Stockley v. Horsey, Millar Co.

9 Del. 605
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJune 5, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Del. 605 (Stockley v. Horsey, Millar Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stockley v. Horsey, Millar Co., 9 Del. 605 (Del. 1874).

Opinion

THIS case came up on cross appeals, the first by Stockley alone, as one of the respondents, and the other by Horsey, Millar Co., complainants in the court below, to the decree of the Chancellor sitting in and for Sussex County, and were heard together as one and the same case before Gilpin, C. J., and Wootten, Houston and Wales, Associate justices, in this court, The nature of the case, the substance of the bill and answers and the evidence in it, will sufficiently appear from the opinion delivered by his honor the Chancellor in the court below, and read in this curt, which was as follows: This case arises under the following circumstances. William B. Horsey and John E. Martin, lately trading under the name and style of John E. Martin, at Seaford, in this state, became indebted to sundry creditors in the City of Baltimore whom they were unable to pay. In September 1866, Horsey visited Baltimore with a view to effect a settlement of the debts. A few days after, Benjamin Stockley followed him for the purpose of aiding him in effecting a settlement. The negotiations with the creditors resulted in their receiving fifty per cent. on the amount of their respective debts. The money was paid by Stockley and the bills receipted to him. The total amount of the debts thus settled was $4,060.95. The amount of money paid to the creditors was a little more than fifty per cent. on the gross amount. One of the debts which was of small amount was paid in full. The fifty per cent. was accepted by the creditors in full satisfaction of any further claim on their part, but whether the transaction was in effect a legal discharge of the debts or a purchase of them by Stockley is one of the points of controversy. *Page 605

On the 27th of December 1866 Horsey gave his judgment bond to Stockley for $4,625.00 with interest from date, upon which judgment was entered in the Superior Court of Sussex County on the 25th of February 1867: execution was issued on said judgment under which the real estate of Horsey was sold by the Sheriff for $5,475.00, Stockley being the purchaser. He paid to the Sheriff the ten per cent., $547.50, but failed to comply at the return of the sale, and, thereupon, on the 26th of August 1871 further execution was issued under which a sale of the property was made and Stockley again became the bidder at $4,500.00. With the terms of this sale he complied and took title to the property by the Sheriff's deed. The proceeds of sale being $4,500 together with the forfeited ten per cent. on the first sale ($547.50) remain in the Sheriff's hands under the Injunction issued in this cause. They are here claimed by the complainants, so far as they are necessary to satisfy the judgment held by them against Horsey for $2,965.78 with interest from August 17th, 1867, this judgment being the first lien against Horsey's real estate after the judgment of Stockley. The bid seeks to avoid Stockley's judgment upon the ground of fraud, and charges that the bond upon which the judgment was entered was given by Horsey to Stockley without any consideration and in order to defraud Horsey's creditors; that the money paid by Stockley to the Baltimore creditors was in fact furnished by Horsey, that even the money paid by Stockley to the sheriff for the real estate was furnished by Horsey, that the whole proceeding was a fraudulent scheme by which the property should be secured to the use and benefit of Horsey clear of his debts. The bill prays that so much of the fund in the Sheriff's hands as may be necessary shall be applied to the judgment of the complainants. It also prays that Stockley may be decreed to convey to Horsey the real estate purchased at Sheriff's sale.

The answer denies in toto the fraud charged by the bill. It alleges that the money paid to the Baltimore creditors *Page 606 was raised out of Stockley's own means and no part of it derived from Horsey. It claims that the purpose or effect of Stockley's settlement with the creditors was to make him a purchaser of the debts and to entitle him to collect the whole amount from Horsey and from Martin, and that the bond for $4,624.00 was given by Horsey in good faith to secure the just demand of Stockley, the co-partner, John E. Martin, having declined to join in it. With respect to the money paid by Stockley to the Sheriff for the real estate, the answer alleges that it was raised by the sale of certain government securities borrowed by Stockley from William H. Hazzard in Brooklyn, N. Y., for which he has since accounted and that no part of the purchase money was derived from Horsey. At the hearing of the cause the prayer for a conveyance of the real estate to Stockley by Horsey and the charges upon which it was founded were abandoned, and the controversy was confined to the validity of the bond and the judgment under which the real estate was sold. The defendant, Stockley, clains under the bond in controversy the right to receive the whole amount of the Baltimore debts ($4,060.95), although in point of fact he confessedly paid in the settlement of those debts only the sum of 82,107.28, upon the ground that the settlement was a purchase and not a discharge of the debts; on the other hand the complainants insist that although Stockley did pay the fifty percent. a fact so clearly proved as not to be disputed in the argument, yet that he is entitled under the bond to receive no thing, not even the reimbursement of the sums paid by him.

My own conclusion is between the conflicting claims of the parties. I think Stockley is entitled to be reimbursed what he paid with interest, and nothing more on account of the Baltimore debts. I will state my reasons. In the first place it is clearly proved and now hardly if at all disputed, chat Stockley applied to the debts his own money and that no part of it came from Horsey. The answers of the defendants on this point being responsive to the bill would be alone conclusive, but they are corroborated by *Page 607 the testimony of Edmundson. It appears from the testimony of this witness that Horsey failed in his first plan of liquidating these debts by raising a loan upon the mortgage of his real estate, and that at this juncture Edmundson advised Stockley to take Horsey's affairs in hand, and upon Stockley's objecting that he had not the money at command, offered to loan him what might be necessary to settle with the other creditors, and to take Stockley's note for the fifty per cent. on his own debt. Stockley acceded to this suggestion and it was carried into effect. Edmund-son's debt amounted at that date to $2140.77, one half of which was $1070.38. Stockley paid in cash $70.38 and gave his note for $1000.00 which Edmundson further testifies Stockley afterward paid, partly out of the proceeds of grain and partly in money at different times. Edmundson also loaned to Stockley $1000.00 for the purpose of enabling him to settle with the other creditors, a sum very nearly sufficient for that purpose, and this loan was afterward repaid by Stockley.

In the next place the evidence clearly satisfies me that the transaction between Stockley and the creditors was not a purchase of their claims, but a satisfaction and discharge of them for Horsey Martin's benefit, the payment by Stockley being in effect a loan to Horsey and Martin. The settlement with the creditors was the direct fruit of a negotiation just had between Horsey and the creditors at a meeting with them for the purpose of obtaining a compromise of the debts at fifty per cent.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Del. 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockley-v-horsey-millar-co-del-1874.