Pollock v. Meyer

96 Ala. 172
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 96 Ala. 172 (Pollock v. Meyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pollock v. Meyer, 96 Ala. 172 (Ala. 1892).

Opinion

COLEMAN, J.

Plaintiffs as creditors of M. Meyer & Co. filed their bill for tbe purpose of having certain conveyances executed by tbe defendants to other creditors set aside and annulled, as being fraudulent and void, and to have tbe property conveyed subjected- to tbe payment of their demands. Tbe biff does not seek to have tbe several conveyances assailed; declared a general assignment for tbe benefit of all tbe creditors, but proceeds entirely upon tbe theory that tbe several conveyances were fraudulent and void.

Tbe gravamen of tbe charges is, that tbe debts in payment of which tbe conveyances were made, were simulated in whole or in part, and also that a benefit was reserved to tbe grantors. Tbe record is voluminous, and large amounts are involved in tbe litigation. There is no material conflict in tbe evidence, that we have discovered, and no new prin[175]*175ciple of law invoked on either side. The real contest is over the legal effect of proven facts upon the transaction, and we think this is narrowed down to the conveyances to Boths-child, trustee for the Commercial Bank and Emilie Meyer, wife of respondent M. Meyer.

In Knowles v. Street, 87 Ala. 360, it is said: “Since the decision in Hodges v. Coleman, 76 Ala. 103, which has been uniformly followed, it should be regarded as settled law in this State that the sale of the whole or a part of his property by an embarrassed or insolvent debtor to his creditor in payment of an antecedent debt, will be upheld, if the debt be bona fide, its amount not materially less than the fair and reasonable value of the property, and the payment of the debt is the sole consideration, and no use or benefit is reserved to the debtor. In such case the enquiry should be directed to the bona, fides of the debt, the sufficiency of the consideration, and the reservation of a benefit to the debtor. If the transaction is not assailable on some one of these grounds, fraud otherwise has no room for operation. Whether there exist the ordinary badges of fraud, whether the debtor intended to hinder or defraud his other creditors, whether the purchasing creditor was swift in' the race of diligence for the purpose of defeating other creditors who were pressing their demands, or whether such is the necessary consequence, are not material enquiries. By devoting his property to the payment of an honest debt, the debtor merely performs a lawful act.”

In Meyer & Co. v. Sulzbacher, 76 Ala. 128, it is said : “The sale of the goods being shown to be in absolute payment of a debt, proved to be due by Sulzbacher to his wife, and the price paid being fair and adequate; and no interest being reserved by the grantor, the preferance is one authorized by law, and the fraudulent intent of one or both parties, would not vitiate the transaction, because the act itself of preference being legal, fraud without damage would give no right of action.” To the same effect is the case of Carter v. Coleman, 84 Ala. 268. In the First Nat. Bank of Birmingham v. Smith et al., 93 Ala. 97, is said : “An insolvent debtor may select which of his creditors, one or more, he will pay and pay them in full, and thus disable himself to pay the others anything; and it makes no difference if the one or more preferred creditors know the effect of the transaction will be to deprive the debtor of all means with which to pay his other debts. Nor is the wish, motive, or intention of the debtor a material inquiry, if the requisite conditions exist. Those conditions, in a case like the present, are : [176]*176First, The debt must be bona fide and enforceable, not simulated ; second, the payment must be absolute, and, if made in property, must not be materially in excess of the debt; third, no pecuniary benefit or consideration of value, other than the liquidation of the debt, must inure or be secured to the debtor. . . . The true enquiry at last is, did the creditor bargain for and receive over-payment, or payment in excess of his just demand.” We italicize the last proposition.

In the case of Harmon v. McRae, 91 Ala. 401, Harmon Bros, sold a stock of goods to Jno. E. Harmon, the consideration being the assumption by Jno. E. Harmon of a debt due Lehman, Durr & Co. by Harmon Bros., and for which Jno. F. Harmon was bound as surety. There was evidence tending to show that Jno. E. Harmon supposed the debt he assumed to pay to be less than the value of the stock of goods. The facts proven, however, disclosed that the debt due Lehman, Durr & Co. far exceeded the value of the goods. It was held, that the fact that Jno. E. Harmon may have supposed at the time of the purchase that he was getting the goods for a less price than their real value did not vitiate the transaction.

The principle of law settled by the decisions of this court is, that the payment of an antecedent debt by an insolvent debtor, by a conveyance of his property, rests upon entirely different grounds, than when a cash or present consideration is paid. It matters not whether the grantor alone, or grantor and grantee both, devised and intended to get the advantage of other creditors, if in fact the effect of the transaction was solely to pay a debt honestly due, and the property was received by the creditor in payment of his debt at a fair and adequate price, and no interest or benefit reserved to the grantor debtor. “If the transaction is not assailable on one of these grounds, fraud has no room for operation.” As was said in Hodges v. Coleman, supra: “What injury can the motive do to a non-preferred creditor ? The act we have seen is lawful. Can human tribunals set aside a transaction lawful in itself because the actors had an evil mind in doing it ? Can there be fraud in doing a lawful act, even though it be prompted by an evil malice or badges of fraud?”

Let us apply these principles to the facts of the case. It is indisputably proven that M. Meyer & Co. were indebted to the bank:

[177]*177On straight paper,.$ 6,500.00
As principal debtors on sundry notes,.$27,635.00
To Ernilie Meyer (conceded),.$14,000.00
Total,.$48,135.00
The evidence shows the actual gross proceeds of
the goods was,.$40,719.00
Leaving a deficit of,.$7,416.00

It is argued that the appraisement by the parties of the goods fixes their value at a much greater amount, and this taken in connection with other circumstances, shows that the parties intended to hinder or defraud their creditors. Concede it for the argument. What then is the true en-quiry? It is whether there has been an overpayment. If by the testimony it is satisfactorily established that at a fair valuation the goods were not in excess of the bona fide indebtedness paid by the conveyance, and no benefit reserved to the grantor, there is no room for fraud.

The argument based upon what is denominated “endorsed paper” can not be maintained. This paper was the property of the bank received in the usual course of business. The liability of M. Meyer & Co. was that of endorsers. As a part of the consideration of the conveyance of the goods, M. Meyer & Co. were released from their contingent liability as such endorsers. To be released from such liability constituted a valuable consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
96 Ala. 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollock-v-meyer-ala-1892.