Court Opinion

ID: 8263058
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 15:56:48.218292+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:42:53.601502
License: Public Domain

BARCLAY, J.
This is a garnishment case based upon an attachment against Messrs. Greengard and Ehrlich, partners under the name of Greengard & Ehrlich Manufacturing Company. The attachment was brought before a justice of the peace. Mr. Joel, trustee (the appellant now), was summoned as garnishee.
The grounds of the attachment, to state them shortly, were the fraudulent transfer of property so as to hinder or delay, etc., and concealment and removal of assets, and other grounds unnecessary to mention.
Before the justice, there was a judgment sustaining the attachment and adjudging a recovery for plaintiff against defendants for $206.11.
The garnishee, Mr. Joel, answered the statutory interrogatories by denying all indebtedness to the principal defendants.. He also denied that he had in his possession any of their property or effects.
The plaintiff denied the answer of the garnishee, and charged that the latter was trustee under a deed of trust, executed to him by Mr. Greengard, partner in the Greengard & Ehrlich Manufacturing Company, and that the trustee had in his possession the entire property and assets of attachment defendants. Plaintiff further charged “that the said deed of trust is void and ineffective in law to convey the said property and effects by reason of the illegal and fraudulent provisions of the said pretended deed of trust; and the plaintiff joins issue with the said garnishee upon the said answer.”
There was a judgment for plaintiff against the garnishee before the justice of the peace, who found $500 to he in the hands of the garnishee. The latter took an appeal to the circuit court. In.the latter court plaintiff asked- leave to amend his denial of the gar*657nishee’s answer, before the trial, by inserting the words, “and by reason of the illegal acts of the said trustee under said deed of trust.” To this the garnisbee objected, and, bis objection being overruled by the court and the amendment allowed, the garnisbee at the time excepted.
Tbe cause came to .trial before Judge Zaohritz, a jury having been waived.
Plaintiff gave evidence tending to show that shortly after the execution of the deed of trust of January 31, 1898, the trustee, in response to an inquiry in regard to a claim against the manufacturing company, said that be was in charge of the property under the deed of trust, was hopeful that be could pay in,full not only the secured creditors but all the other creditors of the concern; that be was conducting the business right along, bad it in pretty good shape and hoped to be able to pay everything before a great while.
The testimony for plaintiff further tended to show that the business of the old firm bad been continued by the trustee, by buying new material, manufacturing goods, and filling orders until March 6, 1898, when the plant was destroyed by fire. The trustee had collected the insurance, amounting to about $14,000, and bad it in bis charge. He admitted that the value of the property conveyed was about $25,000, and the secured indebtedness about $14,000. He further admitted that but for the fire be would have continued to conduct the business as usual. The gist of bis admissions lay in the concession that be was buying new material and manufacturing goods and filling orders. The garnisbee had been the superintendent and manager of the old firm before the transfer of the- property to him. It is to be inferred from the testimony that be simply went forward with the business formerly conducted by the firm. The circumstances of bis appointment and his declarations while in .possession of the property *658justify the inference that his mode of.executing the trust had the sanction of the parties interested-and that he was merely executing the design which inspired the conveyance in trust to him.
No testimony was offered on behalf of the garnishee further than the production of the deed of trust under which he had possession, and the original answer of the garnishee and denial thereof by plaintiff. There was no denial of the testimony concerning the statements of the garnishee in possession of the property. We assume now, without inquiry, that the deed of trust was fair on its face, and not fraudulent on account of its ostensible and expressed provisions.
No declaration of law was given. One was refused as asked by the garnishee to the effect that, under the pleadings, the evidence and the law, plaintiff was not entitled to recover, and exception was saved to the refusal.
Thereupon the court found for plaintiff, and in due course entered judgment for him against the garnishee for $238.05. The garnishee then took this appeal.
T It is the established law of Missouri that where property oi the kind involved in this case is transferred to a trustee in trust to satisfy the claims of certain creditors, and the trustee, with the acquiescence of the secured creditors and the debtor, proceeds to prosecute the business of the debtor beyond the necessary steps to wind it up, the conveyance will be treated as fraudulent as to creditors not assenting thereto. In a recent case enforcing the above principle it is added: “It is familiar law in Missouri that facts which would render a conveyance void if expressed on its face, will likewise render it void if found by the court or jury aliunde to have constituted a part of the transaction. ’ ’ Rubber Mfg. Co. v. Supply Co., 149 Mo. 538.
In the case at bar, no testimony was offered on *659behalf of the garnishee to defeat the inferences to be drawn from the plaintiff’s testimony. The garnishee’s evidence consisted simply of the deed of trust under which the plaintiff took possession, and the original pleadings which were supposed to indicate that plaintiff first relied solely on defects in the terms of the conveyance in trust. It is not necessary to analyze that instrument. Even conceding that it is entirely valid, the outside evidence undoubtedly tends to show that the trustee held the property upon a much broader understanding, one which falls under the ban of the Missouri law of fraudulent conveyances. It might be found reasonably from the testimony that the business was being carried on, materials replenished and new transactions made as before the transfer to the garnishee, and that such was the design of the transfer. The conclusion of tbe learned trial judge implies that he found the fraudulent intent which the statute denounces. R. S. 1899, secs. 3397, 3398. It was his function to pass upon that issue, and there seems no trace of error in his rulings on that subject. Zeigler v. Maddox, 26 Mo. 575; Weber v. Armstrong, 70 Mo. 217; Petring v. Dry Goods Co., 90 Mo. 649; Marble Co. v. Ragsdale, 74 Mo. App. (St. L.) 42.
2. The garnishee contends that he was not subject to the process of garnishment on the admitted facts. But if the conveyance to him was so tainted by a fraudulent purpose as to be void, there can be no doubt, in view of prior adjudications, that that contention is unsound. By virtue of the statute concerning such transactions, the trust failed, as against the plaintiff, an unconsenting creditor, and the latter might treat the proceeds of the property as funds of the debtors, available to satisfy the claim of a creditor diligent enough to improve the opportunity to secure the satisfaction afforded by the law. Rubber Co. v. Supply Co., 149 Mo. 538; Donk Bros. Co. v. Kinealy, 81 Mo. App. (St. L.) 646.
*6603. Over the garnishee’s objection and exception, plaintiff’s denial of the answer of the garnishee was amended in the circuit court, as already described, after the appeal from the justice of the peace. Error is assigned on that ruling. It is not, however, open to review. Such an error must be brought to the notice of the trial judge by some motion after verdict, or it is to be deemed ingulfed in that oblivion which heals the wounds of all unnoted errors. Schaeffer v. Green, 68 Mo. App. (St. L.) 168.
We have reviewed all the assignments of error, so far as they are subject to our review, and finding none well taken we affirm the judgment.
Bland, P. J.,. and Goode, J., concur.