Court Opinion

ID: 4930351
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 01:06:39.62386+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:27.062854
License: Public Domain

Tenney, C. J.
The disclosure shows that the principal defendant was indebted to the supposed trustee to a considerable amount, and had procured him to become his surety on notes, which were outstanding, at the time he was about to move to the state of Iowa. The trustee wished to secure himself for his own claims, and for his liabilities, and it appears that he made the purchase of real estate and certain articles of personal property, not only in form, absolute, but so in reality, in consideration of his own claims, which were canceled, and the agreement to pay the notes, on which he was surety; and also to pay certain debts to others, who were informed thereof.
If the transfer was not designed by the principal to defraud or delay his creditors, or if it was so designed, and the trustee afforded no aid in carrying out the intention of the principal, it was a valid transaction. The consideration was actually paid to the extent of the notes of the principal to *442the trustee, and the agreement of the latter, to become absolutely responsible to the holders of the notes on which he was surety, was, as between the parties to this agreement, a binding contract. The contract to pay Seth Johnson and John Snow, being in consideration of property received by the trustee, for that purpose, did not come within the statute of frauds. Hilton v. Dinsmore, 21 Maine R., 410. If these creditors should receive payment from their original debtor, instead of the trustee, the latter will be liable to the principal for that amount, unless he should be exonerated by some technical rule of law.
This case is distinguished from that of Gorham v. Herrick, 2 Greenl., 87, where the surety on a probate bond took an absolute conveyance of property for his security, where no breach of the bond had taken place, and where he assumed no liability in addition to that of his original suretyship.
The case of Jewett v. Barnard and trustees, was not an .absolute sale of the property, but an assignment by an insolvent debtor for the benefit of his creditors. And the plaintiff therein, who resorted to the remedy by foreign attachment, was allowed to succeed, there being property in the hands of the assignees, beyond the amount of claims of the creditors, who had become parties to the assignment before the attachment. The case cited from 7 Pick., is unlike the one at bar.
The liability of the trustee must be determined by his own disclosure, as there is no other evidence. in the case. Prom the facts disclosed, we cannot conclude that the purchase of the property by the trustee was for the purpose of aiding the principal in any fraudulent design.

Exceptions overruled.