Thompson Nat. Bank v. Corwine

89 F. 774, 12 Ohio F. Dec. 593, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3116
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio
DecidedNovember 9, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 89 F. 774 (Thompson Nat. Bank v. Corwine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson Nat. Bank v. Corwine, 89 F. 774, 12 Ohio F. Dec. 593, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3116 (circtsdoh 1898).

Opinion

TAFT, Circuit Judge.

The complainant is a judgment creditor of John W. Corwine, in the sum of $5,044, on a judgment recovered November 21, 1894. As such, it files its bill against John W. Cor-[775]*775wine, Mary W. Lee, William I!. Lee, James D. Corwine, Eliza Cor-wine, John W. Barger, Kerziah I). Barger, Baehel M. Foster, Jane B. Foster, Peter B. Hayes and George D. Cole, partners as Hayes, Jones & Co., together with certain other judgment creditors of John W. Corwine, who filed cross bills seeking the same relief as the comida inant. The purpose of the bill and cross bills is to set aside as fraudulent five deeds and one mortgage. Four of the deeds were executed by John W. Corwine to his four children, — Mary W. Lee, James L>. Corwine, Kerziah Barger, and Jane B. Foster. ■A fifth deed was executed by John W. Corwine to John W. .Barger, and the mortgage was executed by John W. Barger to Hayes, Jones & Co. The grounds of fraud set up in the bill are — First, that''the consideration paid for the land conveyed was wholly inadequate, and that, at the time of such conveyance, John W. Corwine was insolvent, and the deeds were made to hinder, delay, and defraud creditors; and, second, that the deeds were executed before the debts upon which the judgments of the complainant and cross complain ants were contracted, and that they were kept off the record, and the fact of their existence concealed, for the purpose of inducing the complainant and cross complainants to contract their debts, under the belief that John W. Corwine was still the owner of the land conveyed in the deeds complained of. The bill seeks 1o have tin1 conveyances set aside, ar.d the land subjected to the payment of Hie judgments of the complainant and cross complainants. The defendants filed answers, denying all fraud, and averring that the conveyances were for full consideration.

A large amount of evidence was taken upon the issues of fact raised, all of which I have read with care. I do not propose to discuss tiie evidence, because I have not the time. I can only formulate my conclusions from it. I find the facts to be substantially as follows: John W. Corwine and his wife and his four children, three daughters and one son, were the owners in common of 3,402 acres of fine farming land in Pike county, and 284 acres in Boss county, Ohio. Much of it was Scioto river bottom land, which is the most productive land in the state. By a family arrangement, the lands were divided into four parcels, and, by deeds of partition, each child was given an undivided one-half interest in one of the parcels, while John W. Corwine and his wife each retained an undivided one-four ill interest in all of them. At the same time it was arranged that, by their wills, Corwine and his wife should each devise to their respective children the parcels in which they were co-tenants with their father and mother. The father and mother lived with their daughter Kerziah D. Barger and her husband, John M. Barger, upon one of the tracts, near Waverly, Ohio. A rental was paid to the father and the mother for the interests which they had in the property, but the rental was hardly commensurate with the value of the property. It was sufficient to pay for their support. John M. Corwine, the father, was, during the years of the transactions now to be referred to, a man over 70 years of age, and a farmer by occupation. Prior to 1894, he had become interested in the stock of the National Cotton Seed Oil & Huller Company. [776]*776This company was organized for the purpose of treating cotton seed. Its principal assets were its patents for machinery used in treating the cotton seed, and a plant at Memphis,. Tenn. Corwine, by purchase, had acquired about $68,000 par value of the stock. He had become associated in the company with several persons from Ohio living in the neighborhood of his home, and with others from the South. Because of his age, and in order to protect this property, which was certain to go, to them upon his death, his children assigned John M. Barger, his son-in-law,' to the duty of managing his business interests in this enterprise. Barger accordingly became the nominal owner of $5,000 par value of the capital stock of the company, a director, and a member of the finance committee. The duties of the finance committee consisted largely in borrowing money for the purpose of continuing the operation of the plant. The company itself had little credit, and all the money borrowed was obtained by the indorsement of the individuals who were interested in the enterprise. A broker named Lindley, living at Chillicothe, in Boss county, was employed to negotiate the loans upon notes indorsed by John W. Corwine and some half dozen other of the stockholders. The loans were- placed by Lindley with various bankers in the state of Ohio, and with banks in other states. In order to effect the loans, he procured from the individual indorsers written statements of the property which they had. He obtained a statement in 1891 from John W. Corwine showing his ownership in the lands here in question, in which he placed their value at $100 an acre, and in which he said he had no debts whatever, and that he was worth over $150,000. In November, 1893, when the indebtedness .of the company upon which Corwine was liable as indorser amounted to $200,000, he made another statement, which Barger sent to Lindley, at Lindley's request, in which he described his lands as being worth $100 an acre, and stated that he was worth $100,000. In March, 1894, on the 7th day, the holder of one of the notes on which Cor-wine was indorser insisted .upon its payment; and Barger, by arrangement with Corwine’s children, gave a note for $5,000, signed by all of them, with the proceeds of which the company’s note was paid. At that time Corwine was known to his children to be insolvent. The children feared that, unless the company was sustained and matters were tided along, the indebtedness of Corwine could not be renewed, and that execution would be levied upon his undivided one-fourth interest in the property held by them. For the purpose of delaying the creditors until the company could pay off its own debts, the children agreed among themselves to take care of about $30,000 of the outstanding notes, and, in order to protect themselves should the prospects of the company grow worse and disaster follow, each child took a deed from the father of his undivided one-fourth interest in the land, in which the child held an undivided one-half interest, in consideration, as recited in the deed, of $7,500. When the deeds were executed and delivered by the father to the children, neither the children nor the father knew what debts were to be paid. The arrangements were of the most indefinite character. The execution of the plan was committed to [777]*777Barger and Lee, sons-in-law. The deeds -were turned over to Lee. Afterwards, upon consultation between Lee and Barger, the deeds were wiihheld from record, from March 12, 1891, until November IOHj, of the same year. Two months after the execution of the deeds, Barger procured the drawing of a contract between John W. Corwine and his children, and dated it back to March 12, 1891, the date of the deeds. In the contract he attempted to set out the particular debts the assumption of which was to form the consideration of the deeds. This statement is admittedly incorrect in three of its items, and was certainly nothing' but the fabrication of evidence to support the deed. Before the 10th of November, when the disaster came, the children had taken care of more than $30,000 of the indebtedness. They had paid off, in addition, a $5,000 note. On the 9tli day of November, the plant of the huller company was burned.

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Related

First Nat. Bank of Oklahoma City v. Foster
1924 OK 1054 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1924)
Thompson Nat. Bank of Putnam v. Corwine
95 F. 54 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
89 F. 774, 12 Ohio F. Dec. 593, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-nat-bank-v-corwine-circtsdoh-1898.