Mohar v. McLelland Lumber Company

501 P.2d 722, 95 Idaho 38, 1972 Ida. LEXIS 251
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 1972
Docket11004
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 501 P.2d 722 (Mohar v. McLelland Lumber Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mohar v. McLelland Lumber Company, 501 P.2d 722, 95 Idaho 38, 1972 Ida. LEXIS 251 (Idaho 1972).

Opinion

McQUADE, Chief Justice.

The parties in this case are competing claimants for approximately $18,600, representing the net proceeds realized from the sale of residential property in Pocatello formerly owned by Floyd M. and Jeanne L. Anderson. Prior to his death on December 7, 1968, Mr. Anderson was a real estate developer whose business misfortunes and terminal affliction with emphysema forced him to rely heavily on the financial aid and managerial assistance of his daughter Shirlee, one of the plaintiffs-respondents. Anderson also became indebted to the defendant-appellant, Mc-Lelland Lumber Company, for sums borrowed from the company and for funds advanced by the company to secure other loans which Anderson failed to pay.

On May 29, 1968, Floyd and Jeanne Anderson delivered to their daughter a $20,000 trust deed dated September 30, 1967, 1 creating a first mortgage lien on the property in Pocatello and securing several notes given in return for her contributions to the business. The trust deed was recorded the day of delivery. On June 16, 1969, McLelland Lumber Company obtained a judgment of $42,627.95 against Floyd Anderson, in an action apparently filed on June 11, 1968. Following Mr. Anderson’s demise, and the disablement of Mrs. Anderson by an automobile accident and her gradually worsening mental illness, the residence in question was sold. The net proceeds from sale were placed in escrow with American Land Title Company, pending judicial determination of whether the trust deed or the judgment lien represented the superior claim. The daughter and her husband brought this action for a declaration that their claim was superior because the trust deed was filed more than a year prior to the judgment. As an affirmative defense, and in support of its counterclaim, the lumber company alleged that the trust deed constituted a fraudulent conveyance under I.C. §§ 55-901 et seq. 2 *41 After a court trial the claim based on the trust deed was decreed superior, and American Land Title Company was ordered to deliver the net sale proceeds to the daughter and her husband. The lumber company has appealed, directing its assignments of error to the fraudulent conveyance issue.

The law governing conveyances in fraud of creditors has developed from the concept that the debtor’s property constitutes a source from which debts should be paid; consequently, the debtor should not be permitted to dispose of the property in a manner violative of the creditors’ equitable rights. 3 A fraudulent conveyance is generally characterized by a lack of fair and valuable consideration. 4 A creditor attacking the validity of a transaction on the ground that the property is not available for payment must clearly prove that the underlying consideration is not in reasonable proportion to the value of the conveyance. 5 The consideration may include present advances by the transferees and antecedent debts owed to the transferee by the debtor. 6

The district court in this case found that the advances and expenditures by the daughter to sustain her father’s troubled business constituted full consideration for the trust deed. The record discloses that when the trust deed was executed on September 30, 1967, the daughter held promissory notes bearing interest at rates of 6% and 8% per annum. Specifically, the district court admitted into evidence the following notes: 7

(a) A note dated January 1, 1959, signed by Floyd M. Anderson and payable to one Frank Schivo (the daughter’s former husband), for $3,000, plus $2,000 added by endorsement. This note bore 6% interest until maturity on July 1, 1959, and 8% on the principal thereafter. It was supported by evidence that the $5,000 was deducted from the daughter’s share of community property in the property settlement agreement which accompanied a divorce in 1962.

(b) A note dated April 25, 1967, signed by Jeanne L. Anderson on behalf of the business and payable to the daughter, for $7,500 at 8% interest. The note was supported by uncontradicted testimony of the daughter that it covered a number of smaller prior advances.

(c) Two notes dated April 25, 1967, signed by Jeanne L. Anderson and payable to the daughter, each for $1,800 at 8% interest. These notes were supported by two *42 checks for the same amount, signed by the daughter, payable to Jeanne Anderson, and dated April 24, 1967.

These notes represented an aggregate debt that was reasonably proportioned to the value of the trust deed when executed, and which exceeds the amount now at issue in this case. By our calculations, the $5,000 note, at interest rates of 6% and 8% accruing only on the principal, represented an obligation of approximately $8,399 on September 30, 1967. The $7,500 note at 8% represented $7,763 on that date, and the $1,800 notes at 8% each, $1,863. Total indebtedness represented by the notes thus appears to have been $19,888. The face amount of the trust deed was $20,000; and the amount of net proceeds from sale of the residential property is approximately $18,600. The district court’s finding, that the trust deed was given for adequate consideration, is based on competent evidence and will not be set aside. 8

Although a conveyance be supported by fair and valuable consideration, it may be set aside with respect to creditors if it is the product of a fraudulent attempt by the debtor and transferee to obstruct access to the debtor’s property for satisfaction of legitimate claims. 9 This type of fraudulent conveyance is marked by an actual intent of both the debtor and transferee, to defraud the creditors. 10 Whether a particular transaction was fraudulent is a question of fact to be determined from all the circumstances. 11 Actual fraud must be proven by clear and convincing evidence; 12 but when certain “badges of fraud” attend the conveyance, and are not adequately explained, an inference of actual fraud may be warranted. 13 Among the “badges of fraud” arguably relevant to this case, appellant appears to emphasize the close relationship of the debtor and transferee as father and daughter, the informality of their transactions, the failure to record the trust deed immediately after it was executed, and the precarious state of the debtor’s business.

The existence of close relationship between debtor and transferee is not a “badge of fraud” per se. 14 It invites close scrutiny of the conveyance, 15 but it must be supplemented by other proof of bad faith to establish a prima facie case of fraud. 16

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Bluebook (online)
501 P.2d 722, 95 Idaho 38, 1972 Ida. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mohar-v-mclelland-lumber-company-idaho-1972.