Rogers v. Page

140 F. 596, 72 C.C.A. 164, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 3947
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 6, 1905
DocketNo. 1,389
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 140 F. 596 (Rogers v. Page) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. Page, 140 F. 596, 72 C.C.A. 164, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 3947 (6th Cir. 1905).

Opinion

LURTON, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts). The facts as we find them to be upon the weight of the evidence, necessary to be preliminarily stated, are these:

1. On January 1, 1903, I. B. Merriam, the bankrupt, and C. H. Jarnagin, being joint owners of a tract of coal land situated in Cumberland county, Tenn., joined in a sale, and conveyance of same to Thos. Merriam, a brother of the bankrupt. For the undivided interest of I. B. Merriam, Thos. Merriam agreed to pay $65,000 in money and $20,000 in the stock of the Tennessee. Lumber & Coal Company, a corporation to which Thos. Merriam immediately sold and conveyed the land. This purchase price was appropriated by agreement between the parties as follows: (a) In clearing the title by acquiring a small interest in a part of the land owned or claimed by one Wright, $5,400. (b) By discharging a lien upon the bankrupt’s interest in favor of the Chattanooga Savings Bank, $2,000. One of the conditions of the sale was that the above prior liens should be paid off, so that the remainder of the purchase price is alone involved in the question of an unlawful preference. The shares of stock thus received were immediately pledged to Thos. Merriam to secure him as indorser of a note for $10,000, that day made and discounted by I. B. Merriam in a bank at Rochester. The remainder of the cash proceeds of sale, after providing for the two superior liens mentioned above, and the proceeds of the. new note indorsed by Thos. Merriam, were applied and appropriated as follows: First, to the payment of an alleged indebtedness of I. B. Merriam to Thos. Merriam; second, to Thos. Merriam’s exoneration as security or indorser upon [598]*598obligations of I. B. Merriam to a bank at Rochester, N. Y., the residence of Thos. Merriam; third, to the exoneration of Thos. Merriam, as security or indorser for I. B. Merriam or I. B. Merriam & Son, upon paper outstanding at Chattanooga, the place of residence of the bankrupt. The funds with which these latter payments were made were placed in the hands of I. B. Merriam, bankrupt, with the distinct agreement that Thos. Merriam should be protected by the payment of the claims upon which he was liable.

It is possible that out of the gross sum of $75,000 in money arising from the sale of the land, including the $10,000 raised by pledge of the shares of stock received as part of the price, that a few thousand dollars, not exceeding $10,000, was used by the bankrupt for purposes other than the protection of his brother; 'for the evidence is not clear or detailed as to the sums retained in the first instance by Thos. Merriam on account of the indebtedness of I. B. Merriam to him or for the purpose of paying off claims at Rochester upon which he was liable in some form of suretyship. Neither is the evidence satisfactory as to the precise amount of the claims paid off at Chattanooga by I. B. Merriam out of the proceeds of sale under his agreement to protect his brother by such application of that part of the price brought to Chattanooga from Rochester. At the time of this transfer and appropriation I. B. Merriam was hopelessly in- ' solvent, and within 10 days he filed his voluntary petition to be adjudicated a bankrupt, and was so adjudged. His assets consisted of a number of parcels of real estate situated in Chattanooga, all mortgaged for their full value or more, and a remnant of a stock of merchandise belonging to the firm of I. B. Merriam & Son, appraised at $1,800. The debts of I. B. Merriam individually and of I. B. Merriam & Son, excluding debts due to Thos. Merriam, or secured by him, and wholly unsecured, aggregate approximately $50,000, with no assets to apply to their payment if the purchase price of this coal land be excluded. It is therefore evident that when I. B. Merriam agreed to apply the proceeds of the sale of this land in exoneration of Thos. Merriam as his surety, and in payment of the alleged indebtedness to him, that he was hopelessly insolvent and could not but know that such was the case. Neither was this a recent condition, for the evidence satisfactorily shows that for several years he had been in failing circumstances, and that his creditors were held off only by the apparently unincumbered condition of his coal lands, and the constant promise that he was about to dispose of them for a price which would pay all of his debts and disencumber his Chattanooga property.

2. Neither do we see any reason for disagreeing with the court below in respect to its conclusion that Thos. Merriam was aware of his brother’s condition at the time he bought the land here involved, or of such suspicious facts as to charge him with inquiry and notice of such facts as he might have learned by an inquiry conducted in good faith. The bankrupt was his brother. For several years he had been supporting his credit, both by endorsements and by lending him money. He claims that as far back as 1897 he had taken his brother’s note for $35,000, secured by an unrecorded mort[599]*599gage upon his undivided interest in this coal land. This note he claims was for moneys theretofore loaned his brother from time to time which at the time the note and mortgage were given approximated $25,000, and for additional sums which he might thereafter lend him. This debt grew by reason of further alleged loans and through accumulation of interest until it approximated $44,000 at the date of payment, January 1, 1903. In addition to this, he claims to have incurred liability for him to the extent of probably $15,000 more. That his brother’s affairs were not prosperous and that his debts were increasing he was bound to know from the nature of his own transactions with him. It is true he did not live, at Chattanooga, but he occasionally visited his brother and concedes some degree of knowledge touching other indebtedness of the bankrupt. His deposition in support of his defense has been carefully read. It is neither full nor frank, and impresses us with the conviction that he was aware of the precarious condition of his brother’s affairs as far back as September, 1897, when he claims to have demanded a mortgage upon this coal land. That he should agree not to record the instrument then taken until he should deem it necessary for his own protection is significant of his knowledge of his brother’s condition and of the effect upon his credit if recorded. The very fact that after carrying his brother for years-he should demand the immediate payment of his entire debt out of the proceeds of the sale of this land, and his exoneration from liability as surety by the payment of every debt upon which he was bound, admits of but one explanation in the light of this evidence, and that is that he knew his brother was insolvent, and that, if he was not thus preferred, he would lose a large part of his debt. The mere fact that the mortgage of 1897 was not recorded does not, under the law of Tennessee, affect its validity, except as to creditors and purchasers without notice, if it was made for a valuable consideration and in good faith.

As between the parties to the instrument, it was, if made and held in good faith, a perfectly valid security. Shannon’s Tennessee Code, § 3749; Grady v. Sharron, 6 Yerg. 320; Hays v. McGuire, 8 Yerg. 92; Green v. Goodall, 1 Cold. 404; Woods v. Bonner, 89 Tenn. 411, 18 S. W. 67.

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Bluebook (online)
140 F. 596, 72 C.C.A. 164, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 3947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-page-ca6-1905.