Rothschild's Administrators v. Kohn Bros

19 S.W. 180, 93 Ky. 107, 1892 Ky. LEXIS 58
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 7, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 180 (Rothschild's Administrators v. Kohn Bros) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rothschild's Administrators v. Kohn Bros, 19 S.W. 180, 93 Ky. 107, 1892 Ky. LEXIS 58 (Ky. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE HOLT

delivered the opinion oe the court.

June 29, 1882, M. Levy made an assignment for the benefit of his creditors to one Baer. The assigned property consisted of a stock of merchandise.

After a small portion of them had been sold at retail by the assignee, the balance were, as is claimed, pretendingly purchased by Jacob Q-oldnamer as if for himself, but in fact for Levy, and paid for by the.latter. They [110]*110are brothers-in-law. Levy thenceforth controlled and carried on the business, but in the name of Goldnamer,. who was merchandising about a hundred miles distant.

In April, 1883, J. M. Robinson & Co. and C. H. Bliss, having judgments against Levy and returns of nulla bona, instituted actions ássailing the assignment and purchase by Goldnamer as fraudulent, and averring that the purchase was merely colorable as to Goldnamer, and in fact made for Levy, he furnishing the money to pay for the goods.

They sued out attachments, under which a portion of them were seized, and finally sold under a decree directed to be entered by the Superior Court, it holding that the purchase was fraudulent upon the part of Goldnamer, and made, in fact, for Levy.

The goods so seized did not, however, sell for enough to pay the debts of these two attaching creditors, and the actions remained pending upon the docket.

Goldnamer brought an action for a new trial upon the ground that he had discovered those creditors had, in a suit by the assignee to settle the trust, received their pro rata of the trust estate, including what had been paid for the goods bought in his name, and this fact was attempted to be relied on as an estoppel of the claim that 'the assignment or purchase in Goldnamer’s name was fraudulent.

A new trial was, however, refused, and, upon appeal, 'the judgment was affirmed by the Superior Court.

January 12, 1888, Kohn Bros. & Co., and other creditors of Levy, having obtained judgments and returns of “ no property,” sued to subject the goods in the store, which was still being conducted by him, but in Gold[111]*111namer’s name, claiming that the assignment and purchase by the latter, in 1882, were fraudulent; really for Levy’s benefit; that the latter had in fact paid for them,, and that all the stock then on hand, in truth, belonged to him. The summons was served on Levy January 14,. 1888, but not on Goldnamer until January 19, 1888. No attachment was sued out.

In November previous, Wald & Co. had brought asimilar. suit upon a return of “ no property. ” They sued out an attachment, but nothing was- done under it. Levy and Goldnamer were, however, served with summons within a day or two after the filing of the petition.

They, as well as one other creditor, also sued out executions upon judgments in their favor, which were levied upon the goods.

Goldnamer, with Joseph Rothschild as his surety, executed claimant bonds for them.

Notices were issued in January, but not executed until February, 1888, of motions upon these bonds, and at this stage those motions and all of the suits, including those of Robinson & Co. and Bliss, were, by consent, consolidated.

January 18, 1888, Goldnamer executed a mortgage upon the goods on hand to other creditors, who, on March 10, 1888, tendered a petition in these causes asserting the same, but it was rejected; and the court finally rendered a judgment, holding the obligors in the claimant’s bonds liable for the debts as to which they had been executed, and the goods on hand having been sold by a receiver, it ordered the remainder of the debts of Robinson & Co. and Bliss to be paid in full therefrom, and the balance to be distributed pro rata to the other plaintiffs, not [112]*112including the creditors who had obtained judgment upon the claimant bonds.

It would unnecessarily extend this opinion to detail the testimony in the case, or to consider whether the assignee was a party to any fraudulent purpose. It is •sufficient to say that when all the circumstances proven are considered, they are convincing to an unprejudiced mind of fraud upon the part of Levy to which Goldnamer was a party, and that the Superior Court was right in its ■conclusion upon the appeal in the cases of Robinson & •Co. and Bliss. Moreover, the chancellor has, in all these cases, considered the testimony and so .found, and his •conclusion as to this question of fact is, in our opinion, ■abundantly supported by the testimony.

The fact that the plaintiffs claimed and received their fro rata of the fund in the hands of the assignee in the suit by him to settle the trust, does not estop them from ■seeking to subject the goods now on hand, although, by reason of purchase and sale, they are not the indentical ■ones obtained from the assignee.

It is true, that in the action by the assignee to settle the trust, some of the creditors excepted to the commissioner’s report upon the ground that the purchase by Goldnamer was a pretended .and fraudulent one; but Goldnamer was not a party to that suit, and whether the purchase by him was merely colorable, and, in fact, for Levy’s benefit, which is the issue now made, «raid not have been determined .in .that action. The fact that the plaintiffs in these proceedings shared in the distribution •of the trust fund, including what was paid for the goods purchased in Goldnamer’s name, does not create any estoppel, because they are proceeding upon the ground that [113]*113the money paid for them was that of Levy; that the goods, therefore, also belonged to him, and that they have a right, therefore, to look to both for the payment of their debts. The idea is that the goods when purchased belonged to him, and that the business which had been conducted in Goldnamer’.s name, up to the time it was closed out by the appointment of the receiver in these actions, was in fact that of Levy, and that the goods •on hand, although not the identical ones obtained from the assignee, belonged to Levy, and were therefore liable for the debts of the plaintiffs. The question is not res judicata.

It is however said that Goldnamer and his surety in the claimant’s bonds have been made liable thereon, and still the goods, or the fund arising from their sale, have, by the judgment, been given to the other plaintiffs. So far as the surety is concerned, it is sufficient to say, that in such a case he can only look to his principal for indemnity. No right of subrogation to any creditor’s rights exists as to him, and Goldnamer will not, under the circumstances, be heard as to what equitable right, if any, the claimant of property, where he has been made liable and has thus satisfied the debt, has to look to the property for indemnity where other creditors of the debtors have intervened, and acquired the right to look to the property for the' satisfaction of their claims.

Goldnamer presents himself as a party to a fraud ; and while he may now be liable for goods which have been purchased in his name to run the store, yet, as he has allowed his name to be thus used in the carrying out of the fraudulent purpose, he must rely upon Levy paying for them and saving him harmless. Hé can not upon the [114]*114idea that if he was not the real owner of the goods, yet he at least held them in trust for Levy, be indemnified out of the proceeds, because if he can in any view be regarded as a trustee, he was a fraudulent one.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 180, 93 Ky. 107, 1892 Ky. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rothschilds-administrators-v-kohn-bros-kyctapp-1892.