Swartz v. Bachman

110 A. 260, 267 Pa. 185, 1920 Pa. LEXIS 834
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 12, 1920
DocketAppeal, No. 162
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 110 A. 260 (Swartz v. Bachman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swartz v. Bachman, 110 A. 260, 267 Pa. 185, 1920 Pa. LEXIS 834 (Pa. 1920).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Moschzisker,

Plaintiff filed a bill for an interpleader, to have judicially determined the ownership of certain corporate [187]*187stock in his hands, but claimed adversely by two others ; an issue was framed, with LaMoss Werner Roth, appellant, as plaintiff, and Laura S. Bachman, administratrix of Irving A. Bachman, deceased, as defendant. The case was tried by the court below without a jury, and judgment entered on a verdict for defendant; this appeal followed.

January, 1916, appellant, an adult married woman, and Irving A. Bachman, a married man, spent a week together at a Philadelphia hotel, in illicit intercourse. Bachman, who was the uncle of appellant’s husband, frequently visited the Roth home, and, on several occasions, suggested that Mrs. Roth yield to his embraces; finally, after these solicitations had continued some three months, she accompanied him to Philadelphia, with the deliberate purpose of entering into criminal relations. A few weeks thereafter, Bachman met appellant by appointment and stated that, recognizing the wrong she had suffered, he wanted to make amends; thereupon he delivered to her two demand notes, not under seal, one for $6,000 and the other for $5,000, both reciting a pledge, as “collateral,” of the stock in question, and giving the right of sale in case of default by the maker. The notes also recite that the same stock is deposited with a certain bank as collateral for a prior loan of $8,000; otherwise, they are drawn in the usual form.

Part of the collateral was sold by the first pledgee, and bought by Mark T. Swartz, its president, who is the complainant in the interpleader bill; the purchaser forthwith entered into an agreement with the pledgor, to hold the stock thus acquired until the latter’s obligation to the bank was paid, and then to transfer the shares to Bachman; the bank debt has since been fully discharged. The balance of the stock was also converted into money, and both sums, aggregating $40,596.43, are now in the hands of Swartz; appellant claims therefrom the amount of her notes, $11,000, with interest from [188]*188February 1, 1916, admitting that the balance is payable to appellee.

There is no pretense Bachman was financially indebted to Mrs. Both, or that she had rendered any service to him other than that already recited, and the record shows a finding that “the consideration for the notes in suit was the past cohabitation of Mr. Bachman and Mrs. Both”; these obligations, representing about one-fourth of the maker’s entire estate, were given at a time when the latter was hopelessly insolvent, in which condition he continued until his death, February 11, 1916.

On the facts as found, the court below determined that the attempted transfers to Mrs. Both lacked a sufficient consideration to support them as against the creditors of Bachman, and the fund realized from the sale of the pledged stock, after certain deductions, belonged to Bachman’s estate; it was accordingly awarded to his administratrix for the benefit of creditors.

Appellant contends the notes to her rest upon a “moral consideration,” and hence she is entitled to have them paid in full; while appellee claims they lack a “good consideration,” and therefore are void as against creditors.

It requires no citation of authority to show that the transfer by an insolvent of an appreciable portion of his estate, without a valuable consideration, is a prima facie fraud upon his creditors; and Chester County Trust Company v. Pugh, 241 Pa. 124, following cited precedents, decides that the administrator of an insolvent decedent may maintain a bill to set aside a conveyance, made by the latter, in fraud of creditors.

We agree with the court below that the transaction under investigation shows no sufficient consideration to support the claim of appellant. The law upon this subject is discussed by Chief Justice Brickell, of Alabama, in Potter & Son v. Gracie, 58 Ala. 303, 305, where many authorities are cited. He concludes (and we agree) that, no matter how far transfers of property to [189]*189paramours may have been sustained, they stand, and must be judged, as “any other conveyance, springing not from motives of justice, but from......affection, generosity or prudence,” and, when so judged, they are not good as against the claims of creditors, which “rest' on legal obligations, higher than the demands of affection or generosity.” The Chief Justice properly says that, as to- creditors, such conveyances are void because their “consideration is not valuable”; he adds, “The inflexible rule of the law is that a man must' be just before he is generous,” and, since “the claims of wife and children ......must yield to'the paramount legal duty of the debtor to creditors....., surely other [any] claim, which is the result of an immoral, illegal or meretricious connection, cannot stand on higher ground.” “A conveyance or. transfer in consideration of natural love and affection, as......a conveyance to wife or child, is merely voluntary”: 20 Cyc. 490.

The maxim referred to in the Alabama case, that “a man must be just before he is generous,” has frequently been applied in Pennsylvania: see Stickney v. Borman, 2 Pa. 67, 68; Coates et el. v. Gerlach, 44 Pa. 43; Ammon’s App., 63 Pa. 284. In these cases, where transfers of property from husband to wife were alleged as “unfair and unreasonable” to creditors, the maxim was given force, despite the moral, as well as legal, obligation of a husband to provide for his wife; and our law so heeds the rights of creditors that, in Thompson v Dougherty, 12 S. & R. 448, where a man about to enter into a new business transferred approximately half of his property to trustees for the benefit of his wife and children, we said, in setting aside the conveyance: Men, “under the plea of affection for their wives and children,” cannot “take away the beds from under the wives and children of their creditors”; which is but another application of the same maxim. See also Fair Haven Marble Co. v. Owens, 69 Vt. 246.

[190]*190In Mills v. Wyman, 3 Pick. (Mass.) 207, which contains an interesting discussion upon the point in hand, a limited construction is given to the term “moral obligation,” and the rule that such an obligation is sufficient consideration for an express promise, is there restricted in its application to instances where a good or valuable consideration once existed. Other cases, however, more broadly define the term as an obligation not enforceable by legal action, but which in good conscience and according to natural justice, is binding on him who incurs it. A more generally accepted definition runs thus: A moral obligation is “that imperative duty which would be enforceable by law were it not for some positive rule which, with a view to general benefit, exempts the party in that particular instance from legal liability”: 20 A. & E. Ency. of Law (2d ed.) 872.

The present case does not fall within any of the foregoing definitions; for, as we have seen, the law says that a debtor must be just before he is generous, and good conscience, as well as natural justice, dictates he must care for his creditors before he can indulge in liberality, even toward others to whom he may properly feel a sense of duty. Again, it is obvious that, prior to giving Mrs. Roth the notes in suit, decedent was under no financial obligation to her which, on any theory, could have been enforced at law.

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Bluebook (online)
110 A. 260, 267 Pa. 185, 1920 Pa. LEXIS 834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swartz-v-bachman-pa-1920.