Shelton v. Price

174 F. 891, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 112
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedDecember 16, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 174 F. 891 (Shelton v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shelton v. Price, 174 F. 891, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 112 (N.D. Ala. 1909).

Opinion

GRUBB, District Judge.

This was a bill in equity filed by the trustee of B. B.' Garner & Co.,' bankrupts, by direction of the bankrupt court to have declared null and void a sale of the bankrupt’s stock of goods and fixtures to the respondent, and restore the goods or the proceeds of the sale of them to the bankrupt estate for distribution among creditors, upon the ground that the sale was made with intent to defraud the creditors of the bankrupt, and that respondent knew or should have known of such intent. The issue is simplified by the express admission in the respondent’s answer that the alleged fraudulent sale was made within four months prior to the filing of the petition in ■ bankruptcy and while the bankrupt was insolvent, and, by the admission implied therein, from absence of any denial of the averment of the' bill that the sale was made with the intent on the bankrupts’ part 'to defrdud their creditors. The sale so made would be null and void under section 67e of the'bankrupt act (Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 564 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3449]), “except as to purchasers in good faith and ‘for a present, fair consideration.” The important inquiry is whether the respondent is shown by the evidence in the record to have been a purchaser in good faith and for a present, fair consideration. Both elements must concur in order to uphold the sale as against the trustee. . ...

The sale of the stock of goods and fixtures attacked by the bill was made in bulk and for an actual presently paid consideration of $5,000. Without extending the opinion by an analysis of the evidence relating to the fairness of the consideration paid, the conclusion reached by me is that the respondent paid a fair value for the goods purchased in view of their, condition at the tinie of the purchase and the fact that he overbid another purchaser for them. When the consideration paid is shown by the record to haye been adequate, the burden shifts to the [893]*893complainant to affirmatively show that respondent purchased in bad faith — i. e., that he knew of the intent of the bankrupt McSwine, who made the sale, to make it for the purpose of paying the debt owing by the bankrupt firm to his mother to the exclusion of the other creditors of the bankrupt; or was put on inquiry as to the existence of such intent on the bankrupt’s part, and failed to prosecute such inquiry with the required diligence, the doing of which would have disclosed to respondent the existence of such fraudulent intent. Jones v. Simpson, 116 U. S. 614, 6 Sup. Ct. 538, 29 L. Ed. 742. Under the present bankrupt act, it does not seem to me that the purchase oí a stock of goods and fixtures in bulk is prima facie fraudulent in the sense that proof of such sale alone answers the exigencies, of the burden imposed on complainant, of showing bad faith on respondent’s part in purchasing. Houck v. Christy, 152 Fed. 612, 81 C. C. A. 602. It is merely a circumstance along with the other attendant circumstances of the sale reflecting on the bona fides of the transaction. The question £c)r decision is whether the court is reasonably satisfied from the evidence in the record that the respondent was charged with the duty to discover the fraudulent intent of his vendor to use the proceeds of the sale for the purpose of paying one creditor to the exclusion of other creditors. If such duty rested upon respondent, before making the purchase, inquiry of the bankrupt McSwine would not answer the requisition in this respect. Inquiry from the bankrupt Garner, however, would, under the facts in this case, be on a different footing.

The facts attending the transaction, briefly stated, are as follows: The bankrupt firm consisted of two members, R. W. McSwine and B. B. Garner. At the time of the sale, the latter had withdrawn from the firm, and for some time, before his complete withdrawal, had been a salaried employe only and not a partner. He took no part in the sale and had no knowledge of it until after it was completed. He was an experienced groceryman, while McSwine was not. The business had not been a prosperous one, hut at the time of the sale the firm was not under strenuous pressure from any of its creditors. Even the Merchants’ Bank seems to have been induced to press its indebtedness only because of the suggestion of the bankrupt B. B. Garner, and not from any apprehension of its own as to its claim. No commercial creditors were pressing their claims or discontinuing credit. Had Garner remained with the firm, its business could have easily been continued until late in the spring without financial embarrassment or pressure. The immediate inducement to the sale may be fairly inferred to have been that B. B. Garner, the only experienced groceryman, severed his connection with the firm the first of the year; that the other member of the firm was incompetent to conduct the business of the firm without him, and was desirous of moving to Elorida with his mother and stepfather. The evidence fairly shows that a sale had been contemplated and openly discussed in Florence by the bankrupt iVlc-Swine and liis stepfather Wilson, speaking for him, for these anticipated reasons, for at least two months before the sale to respondent was made, and offers were solicited during that period both from respondent and others, and brokers were employed by McSwine and Wilson to procure a purchaser. This state of affairs was reasonably [894]*894well known in Florence for a considerable period before the sale. It seems clear that a bulk sale, attended by such circumstances, would not arouse suspicion of intending purchasers that it was a sale made in contemplation of insolvency by the vendors, and for the purpose of defrauding their creditors. Any suspicion arising from the offer to sell in bulk, and, so, out of the usual course of business, would be allayed by such generally known innocent reasons therefor. The reputation of the firm up to the time of the sale was not shaky. Garner was a man of integrity and known business capacity, while McSwine seems to have had an undeserved reputation of being a man of some means. It was not publicly known that Garner had left the firm until the time of the sale to respondent. The mere fact that the firm would likely owe mercantile debts, because of the character of its business, would not put upon inquiry an otherwise innocent purchaser, when the sale was publicly and not secretly made, and when there existed, known to the purchaser and the public, a sufficient and an innocent motive on the vendor’s part for making the sale, and when there was current in Florence no rumor that the. contemplated sale was due to the.shaky financial condition of the firm or to the impossibility of its continuing the business because of pressure from its creditors. The evidence fails to disclose the existence of any suspicion in Florence as to the financial instability, of the firm prior to the time of the sale. Indebtedness is not sufficient to create suspicion; it must be insolvency or indebtedness of a character likely to prevent the business from being conducted as a going concern. Simmons v. Shelton, 112 Ala. 294, 21 South. 309, 57 Am. St. Rep. 39.

Does the record show any facts within the peculiar knowledge of respondent, as distinguished from the public generally, that would put liim on inquiry'as to the fraudulent intent? The evidence shows that respondent was asked by McSwine or Wilson about December 1st to make an offer for the stock; that at one time respondent had been in the grocery business, and later and at the time of the sale had been -engaged in buying secondhand stocks and disposing of them. Respondent had known B. B. Garner, one of the bankrupts, all his life, and was an intimate friend.

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Related

Shelton v. Price
182 F. 1023 (Fifth Circuit, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
174 F. 891, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelton-v-price-alnd-1909.