Court Opinion

ID: 3275668
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:44:16.741032+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:00:17.158941
License: Public Domain

In September, 1919, John N. Schichtl, one of the appellees, became the owner in fee simple of a tract of land in Lee County, Arkansas, containing 643 acres, known as the Sullivan place, the consideration for the purchase being the sum of $40,000, of which $10,000 was paid in cash to J. K. Sullivan, the vendor, and annual installment notes were executed for the balance, with a mortgage on the land to secure the same. Sullivan subsequently assigned the notes to appellant. About the same time, Schichtl purchased an adjoining tract of land containing about 1,100 acres, known as the Highland place, the consideration for the purchase being $28,500, which was all paid in cash except $5,000, a note and mortgage on the land securing the same being executed, and this note also was assigned to appellant. Neither of these debts was paid, and on June 22, 1922, appellant, being still the legal holder of said notes, instituted actions in the chancery court to recover judgment against Schichtl and to foreclose the lien on said tracts of land. The amount of the several debts for which the decree was rendered was $31,950, the indebtedness against the Sullivan Place, and $5,000, the indebtedness against the Highland place. This decree was rendered on September 27, 1922, and a sale of said lands was ordered to pay the debt. The sale was made by the court's commissioner on January 23, 1923, and appellant became the *Page 33 
purchaser of the Sullivan place for the consideration of $15,000, and of the Highland place for the sum of $5,000, the amount of the indebtedness against that place.
It appears from the undisputed proof adduced in the present litigation that, during the time that Schichtl owned these lands and a year or two before the foreclosure of the mortgages, he collected from the St. Francis Levee District the sum of $20,000 as damages caused by the taking of a right-of-way along the Mississippi River for reconstructing the levee. Out of this fund thus collected, Schichtl spent $9,000 in the erection of a gin on the Sullivan place, and he also erected three houses on the farm, the cost thereof not being disclosed in the evidence. Schichtl was also the owner of 630 acres of wild and unoccupied lands in Lee County, the value thereof not being shown in the record in the present case, and, during the pendency of the foreclosure proceedings and prior to the rendition of the decree in the case, he conveyed those lands to his wife, Annie G. Schichtl, one of the appellees, for the recited consideration of ten dollars and love and affection and funds which she had previously advanced to him.
Appellant commenced this action in the chancery court of Lee County on August 11, 1923, to set aside the said conveyance of John N. Schichtl to his wife and to subject the lands to the payment of the unpaid balance of appellant's debt represented by the decree against John N. Schichtl. It was alleged in the complaint that the conveyance was executed by Schichtl to his wife without any valuable consideration and with fraudulent intent to cheat, hinder and delay appellant as his creditor. The answer contained denials of all the allegations of fraudulent intent in regard to the conveyance in question. The cause was heard upon oral testimony and upon an agreed statement as to some of the material facts in the case, and the chancery court rendered a decree in favor of appellees, dismissing appellant's complaint for want of equity.
There was a sharp conflict in the testimony upon some of the material facts, principally as to the *Page 34 
market value of the Sullivan place and the Highland place at the time of the execution of the deed by Schichtl to his wife which is alleged to have been executed with fraudulent intent. The chancellor made no special findings of fact, but we must assume that he found in favor of appellees upon all disputed facts which are essential to the support of the court's decree.
It is undisputed that the consideration for the purchase of these lands in September, 1919, aggregated the sum of $68,500; that the lands were worth that sum at that time, and that Schichtl spent $9,000 in improving the lands by building a gin thereon, making a total valuation of $77,500. There is proof of further improvement of the Sullivan place by building three houses, but we find no statement in the record of the cost of those houses. If the $20,000 received by Schichtl from the St. Francis Levee Board should be deducted from the total valuation stated above in arriving at the true valuation, it would leave an aggregate valuation on the two farms of $57,500. According to the testimony in the case, the appraisers for the levee boards fixed the value of the lands taken at $250 an acre, and no improvements on the farm were taken into the right-of-way. The aforementioned settlement with Schichtl was made upon that appraisement.
The amount of the indebtedness against the two tracts of land at the time of the conveyance now under investigation was about $37,000. The commissioner's sale of the two farms left a deficiency decree of something over $16,000. There was, as before stated, a conflict in the testimony concerning the value of the Sullivan place and the Highland place at the time of the conveyance under consideration, but we must accept the finding of the chancery court as conclusive, unless it is against the preponderance of the evidence. The testimony adduced by the appellees concerning the value of the two farms at the time of the execution of this deed was from $50,000 to $60,000, and the testimony adduced by appellant tended to show that the value of the two tracts at that time was from $35,000 to $40,000. According to the preponderance *Page 35 
of the evidence, the value of the lands at that time was considerably above the amount of Schichtl's indebtedness to appellant. The finding of the chancellor that the value was as much as that shown by the testimony of witnesses adduced by appellees is not against the preponderance of the testimony, and we must therefore accept that finding as correct. In addition to that, it appears from undisputed evidence that, after appellant became the owner of the Highland place, it sold timber therefrom at the price of $2,000. It is undisputed that Schichtl had no other indebtedness of any character except that to appellant, as above stated. Schichtl testified, as his reason for making the conveyance to his wife, that she had been in very bad health for two or three years, and constantly needed money, and that he conveyed the lands to her so that she could be prepared to take care of herself. He testified that he had no idea of defrauding appellant, and supposed that it would realize a sufficient sum from the sale under the mortgages to collect its debt.
It is thus seen that we have a finding of the chancery court in accordance with the preponderance of the evidence to the effect that the deed of conveyance under investigation was executed without any actual intention to defraud creditors, and that the grantor was not insolvent at the time of the execution of the deed. The question then presented is, whether or not there was constructive or legal fraud conclusively presumed from the execution of the deed without consideration other than the grantor's affection for his wife, the grantee. It should be noted, in the beginning of the consideration of this question, that our statute (Crawford  Moses' Digest, 4874) renders invalid only those conveyances "made or contrived with the intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors * * * or as against creditors and purchasers prior and subsequent." A conveyance, even without consideration, is valid against creditors and purchasers if its execution is free from fraud, either actual or presumed. Nearly every phase of the subject of fraudulent conveyances has been dealt with in *Page 36 
numerous decisions of this court. The subject was treated at length by Mr. Justice COMPTON in delivering the opinion of the court in Bertrand v. Elder,23 Ark. 494. Reference was there made to the opinion of Chancellor Kent in Reade v. Livingston, 3 Johns. Ch. Rep. 479, where it was directly decided that a voluntary conveyance of property is, as against existing creditors, conclusively presumed to be fraudulent, and that no circumstances will be permitted to repel the presumption. But that decision was directly rejected by this court in the following language: "Though the decision in this case is not unsupported, the decided preponderance of authority, both in this country and in England, is against it, and establishes a rule less rigid, and, in our opinion, more consistent with the sound interpretation of the statute of frauds." After a full discussion of the authorities, the court said:
"The principle, as we apprehend, to be extracted from the decisions in England and America, is that the voluntary conveyance of a party to his wife or child, though he be indebted at the time, is prima facie only, and not conclusively, fraudulent, in respect to the claim of an existing creditor, and that the presumption thus raised may be met and repelled by proof on the other side. The question of fraud must depend on all the circumstances of the case, looking to the state and condition of the grantor, the extent of the property conveyed, and the direct tendency of the conveyance respecting the claims of creditors."
Numerous decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States are cited in support of that statement of the law.
In the case of Driggs  Co.'s Bank v. Norwood,50 Ark. 42, S.W. 323, 7 Am. St. 78, Mr. Justice SMITH, speaking for the court, used the following language, which is in line with that used in the case cited above: "Every voluntary alienation of his property by an embarrassed debtor is presumptively fraudulent against existing creditors. Indebtedness raises a presumption *Page 37 
of fraud, which becomes conclusive upon insolvency. But, as to subsequent creditors, a voluntary conveyance be a person in debt is not per se fraudulent. To make it so, proof of actual or intentional fraud is required." We find in Judge BATTLE'S opinion in the case of Rudy v. Austin, 56 Ark. 73, 19 S.W. 111, 35 Am. St. 85, the following statement, which is not only a most lucid exposition of the law on the subject, but has been often referred to in subsequent decisions:
"A debtor has the right to make reasonable provisions in property for his wife or children, according to his state and condition in life. But, in doing so, he must retain in his possession property amply sufficient to pay all his debts. If he does so fairly and honestly, the child or wife for whom the provision was made is not bound to refund the advancement for the benefit of creditors, in the event the parent or husband should subsequently fail or become unable to pay the debts he owed when the provision was made. The law requires every man to be just before he is generous. If he makes a voluntary conveyance while he is in debt, it presumes that it is fraudulent as to existing creditors, and the burden is on those claiming under the conveyance to repel the presumption. If he be insolvent, unable to pay his debts, the presumption that it is fraudulent as to antecedent creditors is conclusive."
The line as to the presumption of fraud is thus clearly drawn between attacks by prior existing creditors and subsequent creditors. The statute supra protects creditors of both classes, but there is a distinction as to presumption in the rules of evidence in the two classes of cases. As to subsequent creditors there is no presumption, and the burden of proof as to fraud rests upon the attacking creditor, whilst in the case of existing creditors there is a presumption of fraud arising from a voluntary conveyance by the insolvent debtor. Williams-Echols D. G. Co. v. Bloyd, 169 Ark. 529, 276 S.W. 1. The proof in this case and the finding of the court thereon is that Schichtl, the grantor, was not insolvent at the time he *Page 38 
made the conveyance to his wife, therefore there is no conclusive presumption of fraud under the rule stated by Judge BATTLE, even though appellant be placed in the same category with reference to presumptions as a prior existing creditor. There are authorities to the effect that a contingent liability, or one dependent upon a future contingency, is not to be treated as an existing debt within the meaning of the rule as to presumptive evidence. Severs v. Dodson, 53 N.J. Eq. 633, 34 A. 7. There are, however, authorities to the contrary. Thomson v. Crain, 73 F. 327; Sallaske v. Fletcher, 73 Wash. 593,132 P. 648; Crocker v. Huntsinger, 113 Wis. 181,88 N.W. 232. Some of those authorities, particularly the Washington case supra, do not relate to the statute on fraudulent conveyances, but merely to a statute which provides that a conveyance by one of the spouses to the other of community property "shall not affect any existing equity in favor of creditors of the grantor," and no reference is made to the question of fraud. We are not, however, dealing merely with the question whether the indebtedness is one which literally existed at the time of the conveyance alleged to have been executed with fraudulent intent, but the question is whether or not the indebtedness is held under circumstances which would call into operation a presumption of fraud. We have a case now of mortgage indebtedness, and the real question, so far as the case relates to presumption, is whether or not such conclusive presumption should be indulged in favor of the holder of the secured debt. The reason for indulging presumptions does not apply, we think, under those circumstances, and the authorities support the view that there is no presumption under those circumstances. May on Fraudulent Conveyances, p. 163; Bigelow on Fraudulent Conveyances, p. 188; Welch v. Mann, 193 Mo. 304,92 S.W. 98; Cromby v. Young, 26 Ont. 194. The reason for this distinction in putting secured creditors in the same category as subsequent creditors is that, whatever presumption is to be indulged, the creditor, in selecting his security, has, unlike a general creditor, disregarded *Page 39 
other property of the debtor and looked only to his security for the collection of his debt, hence he is entitled to no presumption of fraud in the conveyance of other property. Such a creditor is one who has already been given a preference over others, and is not in the attitude of an existing general creditor, hence his reliance is deemed to have been founded on his security rather than on the solvency of the debtor. It seems to us that this is a sound distinction, but, at any rate, the trial court has necessarily found in this case that there was no insolvency on the part of the debtor and no intention to defraud; therefore, even if there was a rebuttable presumption, it has been overcome by the proof. This view of the law is not in conflict with our decision in First National Bank v. Herring,159 Ark. 317, 252 S.W. 37, which was a case of undisputed insolvency. Nor is it in conflict with the decision of this court in Wilks v. Vaughan, 73 Ark. 174, 83 S.W. 913, and James v. Mallory, 76 Ark. 509, 85 S.W. 472. In both of those cases the court dealt with the question of actual insolvency of the debtors who were indebted to numerous general creditors, and in each instance such conditions were found by the court to exist. The term "embarrassed debtors," used in Wilks v. Vaughan, supra, was evidently meant in the sense of insolvency in fact, which the court found was the condition of the debtor at the time the conveyance under investigation was executed. In James v. Mallory, supra, the court treated a mortgage creditor as an existing creditor, but, in doing so, it was in response to the argument that the renewal of a prior debt constituted a subsequent debt. The question now under consideration in regard to the status of a mortgage debt was not presented to us in the argument. In that case, as in Wilks v. Vaughn, supra, there were numerous general creditors, and the debtor was insolvent at the time the conveyance was executed, and the court found that there was constructive fraud based on actual insolvency. In the present case there was neither insolvency nor actual fraudulent intention. *Page 40 
The finding of the chancery court is, as we have already said, not against the preponderance of the testimony, and therefore should be affirmed. It is so ordered.