Spuck v. Logan & Uhl

54 A. 989, 97 Md. 152
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 5, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 54 A. 989 (Spuck v. Logan & Uhl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spuck v. Logan & Uhl, 54 A. 989, 97 Md. 152 (Md. 1903).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree declaring certain deeds *154 fraudulent and void as against the appellees, who are creditors of Christian Spuck, and directing a sale of the property mentioned therein. On the nth day of January, 1898, Spuck and wife conveyed two ground rents in the city of Baltimore to Solomon Haas, and on April 30th of that year Haas and wife conveyed them to William Deehring, one of the appellauts, in-pursuance of the original arrangement made between them when deed of January 1 ith was made. Each of those deeds recites a consideration of eight hundred and fifty dollars, but it was admitted that no consideration was in fact paid at the time of the execution or delivery of either of them, and it is conclusively shown by the testimony that the transfers were made to prevent one Charles H. Snack from recovering against Spuck on any judgment he might obtain in a suit for damages, instituted on March 1st, 1898. Deehring, Haas and Spuck admit that such was the object of the deeds and that no considration was in fact paid. Snack, who had been in the employ of Spuck, claimed he was injured by reason of the latter negligently allowing the machine which Smack was operating to become in an unsafe, dangerous and unsuitable condition, which he claims resulted in the loss of his arm, and he claimed ten thousand dollars damages in the declaration filed by him. That suit was never tried and is still pending in one of the Courts of Baltimore City. On October 3rd, 1899, Deehring loaned Spuck four hundred dollars, for which he took his note, payable one year after date, and on October 3rd, 1900, a new note was given payable twelve months after date. Deehring owned a leasehold interest in one of the lots and he agreed with Spuck in December, 1900, to purchase the two ground rents for eight hundred and fifty dollars—$450.00 in cash and the cancellation of the $400 note. The cash was paid and the note surrendered, and there seems to be no doubt about the price named being a fair estimate of the value of the property. Deerhring and wife, and Spuck and wife then conveyed the two lots to J. W. Oast, by deed dated December 19th, 1900, in which the consideration recited was five dollars and the same day Oast conveyed them to Deehring and his wife— *155 the same consideration being mentioned in that deed. Mr. Strohmeyer, who drew these deeds, testified that “While examining the title, I discovered that there had never been a lease executed for the ground rent which was intended to be conveyed to Mr. Deehring, and for the purpose of wiping out any flaw by putting the property in fee in Mr. Deehring I suggesten that Mr. and Mrs. Spuck and Mr. and Mrs. Deehring convey to Mr. Oast, by which deed all the interest of all the parties was conveyed to Mr. Oast and then a deed by Mr. Oast to Mr. and Mrs. Deehring.” He also said that the original conveyance by Spuck and wife to Deehring “was an assignment of a leasehold interest in one of these lots, subject to a ground rent of $26.26,” and in reply to the interrogatory “Had any leasehold interest been previously created?” replied, “No, sir, there had not.”

The principal question presented by the record may be thus stated : As the deeds executed in 1898 were confessedly made by or at the instance of Spuck and accepted by Deehring for the express purpose of preventing any recovery by Snack, for damages alleged to have been sustained by him for the injury he held Spuck responsible for, and as the title was thus kept in Deehring until December 19th, 1900 (although Spuck regularly collected the ground rents and acted as owner), are the deeds of the latter date fraudulent, so far as the appellees are concerned, conceding that full consideration was then paid for the lots conveyed ? A number of questions are involved in this case, but inasmuch as it would not afford the appellees relief to set aside the two deeds of 1898 unless those executed in 1900 can be, the validity of the latter is the important inquiry. It will be well to first ascertain the relation that existed between Spuck and the appellees. The latter obtained a judgment against the former before this bill was filed on an account running from January 1st, 1898, to February 5th, 1901. In the early part of the account the course of dealing seemed to be that for purchases made one month Spuck paid the appellees the next month. That was apparently continued for sometime, although the indebtedness was growing. On *156 January ist, 1898, there was a balance from the previous year of $305.84, which was paid that month, but an indebtedness of $383.43 was incurred that day which was paid in February, and the balances struck in the account filed were as follows : December 31st, 1898, $574.61, which was the amount of purchases in that month; June 30th, 1899,$741.60,theamount purchased in June ; January ist, 1900, $785.07, which is $135.51 more than the purchases during the previous December, and finally on February 5th, 1901, there was a balance of $1,031.32 on which $6.95 was paid in October. There never was a time from January ist, 1898, to the filing of this bill when the appellees were not creditors of Spuck, and on December 19th, 1900 (the date of the last deed), he owed them $923.85. It cannot be said, therefore, that the appellees were not subsisting creditors of Spuck when he made the deed of January nth, 1898, although the amount owing to them at that time was subsequently paid. But before it was paid Spuck had in the meantime incurred other indebtedness to them for a larger amount, and that course of dealing continued between them until finally Spuck was indebted to the appellees in the sum stated. If that was all, we would find diffiulty in reaching the conclusion contended for by the appellants, that the appellees were merely subsequent creditors. In Paulk v. Cook, 39 Conn. 572, it was contended that the debts which existed at the time of the conveyance attacked was made had been paid with one exception, and that a voluntary conveyance could only be impeached by existing, and not by subsequent, creditors, but that Court thus replied : “This principle clearly has no application where there has been a continued, unbroken indebtedness. The debts are owed, though they may be due to new creditors. It is a most unsubstantial mode of paying a debt, to contract another of equal amount. It is the merest fallacy to call such an act getting out of debt.” In Wait on Fraud Con., section 103, that author in speaking of the subject says “the case should be treated as if the prior indebtedness had continued throughout, or as a case of a continued or unbroken indebtedness.” In this case there is all the more reason to *157 adopt that rule, as Spuck was indebted to the appellees (not merely to new parties) constantly and without interruption from January 1st, 1898, and to say that under those circumstances they must be denied any rights that subsisting creditors have against a fraudulent conveyance would be protecting fraud by a distinction that should not be made in favor of the guilty against the defrauded.

But if such distinction could be made, it would not avail the appellants. There can be no doubt that whatever fraud was committed on January 1 ith, 1898, when the first deed was made, continued up to the execution of the deeds of December 19th, 1900.

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Bluebook (online)
54 A. 989, 97 Md. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spuck-v-logan-uhl-md-1903.