Tennent-Stribling Shoe Co. v. Davie

75 Miss. 447
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 75 Miss. 447 (Tennent-Stribling Shoe Co. v. Davie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tennent-Stribling Shoe Co. v. Davie, 75 Miss. 447 (Mich. 1897).

Opinion

Woods, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the latter part of March, 1897, the appellee, M. J. Davie, was the owner of a small mercantile business in the town of Macon, which was under the sole control and management of one R. M. Fruit, a son of Mrs. Davie by a former marriage. She was also the owner of two tracts of land, named and described in the pleadings, one of which, the larger, was under mortgage for the sum of $1,650, and the other, the smaller, was also under mortgage for the sum of $700. On March 29, 1897, Mrs. Davie conveyed both tracts of laud, by separate deeds, to Mrs. Manie R. Fruit, her daughter-in-law, the wife of said R. M. Fruit, for a recited consideration, in the one case, of $1,350, cash in hand paid, and the assumption by the vendee of the mortgage debt of $1,650, and for a recited consideration, in the other case, of $710, in hand paid, and the assumption by [450]*450the vendee of the $700 mortgage debt thereon. On the same day, the purchaser of these lands, Mrs. Manie R. Pruit, executed a mortgage on all the lands acquired as just stated, in favor of Mrs. Annie E. Fant, to secure an indebtedness of $1,650, evidenced by Mrs. Pruit’s promissory note of that date. Three days later, on April 1, R. M. Pruit, the son of Mrs. Davie, and her mercantile manager, sold the stock of goods in Macon to Mrs. M. E. Edwards, and delivered possession at once, Mrs. Edwards paying $500 cash down, and agreeing to pay the balance of the purchase price when the amount should be certainly ascertained by an inventory to be immediately taken.

On the second day of April the appellants exhibited their bill in the chancery court of Noxubee county, charging that these several sales of the land, and that of the stock of goods, were all parts and parcel of a fraudulent scheme devised by R. M. Pruit to put Mrs. Davie’s property beyond the reach of her creditors, and that all the parties to these several transactions acted with knowledge'of this fraudulent purpose, and assisted in the attempt to thus carry it out. The bill prays cancellation of the conveyances of the lands, and an annullment of the sale of the stock of goods.

All the parties answered, denying fraud or participation in, or knowledge of, any fraud, and averring that sales and purchases were made in good faith and for the considerations recited.' Much evidence was taken, and, on final hearing, the court below found that.the allegations of the bill touching the fraudulent character of the mortgage executed by Mrs. Pruit in favor of Mrs. Annie E. Fant, were not sustained, and that Mrs. Fant acted in good faith and without notice of any fraud on the part of Mrs. Davie or R. M. Pruit. The court also found that the allegations of the bill in regard to the sale of the stock of goods to Mrs. Edwards, were not.sustained by the evidence, and that Mrs. Edwards was a honafide purchaser for value and without notice of any fraudulent purpose on the part [451]*451of the seller. The court further found that the allegations of the bill as to the sale of the lands by Mrs. Davie to Mrs. Pruit, were sustained by the evidence as to the recited consideration of §710 in one of the conveyances from Mrs. Davie and Mrs. Pruit, the court being of opinion that this consideration of §710 was fictitious and simulated. The decree of the court accordingly dismissed the bill as to Mrs. Fant and Mrs. Edwards, taxing the complainants with two-thirds of the costs, and declared Mrs. Pruit’s title to the lands conveyed to her by Mrs. Davie null and void.

From the decree in favor of Mrs. Fant and Mrs. Edwards the complainants -appeal; and from the decree vacating her title, Mrs. Pruit prosecutes a cross appeal.

The gravamen of complainants’ bill was the formation of a fraudulent scheme, by Mrs. Davie and R. M. Pruit, to conceal her property by false and pretended conveyances and sales, whereby the property of Mrs. Davie would be placed beyond the reach of her creditors and the participation in that fraudulent scheme by the other respondents. It was not enough to charge this fraudulent scheme in vigorous phrase, nor enough to produce evidence to support the charge, which raised mere suspicion, but it rested upon complainants to clearly show the frauds charged by satisfactory evidence. Until that had been done, to the extent at least of making a -prima facie case, the duty was not upon the respondents to show that their purchases were made in good faith.

Now, the findings and decree of the court below necessarily involved the proposition that the sweeping charges of the bill as to the fraudulent scheme therein set out, were not supported by the evidence, and the court only vacated the titles conveyed to Mrs. Pruit by Mrs. Davie, because, in the court’s opinion, the recited consideration in one of those conveyances of §710 was fictitious.

We first dispose of the contention of appellants as to the fraudulent character of the sale of the stock of goods to Mrs. [452]*452Edwards. There is not one word in the transcript even tending to show that Mrs. Edwards or her husband, who represented her in that transaction, had any knowledge whatever of Mrs. Davie’s condition. On the contrary, it affirmatively appears that they had no knowledge of any sort. The simple facts are that R. M. Pruit proposed to sell to Mrs. Edwards because the-business, as conducted, was unprofitable, and Mrs. Edwards offered to buy, and did, on the next day, actually buy, at sixty cents on the dollar, and all this without Mrs. Davie ever being consulted, and without any knowledge of the contemplated sale, on her part, until after it had been made. That Mrs. Edwards paid $500 of the purchase price, at the time of sale, to W. B. Stewart, and the balance subsequently to Stewart, at Mrs. Davie’s direction, cannot be doubted, and that Stewart was her creditor, for loaned money and by indorsement in bank, in a sum far in excess of the purchase price of the goods, we have no doubt. The action of the court below in upholding this sale was correct. Indeed, we do not see how the court could have found otherwise.

We come now to consider the action of the court in upholding Mrs. Fant’s rights as mortgagee, and in dismissing the bill as to her. In March, 1897, Mrs. Davie needed some money for her own individual uses, and she desired to raise additional funds to fling into the little mercantile maelstrom operated by her son. • Mrs. Pruit was then desirous to collect from Mrs. Davie an alleged debt of $710, before that, as is said, created by Mrs. Pruit having loaned to Mrs. Davie (out of a loan of $1,000, clearly shown to have been made Mrs. Pruit by the Georgia Building & Loan Association) said sum of $710. In this posture of affairs, it appears that both Mrs. Davie and Mrs. Pruit consulted A. C. Fant, Esq., a member of the Macon bar, and a brother of Mrs- Pruit and a nephew of Mrs. Davie, as to what should be done, and Mr. Fant undertook to effect a loan by which the desires of his aunt and sister would be met. The plan was this: He applied to his mother, Mrs. Annie E. Fant, [453]*453to help, and she agreed to borrow, and did borrow, from one N. H. Harrison, SI, 350, and mortgaged her own estate, wholly disconnected from any of the lands involved in this litigation, to secure the loan. This SI, 350 was to be loaned, and was loaned a few days later, to Mrs. Pruit,'it being agreed upon as a part of this plan that Mrs. Davie should convey her two tracts of land to Mrs. Pruit, one for SI,350 cash and the assumption of the mortgage debt on it of SI,650, and the other for the $710 claimed by Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Miss. 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennent-stribling-shoe-co-v-davie-miss-1897.