a sale of the' place to her. The trade was consummated the next morning by the delivery of a deed reciting a consideration of $10,000. The consideration consisted of an agreement by Mrs. Millington to discharge certain notes held by Hill, Fontaine & Co., amounting, as the deed recited, and the parties agreed, to about $6000, and secured by two mortgages on the plantation, reference being made in the deed to the records of Desha county to identify them; and for the residue of the purchase price and as a cash payment of $4000, Mrs. Millington transferred to Bolton two bills of exchange, drawn by E. M. Apperson upon and accepted by E. M. Apperson & Co., for $2000 each.

Within a few days after this transaction these two bills gave rise to a litigation in the Tennessee courts between Galbreath, Bolton and Mrs. Millington, which has an important bearing upon, the litigation between the same parties here. It arose in this way. Galbreath sued Bolton, in Memphis, for the recovery of the debt already in suit in Arkansas, and impounded the two bills of exchange by causing an attachment to be levied upon them as Bolton’s property. Mrs. Millington intervened in this proceeding, claimed the bills as her own, and undertook to show that soon after transferring them to Bolton, she purchased back one of them for $1600 in gold, and that the other was re-transferred to her as indemnity against a further lien that her husband and brother upon further consideration supposed might be established against the land. Galbreath answered that the- re-transfer of the bills to Mrs. Millington was fictitious, and part'of a general scheme entered into between Bolton and his sister to cheat, hinder and delay the creditors of the brother; the first step in the scheme, being, as he alleged, the purchase of the plantation. Upon this issue a mass of testimony was taken, and the chancellor before whom the cause was heard* found that the whole transaction was concocted in fraud, and by appropriate decree subjected the proceeds of the bills of exchange, which had in the meantime been, collected, to the satisfaction pro tanto of Galbreath’s debt. Mrs. Millington prosecuted an appeal from this decree to the supreme court of Tennessee, where the testimony was reviewed, the facts carefully collated, and the chancellor’s conclusions indorsed in strong and unequivocal language by the supreme court commission, and the decree remained undisturbed. It was after the determination of that suit that Galbreath filed the bill that gives rise to this appeal. A transcript of the entire Tennessee record found its way by common consent into this litigation, and is submitted to our consideration.

Counsel who represent the Galbreath interest here, argue that the Tennessee decree renders the questiou of fraud in the purchase made by Mrs. Millington res adjudicata, so far at least as Galbreath is concerned; but the effect of Galbreath’s proceeding in Tennessee precludes him from inquiring into the question of fraud, and so ends his litigation here in limine. He had charged in his answer to Mrs. Millington’s assertion of title to the two bills of exchange in the Tennessee suit, that the purchase of the lands was a fraud on his rights as a creditor of Bolton. Thereupon Mrs. Millington, while ¿leafing the fraud, offered to re-convey the lands to Bolton, and permit .Galbrcathto subject them to the payment of his debt if he would release the bills of exchange from the levy of his attachment. Galbreath declined this, prosecuted his attachment and reaped the benefit of the.land sale by appropriating- the consideration he alleged was paid for n. The acceptance of the benefit arising to him from the transaction, with knowledge of the surrounding facts, estops him from afterwards questioning the sale,

3. Fraudulent Conveyance:— Hots* far good.

2. When creditor estopped.

A conveyance to defraud creditors is good as between the parties ;md their privies, aldiough.it niay be avoided by the creditors of the fraudulent grantor. ■ If the creditors condone the fraud, the grantee's tifio is good against all comers, and when any creditor, with knowledge of the wrong that has been done him, makes his election to take from the grantee the purchase price agreed to be paid for the land, his conduct is, in effect, an affirmance of the sale and a waiver of the right to complain of the fraud. Lemay v. Bibeau, 2 Minn., 291; Hathaway v. Brown, 22 Ib., 214; Butler v. O’Brien, 5 Ala. (N. S.), 316; Rennick v. Bank of Chillicothe, 8 Ohio, 529; Frierson v. Branch, 30 Ark., 453; Pickett v. Merchants Nat. Bank, 32 Ib., 346.

There is nothing in the record, however, to debar the other judgment creditors from'asserting their claims against the lan-d. But it is argued on behalf of Mrs. Millington, that however fraudulent tin: intent of her brother may have been in effecting the sale to her, there is nothing- to show that she participated in. his design or knew of his embarrassed affairs.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Ark. 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millington-v-hill-fontaine-co-ark-1886.