Pool v. Gramling, Spalding & Co.

16 S.E. 52, 88 Ga. 653, 1891 Ga. LEXIS 360
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 7, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 16 S.E. 52 (Pool v. Gramling, Spalding & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pool v. Gramling, Spalding & Co., 16 S.E. 52, 88 Ga. 653, 1891 Ga. LEXIS 360 (Ga. 1891).

Opinion

Judgment affirmed.

On December 28, 1885, Gramling, Spalding & Co. et al., creditors by open account of tbe firm of Turner & Hudson (composed of G. R. Turner and Allen Hudson), filed their bill against that firm and against W. II. Pool, E. L. Ergle, Samuel Turner and the sheriff, for injunction, receiver and other equitable relief. In this bill the complainants alleged that Turner & Hudson were insolvent traders, and attacked as fraudulent and void a deed from G. R. Turner to W. H. Pool, dated March 19, 1884, and recorded December 18, 1885, and a mortgage from Turner & Hudson to E. L. Ergle, dated December 18, 1885, and foreclosed six days afterwards. They also attacked as fraudulent and without consideration, a transfer from G. R. Turner to Samuel Turner of certain promissory notes which had been given by A. S. Gresham for land sold to him by G. R. Turner. [655]*655The deed to Pool covers realty on which stand the storehouse in which Turner & Hudson did business, the dwelling-house in which G-. E. Turner lived, and another house. The mortgage to Ergle covers all the goods in the store at the time it was made. The complainants allege that the deed to Pool was executed and is held for the purpose of delaying and defeating the collection of debts due by Turner & Hudson to complainants and other creditors; that Turner & Hudson were allowed to remain in possession of the property thereby conveyed, that its execution was kept secret, and it was kept off record for the express purpose of inducing complainants and others to extend credit, and was not recorded until the insolvency of Turner & Hudson was fully known in the county; that before complainants would extend credit, Turner & Hudson represented to them that they owned the property, and on the faith of this property complainants sold them goods; and that if it should appear that there is any amount due by Turner to Pool, for which this property is bound, the same should be sold, Pool’s debt satisfied from the money, so obtained, the remainder be paid to complainants; and the deed to Pool be cancelled. As to the Ergle mortgage, the complainants allege that, according to their information and belief, Turner & Hudson did not owe Ergle the amount ($735) for which the mortgagé was made, but it was executed with an understanding between them so as to ward off other creditors, and after its execution Turner & Hudson continued to sell goods from the store, with the consent of Ergle, who knew at the time that they were insolvent and owed complainants and others, but allowed them to sell several hundred dollars’ worth of goods before foreclosing, the amount of which sales should go as -a credit on his mortgage if it be held good. They further allege that within the past few days, and since it was found out that Turner & [656]*656Hudson were insolvent, G. R. Turner confederated with. Samuel Turner, who is his uncle or other relative, and they have an understanding by which G. R. Turner has transferred to Samuel Turner the land notes given by Gresham, and has made him a deed without his having paid anything for the same; and that Gresham, who holds G. R. Turner’s bond for titles, has agreed to the making of the deed to Samuel Turner, and to accept his deed on payment of the purchase money notes. They say that the deed to Samuel Turner was made after the foreclosure of Ergle’s mortgage, but was dated back to the 18th of December, 1885 ; and that the only consideration for this transaction was to defeat the collection of the debts due complainants and other creditors.

Pool and Samuel Turner made a motion in the nature of a general demurrer, to dismiss the bill so far as they were concerned; and the overruling of this motion forms one of the exceptions taken here. The case was referred to a master who reported, in brief, as follows:

1st. The deed from G. R. Turner to Pool was executed on March 19,1884, for the expressed consideration of $650, and Pool gave to Turner a bond to reconvey upon payment of that sum; but before the bill was filed the bond for title was surrendered to Pool and the note for $650 was surrendered to Turner. The firm of Turner & Hudson was not organized until several months after the date of the deed; and therefore it was not executed to hinder and delay their creditors. The complainants do not allege or prove a tender to Pool of the amount loaned or paid by him, nor do they offer to redeem the land; The deed was executed before the passage of the act of 1885 (A.cts 1884-5, p. 124), and so is not affected thereby; it passed the title to Pool, and cannot be subjected to the debts of complainants.

2d. The evidence shows that Samuel Turner loaned G. R. Turner $600, and took his note therefor on the [657]*6578th of March, 1884, hearing interest from that date, and that the money has never been repaid; and the deed to Samuel Turner was executed on the.18th of December, 1885, in payment of his debt, G-. R. Turner taking no bond to reconvey. This was ten days before the sanction and filing of, the bill. There is no evidence to sustain the charges relied on to set the deed aside; and so far as the evidence shows, the transaction was fair and clear of fraud throughout. The prayers as to this transaction should be denied, and the injunction as to Samuel Turner and Gresham be dissolved.

3d. Ergle’s mortgage was , executed on December 18, 1885; execution thereon was issued on December 23, 1885. The mortgage was for $735, with interest at 8 per cent., which principal and interest should be paid out of the money in the hands of the receiver, after payment of the amounts mentioned in the next item. The complainants offered no evidence to sustain their contention that this mortgage is without consideration, fraudulent and void. Ergle could enforce his lien at leisure. The complainants had no lien; none of them recovered judgments until January, 1886, and their bill was not filed until five days-after the foreclosure of the mortgage. Turner & Hudson had the right to prefer Ergle as a creditor, as provided in section 1953 of the code.

4th. The sum in the receiver’s hands is $898.95. After paying the complainants’ attorney a fee of $100 for bringing the fund into court, and after paying the fees of the master and the receiver, the balance should be applied to Ergle’s execution.

This report was filed on July 6, 1889. During the same (July) term, the complainants took the following exceptions:

(1) The master erred in not setting aside the deed to Pool. Under the law and evidence, it should have been [658]*658set aside and the property sold, so far as the creditors are concerned, and the money applied to the payment of- the debts according to priority of the demands of complainants; and if not set aside, then the property should have been ordered sold and first applied to whatever debt was due to Pool, and the remainder paid to the complainants. It appears from the evidence that there was but a small amount due Pool, he having received from the defendants rent sufficient to pay him all but a small balance. The deed should have been set aside because it was made as part of an usurious contract, and was absolutely void as a conveyance as to the creditors, especially as Turner was allowed to remain in possession of the property and exercise acts of ownership over it, and thereby deceive the creditors, and induce them to extend him credit, believing he owned the property, aud as the deed was not recorded until after the complainants had extended credit, and after their debtors were insolvent, and only a few days before the bill was filed.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.E. 52, 88 Ga. 653, 1891 Ga. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pool-v-gramling-spalding-co-ga-1891.