Wells v. Selling

Robinson, J.

Defendant, in the fall of 1868, began business in this city as a tobacco merchant, with a cash or available capital of less than $2,000.

In November, 1875, he bought tobacco of plaintiffs to the amount of.. $3,981 87

And paid on account.............. 1,500 00

$2,481 87

On January 17, he bought of them a bill of......................... 1,120 95

On which the expenses of delivery were.......... 63 40

January 17, 1876, he bought of D. W. King, tobacco to the amount of..................

$3,666' 22 1/307 41

Carried forward

$4,973 63

*37Brought forward.......................

Same date he bought of B. M. Burdick, tobacco to the amount of.........................

January 14 and 26, 1876, he bought of S. Barnett, tobacco to the amount of.............

Oct. 19,1875, he bought of Hubbard & Co., tobacco to the amount of.. $1,585 30 On January 14, 1876 ............. 635 20

$2, 220 50

On which, Jan. 17, 1876, he paid... 1,000 00

- 1,220 50

January 28, he overdrew from National Trust Co..................................... 867 66

$11,325 28

He owed for money borrowed in 1875 :

J. P. Hornthal................ o o o €£■ 00

Louis Hornthal............... HbO o o 00

Hornthal Bros................ ... 1,530 00

Louis Selling................. 550 00

Z. Selling.................... 850 00

S. Bappa...................... 400 00

D. Selling.................... 500 00

A. Hartman.................. 400 00

Jos. Hornthal................. 500 00

And other small debts......... 400 00

Making an aggregate of.... o CO CO 00 00

Making his indebtedness at least......$19,755 28

He made an assignment to Moses Hatch, dated February 7,1876, returning his entire property at a valuation of $1,400, without any pretense of any loss by bad debts or otherwise, occurring since the date of his purchase from plaintiffs. He then owed, as he asserts, over $8,000 for money borrowed from his relatives without shadow of means, exceeding $2,000,

$4,973 63 623 49 3,640 00 *38to pay his debts. That this purchase from plaintiffs, without any pretended disclosure of the condition of his affairs, or any reasonable ground for expectation of meeting his obligations, was fraudulent, can scarcely admit of a question. He’discloses no possible or probable condition of his affairs from which any reasonable expectation might be raised or indulged, enabling him to pay the debt he contracted with the plaintiffs. The extraordinary credits he obtained in January, on the very eve of his assignment,

Of plaintiffs, January 17, 1876............... $1,120 95

Of D. W. King, same date................... 1,307 41

Of K. M. Burdick, same date................. , 623 49

Of S. Barnett, January 14......... $1, 640 00

And borrowed money, January 26.. 2, 000 00

-- 3,640 00

Overdraft National Trust Co.........'........ 867 66

$7,559 51

Evinces nothing more clearly than that he intended to avail himself of the confidence of his creditors to the utmost, and thus make a grand raid upon them. Of this $7,500 worth of property obtained in January, he fails to make any explanation as to its disposition or to show how it, together with what he previously possessed, culminated in the meager show of assets on the seventh of February, amounting to less than $1,500, as estimated by himself.

These main facts are so patent upon the case as disclosed that, without regard to other details involving the collusion and frauds of his conniving relatives, the result is manifest that the debt to plaintiffs was contracted by the defendant without any reasonable expectation of legitimate resources to pay it when due, and that the defendant, out of the property thus acquired from confiding creditors during the latter pait of the month of January, to the extent of at least $7,500, has misappropriated, without regard to what he previously owed, *39all but about $1,500 of his assets. That he is thus shown, in the absence of any explanation, to have fraudulently disposed of his property with intent to defraud his creditors can scarce admit of a doubt.

The particular transaction by which the defendant disposed of $2,800 to his uncle, Louis Hornthal, in the latter part of January, 1876, under an assumed indebtedness to him in that amount; the deposit of the same sum by Hornthal in the Butchers and Drovers’ Bank in a newly-opened account on . the third of February, and the reappearance of the defendant on the first of March in full possession of the same business he had previously carried on under general power of attorney from his wife, and with capital evidently afforded her by Hornthal from the $2,800 that had gone through the formal process of payment of a debt to the latter, leaves no question in my mind but that the whole was a scheme to defraud defendant’s creditors of this sum. Louis Hornthal, it is too apparent, was but a mere tool used to accomplish this end. The transaction is too bald and wanting in every just and fair explanation which, if honest, might readily have been given. I am, therefore, drawn to an irresistible conclusion that this transaction of the assumed payment to Louis Hornthal of $2,800 was a fraudulent disposition of so much of the defendant’s property with intent to defraud his creditors, and, as before mentioned, I also find that he fraudulently contracted the debt for which the suit is brought.

I therefore order his commitment to the county jail to be' there detained until discharged according to law, unless he comply with some of the provisions contained in the first four subdivisions of the tenth section of the non-imprisonment act of 1831.