Stobaugh v. Mills

23 F. Cas. 110, 8 Nat. Bank. Reg. 361
CourtDistrict Court, D. Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 23 F. Cas. 110 (Stobaugh v. Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stobaugh v. Mills, 23 F. Cas. 110, 8 Nat. Bank. Reg. 361 (texd 1873).

Opinion

DUVAL, District Judge.

Levy & Bro., filed their petition praying to be adjudged bankrupts, on the 12th of September. 1SGS, and were adjudicated bankrupts on the 20th of October, 1868. Complainant, as the assignee of said bankrupts, filed his bill in equity, in this court, on the 24th of March. 1871, seeking to set aside a deed of assignment made by the said bankrupts to the defendants, on the 22d day of May, 18GS, as being fraudulent, and to recover the property thereby conveyed to defendants as trustees, &c. At the date of the assignment, the defendant, Mills, and liis wife, were creditors of bankrupts to the amount of about two thousand dollars, and the defendant, Fitch, to about- one thousand dollars, and as such creditors they accepted the trust. The bankrupts were merchants, and by the terms of the deed of assignment (which was joint and several, as well as irrevocable) they conveyed to the said defendants, all their goods, wares and merchandise, chattels, notes, bills, bonds, judgments, evidences of debt, securities and vouchers, for and affecting the payment of money, claims, demands, things in action, and all property of any nature whatsoever; all of which the defendants seem to have received in their possession as trustees aforesaid. The deed of assignment further provides that the debts due from bankrupts to defendants and one R. Walden should be paid in full — that certain other debts therein mentioned, should then be paid off and discharged, if there were sufficient funds for that purpose, and if not, they were to be paid pro rata, &c. The bill specifically alleges, among other things, that within less than four months before the filing of the petition of Levy & Bro., in bankruptcy, to wit: on the 22d of May, 18GS, they being then in failing circumstances, and contemplating bankruptcy, and being insolvent, made the said deed of assignment, and, among other assets, delivered to said defendants, as trustees aforesaid, goods, wares and merchandise, then on hand, to the value of three thousand nine hundred and fifty-nine dollars and twenty-seven cents, as appears from a schedule thereof, made a part of the bill. It is further alleged in the bill that the defendants knew Levy & Bro. were insolvent at the time of the assignment, and contemplated bankruptcy, and that they combined and confederated with said Levy & Bro., and fraudulently procured the making of the same, in order that said defendants might receive a preference of payment over other creditors of said bankrupts.

The defendant, Fitch, failing to answer the bill, a decree pro confesso has been taken against him, and at this term leave to enter a final decree as to him has been prayed and granted. The defendant, Mills, filed his answer on the 3d of July, 1872. He denies any knowledge of the . bankrupts contemplating bankruptcy at the time of the assignment, or that the making of the same was fraudulently procured by the trustees, who only received the same for the purpose of securing their own legal and honest debts — denies that he took or intended to take any fraudulent preference over other creditors — denies that trustees applied any assets of the bankrupt estate to the payment of their own debts in full, but admits that about one thousand five hundred and sixteen dollars worth of goods [111]*111was turned over to him, Mills, under a judgment of the district court, of Johnson county, at the fall term of 186S — denies that any demand for the goods, &e., or for any account thereof was made of him by complainant, but admits that there was of his co-trustee, Fitch, in the month of -, 1SG9. The j charge of insolvency on the part of Levy & ¡ Bro., at the time of the assignment, and the : knowledge thereof by defendants, is not de- ¡ nied. They only deny any knowledge of a ! contemplation of bankruptcy. Admits that he and his co-trustee took possession of a bill , of merchandise, amounting to about three 1 thousand nine hundred and fifty-nine dollars Í and twenty-seven cents, but avers that the ; same were returned to the possession of Levy • & Bro., after the deed of assignment was j made, and before Levy & Bro., went into j bankruptcy, who sold the most of them, &c. I

The cause is now heard and tried upon bill, i answer and exhibits. The admission con-', tained in the answer, shows its falsity or in- i accuracy in some respects; thus, while deny- j ing notice of the filing of the petition in bank- I ruptey until he learned through Messrs. Bob- ¡ ertson & Herndon, in the early part of the ! year 1871, he admits that complainant, as as- 1 signee of the bankrupts, demanded the goods I of his co-trustee in the month of-, 1809. ! Now the filing of the petitions in bankruptcy I in September. 1808, was constructive notice j to the defendants of that fact, and a demand ¡ of the goods by the assignee in 1869, upon ; Fitch, was in law a demand on the defend- | ant Mills. Again, while averring that all the | goods, &c., were turned over to Levy &. Bro. : before September 12th, ISOS, the answer ad- I mits, in another part, that six hundred dol- j lars worth were turned over to complainant, i as assignee, in 1809. The act of one joint ! and several trustee is the act of both. If ¡ the trustees, as alleged in the answer, re- I Turned the bill of goods amounting to throe I thousand nine hundred and fifty-nine dollars i and twenty-seven cents to Levy & Bro., such ' a return was wholly inconsistent with the as- i signment. and the pulposos for which the de- : fendants undertook the trust. It would of ; itself be a very suspicious act, and in any ■ event could not relieve the defendants from j the legal effect of the trust deed. Upon the j face of the answer it is, in some material re- ; spects, vague, evasive and contradictory, and : not responsive to the allegations of the bill. '■ Now, as to the legal effect of the assignment : itself, it shows by its very terms that the bankrupts were then insolvent. They were , merchants and unable to pay their debts in j the ordinary course of business. This is the j avowed cause prompting them to make the I assignment. And when, in addition to this ! fact, we find by reference to their schedules, ¡ made exhibits herein, and filed in the bank- i rapt court, that the bankrupts were then in- ! debted to over twenty thousand dollars, there can be no question as to their utter insolvency. That the defendants not only had reasonable cause to believe Levy & Bro. to be then insolvent, but that in the very nature of things they must have known it, there can hardly be a question. The deed of trust itself, with its admissions as to the inability of the bankrupts to meet their debts, was sufficient notice of the fact to the defendants who were themselves creditors. That the deed of assignment gave the defendants a preference over other creditors is equally free from doubt.

In the case of Toof v. Martin [13 Wall. (80 U. S.) 40], the supreme court of the United States, says: “It is a general principle that every one must be presumed to intend the necessary consequences of his acts. The transfer, in any case, by a debtor, of a large portion of his property, while he is insolvent, to one creditor, without makiDg provision for an equal distribution of its proceeds to all his creditors, necessarily operates as a preference to him, and must be taken as conclusive evidence that a preference was intended, unless the debtor can show that at the time he was ignorant of his insolvency, and that his affairs were such that he could reasonably expect to pay all his debts. The burden of proof is upon him in such case, and not upon the assignee or contestant in bankruptcy.” No such proof was made or attempted in this case.

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23 F. Cas. 110, 8 Nat. Bank. Reg. 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stobaugh-v-mills-texd-1873.