Kelly v. Schillinger

HEAD, J.

We think the finding and judgment of the city court in this case were clearly right. J. B. Smith, a saloon keeper, sold out his stock, &c. to the claimant, Scliillinger, for. $8,500, which the undisputed evidence shows was its reasonable value. Smith informed Schillinger of outstanding claims against him for something over $2,900, and the latter was careful to make it a part of the contract that those debts be paid out of the $8 ,500, and took it into his own hands to see that they were paid, and it was done. He asked Smith if there were any other claims against him, and was assured there were none. He then paid Smith the balance of the price, to-wit, $5,545.15, giving him a check for the same on his bank. Before the trade was consummated, Mount-joy & Tomlinson, attorneys in Birmingham, presented another claim, one in favor of Rosskam, Gerstly & Co. *338for $170.35, of which Schillinger was notified, but Smith declared to Schillinger that he did not owe it, and no provision was made- for its payment. This was all Schillinger knew about Smith’s indebtedness, and we see in the evidence, no facts or circumstances sufficient to charge him with notice of any other indebtedness. It developed subsequently that a claim for $114.69 in favor of Sattler & Co. and the claim of Kelly, the plaintiff in this suit, for $125, appeared in the form of accepted drafts. There is no evidence that Smith owed anything more than is hereinabove shown, so that on the undisputed evidence his stock, &c. were worth over five thousand dollars more than he owed. If it be conceded that Smith made the sale with the intent to defraud the three small creditors who were unprovided for, we are well satisfied that the nature of the transaction was such that Schillinger, as a reasonably prudent business man, was not charged with notice of that intent. He had every reason to believe that Smith had honestly provided for all his creditors. We do not think, under all the circumstances, that Schillinger was called upon to demand an inspection of Smith’s books to see what creditors there were. It is argued that there is no proof in the record of the validity and bona jides of most of the claims which were provided for and paid, and that it must be taken that $8,500 worth of property was sold for a little over $5,000. The answer is, that if those claims were not real, Schillinger had no notice whatever of the existence of any debts, except the disputed claim of Rosskam, G-erstly & Co. He evidently believed them to be just claims, and acting honestly and with reasonable precaution throughout, he can not be charged with notice of any fraud on the part of the seller, if such was intended. The case would then be the same as if the whole $8,500 had been paid over to Smith. We do not affirm that if the facts had been such as to put Schillinger on notice of a fraudulent intent on the part of Smith, it would not have devolved on Schillinger to prove that the claims paid were real debts. That question does not now arise.

We concur fully in the conclusion of the city court,’ and its judgment is affirmed.