Whitaker v. Davidson, Assignee

273 S.W. 485, 209 Ky. 698, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 582
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 19, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 273 S.W. 485 (Whitaker v. Davidson, Assignee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitaker v. Davidson, Assignee, 273 S.W. 485, 209 Ky. 698, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 582 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Beversing.

This is an action brought by the assignee of W. E. .Whitaker under sections 1906 and 1907 of the Kentucky Statutes, to set aside a transfer of a note by W. E. Whitaker to his brother, the appellant, Arch. Whitaker, because, as alleged, such transfer was made without consideration and for the purpose of cheating, hindering, delaying and defrauding the creditors of W. E. Whitaker. The appellant pleaded that he was a bona fide purchaser for value of said note and without knowledge of any intent on the part of W. E. Whitaker to so cheat and defraud his creditors. The lower court held the transfer fraudulent and from that, judgment appellant appeals.

Appellant first insists that the petition is defective in that it fails to aver that he had knowledge of the alleged fraudulent intent of his brother. The petition, lxowevér, avers that the transfer was made without consideration, and if that allegation be true, as it must so be taken on demurrer, then appellant was not a bona fide purchaser of the note, and so not within the saving clause of section 1906 of the statutes, supra. Hence the petition *700 stated a good cause of action. Moreover, in Ms answer, appellant specifically pleaded his lack of knowledge of the fraudulent intent of his brother, which allegation was traversed of record, and was treated by the parties as an issue in this case. It is, therefore, obvious that there is no merit in the first contention of appellant.

The other contention of appellant is that the evidence does not support the finding of the chancellor and with this contention we agree. The facts shown are that about 1917 W. E. Whitaker, who was then in very good circumstances, bought a horse on credit from the ap'pel■lantfor- the sum of $200.00. It is true that appellant does not remember where he got this horse, but inasmuch as this suit was filed about five years after this transaction, during which time appellant had been a very busy man, this failure of memory on his part, while is may arouse a suspicion, does not amount to proof of fraud. In the same year appellant sold his brother, also on credit, $50.00 worth of hay. There was no charge made on any books for either the horse or the hay, nor was any note given for the same, but this is not even suspicious, because brothers who live in affectionate relationship and trust one another do not often require notes or make charges on books as evidence of transactions between them. Between 1917 and the fall of 1920, appellant lent his brother at various times sums of money, the last being $200.00 in September, 1920, at which time appellant and his brother testified that the latter gave appellant a note covering the then indebtedness of W. E. Whitaker to appellant amounting to $700.00. The United States revenue stamps on this note were cancelled either one or two years after the date of the note. We state it thus indefinitely as the note has been lost from the record, but it is agreed between the parties that the statement as made is correct. Again it is sought to give a sinister aspect to this by inferring that the note was dated back but that the parties failed to date the cancellation of the stamps back. ,On the other hand, it is well known that in transactions between laymen ignorant of the requirements of the U. S. revenue laws, notes were often given without stamps being affixed thereto, and later when some question came up ’ in law about such ■notes, stamps were then affixed and cancelled. W. E. Whitaker was solvent at the time this note was given. It was payable in January, 1921. After giving the note, he entered into a contract to purchase some land. He *701 had been dealing extensively in lands and when the slump came in the winter of 1920 and spring of 1921, he was unable to meet his maturing obligations. In February, 1921, he was sued on this land contract made in the previous fall. In the meantime he had been unable to meet the note due appellant in January and he-gave to him as collateral security a note for $1,750.00, the maker of which was one Whiteted. Whiteted made an assignment for the benefit of his creditors in February, 1921. It is not clear by any means that excluding the ■contingent liábility W. E. Whitaker was under on account of the suit filed against .him in Fébruary, he was then insolvent in the sense that his assets were not equal in value to his liabilities, although he was having a hard time to meet his maturing obligations due to lack of ready cash. The evidence without a doubt discloses that in order to raise ready cash he tried to sell this Whiteted note to other people in Garrard county, and for as low a sum as $1,250.00. He was unable to sell it, however, because, although, as it turned out, the property on which ■this note was a first' lien was amply sufficient to discharge it in full and did so do, yet at that time the maker of the note had made an assignment, there was about two years back interest on it unpaid, both of which facts affected its marketability very much. Moreover, securities of the highest type, such as government bonds, were then selling at a great- discount and the prevailing rate of interest in Garrard county, where money was exceedingly hard to get and land values were dramatically tumbling, was eight per cent. Being' in need of some ready cash, W. E. Whitaker, on March 3, 1921, transferred the note to the appellant in payment of the $700.00' note that had fallen due in the previous January and for an additional sum of $700.00, which the evidence clearly and satisfactorily shows was then paid by appellant to his brother in cash and out of his bank account in the Farmers’ Exchange Bank of Nicholasville, in which town appellant then was and had been for some time conducting a restaurant business. A copy of his bank account has been brought to this court, beginning August 10, 1920, and running to June 29, 1921. It shows that his balance during that period, except toward the latter part thereof, averaged from $400.00 to $600.00 and ran as high as even $800.00. We do not think there can be any doubt but that this money was paid to W. E. Whitaker and was appellant’s money. In August, 1921, the suit which had *702 been filed against W. E. Whitaker in the previous February came on to be tried and a verdict was rendered against him for $5,500.00, which verdict probably made W.'E. Whitaker insolvent. He thereafter filed his assignment and still later his petition in bankruptcy. The appellant says that he did not know anything about this suit being filed against his brother until long after the verdict above mentioned had, been rendered. At this time they were living some sixteen or twenty miles apart, and there is nothing unusual in this statement. There was a great deal of evidence introduced to which no objection has Been made to' the effect that the appellant and his brother were both men of high character and integrity, well thought of as honest men in the community in which they lived. Both of them swear that there was no intent to 'cheat or defraud any creditors, and that Arch Whitaker particularly took this note innocently and for value. W. E. Whitaker swears that he thought himself solvent in the spring of 1921, in that his assets equalled his liabilities, and he still insists that had he not been pushed he could have paid out in full, at least in the absence of the verdict rendered against him in the following August.

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Bluebook (online)
273 S.W. 485, 209 Ky. 698, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitaker-v-davidson-assignee-kyctapphigh-1925.