Yancy v. Cothran

32 F. 687, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2819
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia
DecidedMay 9, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 32 F. 687 (Yancy v. Cothran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yancy v. Cothran, 32 F. 687, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2819 (circtndga 1887).

Opinion

Newman, J.

This is a bill filed by Yancy, as assignee in bankruptcy of tbe firm of Cothran & Jackson, composed of II. D. Cothran and J. N. Jackson, against Mrs. Laura E. Cothran, her husband, H. I). Cothran, and others. The object of tlio bill is to recover from Mrs. Cothran 232 shares of the capital stock of the East Rome Town Company. The facts upon which this right to recover is based are substantially as follows, as shown by the pleadings and evidence: In April, 1874, H. D. Cothran was tbe owner in his own right of the stock in question. ITe had previously, in 1873, failed in business as a member of the firm of Cothran & Jackson. At the time named, in April, 1874, Cothran transferred the stock to Cothran & Jackson, which firm it would seem'was then endeavoring to wind up its old business. Tbe stock was pledged by Cothran & Jackson to the Rank of .Rome as security for the loan of $3,500. In August, 1874, tbe note for $3,500 was due, and tbe firm had not met it. H. D. Cothran was the president and manager of the Bank of Rome, the stock of tbe bank being all owned, or practically so, by the firm of Ogden & Brower, of New York. About this time H. D. Cothran went to R. F. Fouche,'and stated to him the facts about the hypothecation of the stock; that the debt was due; and that Cothran & Jackson were unable to pay it. He told Fouche that he and the cashier of the bank, C. O. Stillwell, had tried to sell the stock, but could not get an offer for it. Stillwell told Fouche the same thing. Cothran then asked Fouche if he would give his note at 90 days, take a transfer of the stock, and agree that Mrs. [688]*688L. E. Cothran should have the stock. Fouche agreed to do so, and gave his note in lieu of the Cothran & Jackson note, took a transfer of the stock to himself, and hypothecated the stock as collateral for his note, and signed .an agreement in writing that if Mrs. Cothran would pay his note, to transfer the stock to her. The old certificates were taken up by the East Rome Town Company, and new ones issued to Fouche. The stock stood at the time transferred on the books of the company in the name of H. D. Cothran. Fouche had no communication with Mrs. Cothran in the transaction, and communicated only with H. D. Cothran, Stillwell, the cashier, and, perhaps, one Adams. Fouche’s wife was a cousin of Mrs. Cothran. About November or December, 1874, Fouche being in the Bank 'of Rome on other business, Stillwell, the cashier, handed him his note stamped “paid,” and said the matter had been arranged. Fouche went into the back room of the hank, and transferred the stock on the books of the company to Ogden, Brower & Co., and it appears from the certificates that about the same time it was transferred by Ogden, Brower & Co. to the Bank of Rome. Fouche testifies that he did'not desire or expect to purchase the stock for himself; that he was solvent and able to pay for the stock, and has been solvent ever since; that his principal object in going into the matter was to help Mrs. Coth-ran. He says his note was a legal-note; that he was liable upon it; that nothing existed that would have relieved him from its payment. He also says that when the note was handed him by Stillwell there was on it this entry: “Paid by Mrs. L. E. Cothran.” He did not observe this entry at the time, and not until long afterwards, when he attached the note to interrogatories in the case of Mrs. Cothran against Brower. The discount registry of the Bank of Rome shows that after the Fouche note was taken up these 232 shares of the East Rome Town Company stock became collateral in the bank for certain notes of W. S. Cothran, Jr., who was a brother of H. D. Cothran. It continued to run thus on the books of the bank as collateral, with other stock and property, for notes of W. S. Cothran, Jr., down to September 1, 1875, at which time it stood with other stocks as collateral for $10,948.43. The notes seem to have been then extinguished. On May 8, 1876, the stock in question seems to have been transferred by the bank to Brower. In 1878, under an execution in favor of Forsyth, Administrator, v. Cothran & Elliott, this stock was levied on as the property .of H. D. Cothran. A claim was interposed by Brower, and on the trial there was a verdict and judgment for Brower. In August, 1880, Mrs. Cothran filed a bill in equity in Floyd superior court to recover this stock, alleging that about September 1, 1875, she owned this stock, and that it was pledged by her husband to the Bank of Rome for moneys previously advanced to him. She claimed also a large amount of dividends that had been paid on the stock. The ease was not tried until January, 1883, when Mrs. Cothran obtained a verdict and decree in her favor for the stock, and for a large amount of dividends, subject to certain credits of amounts for which it had been pledged in bank. It appears of record that Mr. Yancy, the complainant (as assignee) in the case, was attorney for "Brower [689]*689in the case of Mrs. Cothran against him. His name, with other counsel, is signed to Brower’s answer, which was filed December, 1880.

The defendants in this case filed several pleas, and an answer. They set up, in substance, as defenses — First, the statute of limitations; second, that the facts do not make a case of fraudulent transfer of this stock as against the creditors of Cothran.

It is unnecessary to consider or to determine whether or not the facts established in this case as to the various transfers of the stock, and the circumstances in connection therewith, are fraudulent as against the creditors of Cothran, so as to have authorized a recovery of the same by the assignee in bankruptcy, if it appears that the assignee knew the facts, or had such information that by the exercise of proper diligence he could have known them more than two years before this suit was brought.

Section 5057, Rev. St. U. S., provides:

“No suit, either at law or in equity, shall be maintainable in any court between an assignee in bankruptcy and a person claiming an adverse interest, touching any rights of property transferable to or vested in such assignee, unless brought within two years from the time when the cause of action accrued for or against such assignee.”

The courts have, however, ingrafted on this act the recognized rule as to statutes of limitation, that if the facts on which any right of action is based have been fraudulently concealed by the parties in interest, or if the fraud is of such character as conceals itself, the statute will only commence to run from the date of the discovery of the fraud, or of such information as, if diligently followed up, would discover it. Carr v. Hilton, 1 Curt. 390; Bailey v. Glover, 21 Wall. 342; Upton v. McLaughlin, 105 U. S. 640; Rosenthal v. Walker, 111 U. S. 185, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 382.

This bill was filed January 22, 1885. The right of action now claimed, existed in 1875, when the assignee was appointed; so that about 10 years have elapsed since the right of action accrued. Complainant says, however, that the defendants Cothran and wife fraudulently concealed from him the real facts connected with the transfer of this stock, and that the same was only discovered by him within two years before filing this bill in this court.

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Bluebook (online)
32 F. 687, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yancy-v-cothran-circtndga-1887.