State Ex Rel. v. Nashville Trust Co.

190 S.W.2d 785, 28 Tenn. App. 388, 1944 Tenn. App. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 4, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 190 S.W.2d 785 (State Ex Rel. v. Nashville Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. v. Nashville Trust Co., 190 S.W.2d 785, 28 Tenn. App. 388, 1944 Tenn. App. LEXIS 79 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

PELTS, J.

The State of Tennessee, a judgment creditor of Rogers Caldwell for $4,354,702.73,- seeks by this suit to subject certain land on which he put $350,133.80 of im *393 provements and which, was later given him by his father in a “spendthrift trust.”

The land is a tract of 204 acres near the Franklin Pike some seven miles from Nashville. James E. Caldwell, father of Rogers Caldwell, bought the land in 1909 for $18,436.00'. ’ In 1917 he allowed his son Rogers to move onto the land and live there until the improvements were begun. He had declared his purpose to give the land to Rogers in trust free from the claims of creditors. Acting upon this understanding and with his father’s consent, Rogers Caldwell named the place “Brentwood Hall” and built thereon a mansion and other improvements costing $350,133.80. He did this during a period of two years from June, 1927 to June, 1929.

He had little or no property except'his stock in Caldwell & Company, a corporation which he had organized in 1917 and which described itself as investment bankers and dealt in stocks and bonds of private and public corporations. He owned all the stock in Caldwell & Company and Caldwell & Company owned all the stock in two subsidiaries, Rogers Caldwell & Company and the Bank of Tennessee. Rogers Caldwell & Company was a corporation which had been organized to sell Caldwell & Company’s securities in New York and the other great money centers in that section. The Bank of Tennessee had been organized under a banking charter to receive deposits and it was operated in the Nashville office of Caldwell & Company.

The Bank of Tennessee was designated a public depository, and from 1924 to 1930' it was continuously receiving-large deposits from cities, counties, and the State of Tennessee. Pursuant to Code, sec. 230, it made bonds to secure the State’s deposits. The sureties on these bonds were Rogers Caldwell and employees of Caldwell *394 & Company. These bonds ran into millions of dollars. Prom February, 1927, to November, 1930', Caldwell & Company did an enormous business buying and selling bond issues of counties and cities, sponsoring numerous private corporations and selling their stocks or bonds, and acquiring, with others, control of several banks and insurance companies.

Caldwell & Company, Rogers Caldwell & Company, and the Bank of Tennessee failed November 6,1930. At that time Rogers Caldwell was surety on four depository bonds to the State of Tennessee aggregating $6,250,000. On November 18, 1930, there was recorded a deed of James E. Caldwell and wife conveying this 204 acres of land to the Nashville Trust Company, trustee, in a spendthrift trust for Rogers Caldwell and any child that might be born to him. This deed bad been dated September 19, 1930, and its acknowledgment bad been dated the same day. It vested the legal title in the Nashville Trust Company, trustee, and gave Rogers Caldwell and any child of bis the right to occupy and enjoy the land for life, but without the right to alienate it and without its being-in any wise liable for any debt of his or of any child be might have.

Within a day or two after these failures the superintendent of banks brought a suit to liquidate the Bank of Tennessee, and creditors of Caldwell & Company brought a receivership suit in the Federal Court at Nashville to wind up Caldwell & Company. The State of Tennessee brought suit against Rogers Caldwell and the other sureties on these four depository bonds. Also on December 4, 1930,' the State filed the original hill in this cause against the Nashville Trust Company, trustee,-James E. Caldwell, Rogers Caldwell, and the unborn children of Rogers Caldwell, to subject the land to the payment *395 of the obligation of Rogers Caldwell as surety on these bonds. ' a

He took the position that the amount of his liability as surety could not be determined until the principal, the Bank of Tennessee, had been liquidated. So the present suit was delayed until that was done. On December 1,, 1938, the State filed an amended and supplemental bill in the present suit stating that the Bank of Tennessee had been liquidated and had paid to the State as a preferred creditor only a small dividend; that on November 21, 1938 the State had recovered a judgment on these four depository bonds' against Rogers Caldwell for $4,-354,702.73; and that execution had been issued and returned nulla bona. Since there is no question upon the pleadings, their averments need not be detailed. The case made by the bill, as supplemented and amended, set forth two grounds for relief:

(1) That Rogers Caldwell put the $350,133.80 of improvements on the land of his father with a secret agreement or understanding with his father that his father would give him back the improvements and the land in a trust free from his creditors; that he was largely indebted, engaged in hazardous speculation, expected to incur debts beyond his ability to pay, and transferred this $350,133.80 to his father with an actual intent to hinder, delay, and defraud his existing and subsequent creditors; that this intent was known and participated in by the father, the transferee; that this transfer and the transfer to the Nashville Trust Company, trustee, were fraudulent conveyances; and that the State has the right to have them set aside and to subject the whole value of the land up to the $350,133.80' to the payment of its debt.

(2) That, regardless of any actual intent to defraud his creditors, the making of these improvements by *396 Rogers Caldwell, upon tlie understanding* with, his father that the land with these improvements would be given him in trust free from his creditors, was a contribution by him to the trust property and to that extent a creation by him of a trust for his own benefit; that since one may not have and enjoy, free from his creditors, ■ property which he has himself paid for or contributed to, the trust was a fraud in law upon his creditors to the extent that his contribution enhanced the value of the property; and that the State has the right to subject the property to the extent of such enhancement.

The separate answers of Rogers Caldwell and James E. Caldwell denied that the State was entitled to any relief upon either of these grounds, denied all the charges of fraud, denied that the making* of the improvements was a fraudulent conveyance or a contribution by Rogers Caldwell to the trust property, and denied that the conveyance to the Nashville Trust Company, trustee, was fraudulent either in fact or in law. These answers averred that James E.

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W.2d 785, 28 Tenn. App. 388, 1944 Tenn. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-v-nashville-trust-co-tennctapp-1944.