Vicksburg Liquor & Tobacco Co. v. Jefferies

12 So. 743, 45 La. Ann. 621
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1893
DocketNo. 11,206
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 So. 743 (Vicksburg Liquor & Tobacco Co. v. Jefferies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vicksburg Liquor & Tobacco Co. v. Jefferies, 12 So. 743, 45 La. Ann. 621 (La. 1893).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nicholls, O. J.

This suit is brought by five different persons, who allege that the defendant Jefferies is justly, legally and severally indebted to them.

[624]*624They aver that in March, 1891, Jefferies filed a petition in the Madison Court, in which he surrendered all of his property to his creditors; that the court- accepted the cession, appointed a provisional syndic, and ordered a meeting of creditors to be called as provided by law. That pending these proceedings in March, 1891, Jefferies abandoned the cession so made and accepted and filed his petition for a respite, and obtained from the court an order staying all proceedings against his person or property, and calling a meeting to deliberate upon the proposed delay of the payment of the sums due them. That plaintiffs were induced to believe by the representations of Jefferies that such delay would be for the interest and advantage of all parties, and would enable him to pay and satisfy his debts in full, and by such representations so made were induced to forbear from opposing the respite or to vote for it, and that a contract was duly entered into and approved by the court without opposition, by which Jefferies obtained a delay of one, two and three years for the payment of his debts, in three annual instalments, of one-third each. That in 1892, as the time for the payment of the first instalment was approaching, Jefferies again presented his petition to the court, praying that all proceedings against his person and property be stayed, and that a meeting of his creditors be called to deliberate upon a proposed change in the terms of the contract, by which the debts should become due and exigible in two annual instalments — in 1893 and 1894. That plaintiffs were again induced to believe by the representations of Jefferies that such additional delay would be for the intei’est and advantage of all parties, and would enable him to pay and satisfy his debts in full, and by misrepresentations so made were induced to consent to the proposed change in the terms of the contract, or to forbear from opposing it, and that the contract was duly entered into and approved by the court without opposition, by which the said Jefferies obtained the additional delay for the payment of his debts. That plaintiffs have recently and since the May term, 1892, learned that the representations so made by the said Jefferies of the condition of his affairs, and upon which their consent or forbearance was obtained, were false, and the said consent and forbearance were given in error of fact induced by the said Jefferies.

That it was represented to plaintiffs and other creditors by said Jefferies that although on account of the low prices of cotton he would [625]*625not be able to meet the instalment of one-third of the debts in May, 1892, yet he had shipped to his merchant near three hundred bales of cotton, mostly of long staple and superior quality, the proceeds of which would be more than sufficient to pay the expenses of the year-, that he still retained $7000 of the stock of goods, and would be able to continue the business in good condition with a fair prospect of meeting all of his obligations at maturity. That plaintiffs have recently and since the May term, 1892, discovered that the representation of the condition of his affairs so made by the said Jefferies, and by which their consent or forbearance to the new contract was obtained, were false, and that the cottons so shipped was not of long and superior quality — that the proceeds were barely sufficient to pay the expenses of the year — that about only $3000 of the stock remained; that he had abandoned the only business from which he could hope to obtain the means of paying his debts; that his merchant of last year would not continue to furnish him, and that he could not get another, and that so far from being able to continue the business in good condition with a fair prospect of paying his debts he had consumed and wasted or otherwise disposed of the stock of goods so entrusted to him, and practically abandoned the business, with no prospect or intention to pay.

Plaintiffs further represent that Green L. Boney, agent for R. H. & J. G. Boney, and Mrs. M. P. Utz, and Mrs. Sarah E. Marshall, a resident of New York, who were named on the schedule as creditors with lessor’s privilege, and voted for the respite, have conspired with Jefferies in violation of the conditions of the respite, and by fraudulent preference have obtained the payment of their debts of $1300, $840 and $500 respectively, and that Chaffe, Powell & West, of New Orleans, have been paid by Jefferies with fraudulent preference the proceeds of thirteen bales of cotton of the value of. $600.

That said creditors so named as lessors voted to grant the respite and to that extent waived their privilege, and the payments so made to them by Jefferies were fraudulent and void, the said Jefferies being then insolvent to the knowledge of said payees, and were in violation of the terms of the respite. That said Chaffe, Powell & West, although no parties to the contract of respite, were creditors on the schedule, and the payment to them was equally fraudulent and void. That Mrs. Utz, although named on the schedule as a creditor with the lessor’s privilege, was not in fact such creditor. [626]*626That by Jefferies’ conduct in the premises, his false representation of facts, his waste and consumption and other disposition of the stock of goods, his mismanagement of the business and his fraudulent-payments to favored creditors, the said Jefferies has violated the condition- of his contract and has forfeited the respite and made it necessary for plaintiffs to invoke the process of the court or to submit to have what remains of the assets of the insolvent wasted, consumed or otherwise disposed of in fraud of their rights. That Jefferies has mortgaged, assigned or disposed of, or is about to mortgage, assign or dispose of, his property rights or credits, or some part thereof, with intent to defraud his creditors or give an unfair preference to some of them, and that he has converted, or is about to convert, his property into money or evidences of debt with intent to place it beyond the reach of his creditors.

The premises considered, the plaintiffs prayed for a writ of attachment directed to the sheriff of Madison commanding him to attach all the property, real and personal, rights and credits of W. T. Jefferies to await the further order of court. That Jefferies be cited to answer their demand, that they have judgment against him respectively for the amounts stated in the petition as being due to them severally, with recognition of the lien and privilege resulting from the attachment, and that said Green L. Boney, agent for R. H. Boney and J. G. Boney, and Mrs. Utz, be cited to answer their demand. That Mrs. Sarah E. Marshall, a femme sole resident of the State of New York, who owns property within the jurisdiction of the court, be cited by the attachment of the property and the appointment of a curator ad hoc. That the payments as stated made to them respectively, by the said W. T. Jefferies be decreed to have been fraudulent and void, and that petitioners have judgment against them severally for the said sums of $1300, §840 and §500 so paid to them respectively with interest thereon from their respective dates of payment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 So. 743, 45 La. Ann. 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vicksburg-liquor-tobacco-co-v-jefferies-la-1893.