Williams v. Davidson

176 P. 334, 104 Wash. 315, 1918 Wash. LEXIS 1180
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1918
DocketNo. 14991
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 176 P. 334 (Williams v. Davidson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Davidson, 176 P. 334, 104 Wash. 315, 1918 Wash. LEXIS 1180 (Wash. 1918).

Opinions

Tolman, J.

This action was brought by the appellant, as trustee in bankruptcy of Knosher’s Incorporated, a bankrupt corporation, to cancel and set aside a transfer of the corporate assets theretofore made to the respondent, upon the ground that the transfer was preferential and void and was made to the respondent, the principal corporate creditor, with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the other creditors of the corporation. The complaint charged that the transfer was made by the corporation within four months preceding its adjudication as a bankrupt, and at a time when it was wholly insolvent; that the respondent knew, at the time of the transfer, of such insolvency, and that the transfer effected a total depletion of the corporate assets, leaving the other corporate creditors wholly unpaid. The relief sought was cancellation, the appointment of a receiver, and the recovery from respondent of the assets which she received, or their value. The respondent, answering, admitted the transfer, but as an affirmative defense, alleged that she purchased the assets from the corporation in good faith in compliance with the sales in bulk law, that she assumed and paid corporate debts to the amount of $15,076.35, which the corporation had represented to her was its total indebtedness, and that therefore she had acquired the assets for a valuable consideration, in good faith. The affirmative matter in the answer was denied. Upon a trial below there was but little serious conflict in the evidence, and, briefly stated, the facts which appear to be established are as follows:

Knosher’s Incorporated was a domestic corpora-tion, operating a retail store in the city of Seattle, [317]*317with a capital stock of $15,000. Respondent’s deceased husband, S. R. Davidson, had been a creditor of this corporation, his debt being evidenced by a demand note, upon which there was due on October 2, 1917, $8,022.25. This note was secured by a chattel mortgage upon the stock and fixtures of the corporation, which had never been filed for record. Prior to Mr. Davidson’s death, which occurred in August, 1917, he had made repeated demands for payment of this debt, and had sent an auditor to the debtor’s store to check up its affairs, and placed an agent in charge of the store and business. The respondent is the executor of the nonintervention will of her deceased husband, acting without bond, and is his sole beneficiary under the will. Upon the probate of the will, the respondent, with the assistance of her attorney, vigorously renewed efforts to enforce collection of her claim against Knosher’s Incorporated, and her attorney, by threats of a receivership and representations that it was practically bankrupt, succeeded in placing respondent’s agent in full and exclusive charge and control of the receipts and disbursements of the corporation’s business, and the agent so remained in control until the property was transferred by a bill of sale to the respondent on October 2, 1917. During all of this time, the corporation was heavily indebted, the greater portion of its indebtedness being past due, and it was unable to pay, and apparently was in a failing condition. The respondent and one MacMaster, to whom it owed $1,800, were its most pressing creditors. As its credit standing was poor, it was unable to purchase new goods, and its stock had run down. The assets consisted of the stock of goods and fixtures, which, according to an inventory taken by the respondent, amounted in value to the sum of $15,053.70.

[318]*318Shortly before the time of the transfer, it developed that a list of creditors furnished to the respondent by the corporation was incomplete, the debt to MacMaster having been omitted therefrom. MacMaster, finding that the respondent was in full possession of the corporate assets, and that no provision had been made for his claim to share in the proceeds of sales, employed an attorney, who threatened to place the corporation in the hands of a receiver, or take other drastic measures, unless his client was permitted to share in the proceeds. Negotiations ensued between Mac-Master and respondent, which resulted in an agreement by respondent to purchase the MacMaster claim for $1,200 and take an assignment of it to herself. Upon the appearance of the MacMaster claim, respondent demanded that the corporation transfer all of its property to her, and suggested as the only alternative an involuntary liquidation. The corporation, through its officers, acquiesced in this demand, and a bill of sale was drawn and an affidavit under the sales in bulk law was prepared, which was signed and verified by the president of the corporation. The list of creditors verified by this affidavit showed an indebtedness aggregating $15,076.35, including the respondent’s claim for $8,022.25, the MacMaster claim for $1,800, which respondent paid or purchased at the time of receiving the bill of sale and affidavit, by paying therefor $1,200 of her own money, and another note of the corporation for $1,274.84, upon which the respondent was personally liable as a guarantor.

It is conceded that five claims against the corporation, amounting to $4,538.23, were not included in this list of creditors made by the corporation and verified by its president, and that these claims have not been paid. It is established, however, by the evidence that [319]*319the respondent took special pains to have the books of the corporation examined, its officers closely questioned, and every inquiry made which good faith required, without discovering the omission of these claims from the affidavit, or any fact which would put her on notice of such claims, or any of them. None of the excluded creditors were advised of, or had any notice of, the transfer of the corporate assets to the respondent until after it had taken place. One of these creditors wrote the respondent’s attorney about the 'middle of October, 1917, and then learned what had taken place, and on or about November 7, 1917, respondent was fully advised of the existence of all of the corporate indebtedness which had been excluded from the affidavit under the sales in bulk law. Immediately upon the transfer being made, respondent advanced from her personal funds, in addition to the $1,200 used to purchase the MacMaster claim, about $700, which was paid upon the pressing debts shown in the affidavit, and these sums are practically all that the respondent advanced at any time in this transaction. The remainder of the corporate debts covered by the sales in bulk affidavit, including her own, have been paid out of the proceeds of the business, which respondent operated after the transfer, buying new stock, commingling new goods with old, and operating the business generally as her own.

On December 8, 1917, and within'four months after the transfer, a petition in bankruptcy was filed against Knosher’s Incorporated, which charged the transfer referred to as an act of bankruptcy, and on January 2, 1918, the corporation was adjudged a bankrupt, and appellant herein was duly appointed trustee, and having qualified, was authorized by the bankruptcy court to institute this action. The trial court made findings of fact, conclusions of law, and rendered judgment dis[320]*320missing the action, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 P. 334, 104 Wash. 315, 1918 Wash. LEXIS 1180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-davidson-wash-1918.