Richardson, Et Ux. v. Gill

190 So. 255, 138 Fla. 787
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 30, 1939
StatusPublished

This text of 190 So. 255 (Richardson, Et Ux. v. Gill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson, Et Ux. v. Gill, 190 So. 255, 138 Fla. 787 (Fla. 1939).

Opinion

Per Curiam. —

Clarence P. Grill, as trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of Walter S. Richardson, bankrupt, on April 29, 1933, filed his bill of complaint against appellants, Walter S. Richardson and Rose Harris Richardson, his wife, and also against one V. Mason Weil. Weil was dismissed as a party defendant in the lower court. In substance, the bill sought to subject certain real estate to the claims of creditors on the theory that the property was purchased with funds furnished by the bankrupt. This appeal is from a final decree impressing the property with a trust for the benefit of creditors and authorizing sale of same in such manner and time as ordered by the Referee in Bankruptcy. Appellants filed a petition for rehearing which was granted. The Circuit Court then entered an order reaffirming the decree formerly entered.

*788 The bill of complaint, after setting out the names an'd residences of the parties, alleged:

1. That Clarence P. Grill was, and still is, the duly-elected, qualified and acting trustee in bankruptcy of' the estate of Walter S. Richardson, bankrupt, still pending in' the District Court of the United States. The appointment of said Trustee in Bankruptcy grew out of a voluntary petition in Bankruptcy filed by said Walter S. Richardson, bankrupt, on December "14, 1932, and he was on the same day duly adjudged a bankrupt.

2. That between 1928 and 1932 Walter S. Richardson is known to have received $66,000 as fees and profits as well as other large sums of money.

3. That the schedule filed in the aforementioned bankruptcy proceedings by Walter S. Richardson shows that his total assets were valued by him as $875.00 The schedule included chickens to the value of $250.00, which had been previously seized and sold under a chattel mortgage foreclosure. The Trustee in Bankruptcy sold a major portion of the assets, receiving $156.00 therefor, and value of the remaining assets is less than $125.00.

4. That claims amounting to approximately $5,000.00 have been filed and allowed in’ the Estate of Walter S. Richardson, bankrupt, and the assets of said bankrupt are insufficient to pay in full the creditors who have filed their claims in said Bankrupt Court.

5. That Walter S. Richardson “for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding his existing and subsequent creditors” transferred a major portion of the money received by him as above set forth to Rosa Harris Richardson, his wife, on one occasion, (November 18, 1929) transferring $8,000.00 by check to the said Rosa Harris Richardson.

6. That within the last four years defendant Walter S. *789 Richardson has engaged in various business enterprises, but he was unfamiliar with the conduct of each of them and had no experience or training in any of them.

7. That on May 1, 1931, defendant Walter S. Richardson purchased certain property, paying therefor $4,000.00. Although defendant Walter S. Richardson bought and paid for the said property with his own money, title thereto was taken in the name of himself and wife, Rosa Harris Richardson, as tenants by the entirety, “for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding his existing and subsequent creditors.”

8. That between 1929 and 1931 the said Walter S. Richardson acted as receiver of the Whitehall properties in a certain foreclosure suit then pending in the Federal Court. While acting as such Receiver defendant Walter S. Richardson purchased certain bonds of Whitehall Building and Operating Company at fifteen or twenty cents on the dollar. Then he transferred said bonds, amounting in par value to $48,700.00 to one of the defendants, Rosa Harris Richardson, his wife, “without consideration and for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding his creditors and those whom he expected to become his creditors.”

The prayer of the bill reads as follows:

“That the above described land and buildings thereon may be impressed with a trust to the extent that it was paid for and improved with money belonging to Walter S. Richardson, bankrupt, one of' the defendants, or that it was bought and paid for by Rosa Harris Richardson, one of the defendants, out of the money received from Walter S. Richardson', bankrupt, one of the defendants.”

The appellants in their answer admit tint defendant Walter S. Richardson received $51,600 between 1928 and 1932, and as such money came into his possession he gave to his wife, Rosa Harris Richardson, something like *790 $12,000 to $15,000. The record shows that on' November 18, 1929, Richardson gave his wife a check for $8,000 and that on or about May 1, 1931, defendants purchased the property involved herein', taking title in themselves as tenants by the entirety. It is alleged that the property was purchased with funds of Rosa Harris Richardson, but there is no competent evidence to support this. From the record as a whole the conclusion is inescapable that the funds used in' the purchase of the property came from the defendant Walter S. Richardson.

This leads us to the question of whether there is such a showing of fraud herein that property purchased with funds provided by the debtor and the title thereto taken by him and his wife in the entirety can be made the subject of a suit in equity to impress the same with a trust in favor of existing and subsequent creditors.

The bankruptcy schedule lists the following creditor at the time the money was transferred to Rosa Harris Richardson and at the time the property was purchased:

Callaghan & Company, 401 E.

Ohio St., Chicago Illinois,

Contracted West Palm Beach, Value of Amount of

Florida, to-wit, June, 1928, Securities Debts

Retention title note. $50.00 $34.50

It also appears that the appellant Walter S. Richardson at that time was an accommodation indorser on a note'payable to the Noretta Company on which $468.84 was due. In' its proof of unsecured claim the Noretta Company by its president states that the consideration of the debt was the dismissal of certain litigation in which Richardson was interested as attorney and otherwise and for which reasons he indorsed and guaranteed the note. These were the only *791 debts existing at the time of the transfer of the money to the wife and the purchase of the property.

In McKeown v. Allen, 37 Fla. 490, 20 So. 556, this Court said:

“There is some conflict of authority as to the effect upon the rights of existing creditors of voluntary conveyances by debtors of their real estate. By some authorities it is held that such conveyances by a man indebted at the time is of itself a fraud upon creditors, no matter how innocent or meritorious the motive with which the conveyance wis made, or how inconsiderable the part of the grantor’s property which is disposed of.
“Upon the other hand, the greater weight of authority supports the proposition that such conveyances are not absolutely fraudulent per se, but that they only afford a prima facie

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Related

Alhizer v. Tate
177 So. 325 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1937)
McKeown v. Allen
37 Fla. 490 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1896)
Ohio Butterine Co. v. Hargrave
84 So. 376 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1920)

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190 So. 255, 138 Fla. 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-et-ux-v-gill-fla-1939.