The proofs fail to establish that the transactions complained of
by the appellant were fraudulent, as alleged.
The relationship of brothers does not of and, in itself, cast
suspicion upon a transfer of property by one to the other or create
such a
prima facie presumption against its validity as
would require the court to hold it to be invalid without proof that
there was fraud on the part of the grantor, participated in by the
grantee.
Page 151 U. S. 272
A judgment being filed for record and recorded as required by
the statutes of Colorado, a lien attaches at once upon the real
estate of the judgment debtor.
The proviso in the Colorado statute concerning liens, suspending
the running of the statute when issue of execution is restrained by
injunction, applies to a suspension of issue by supersedeas on
appeal.
In equity. Decree dismissing the bill, from which complainant
appealed. The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by the appellant, who was the complainant
below, against the appellee to set aside conveyances made to him by
Samuel H. Thatcher and the Sheriff of Arapahoe County, in the
Territory of Colorado, of certain lots and parcels of land lying
and being in that county and in the Eastern Division of the City of
Denver, on the ground that the lands were conveyed, and caused to
be conveyed, to the appellee for the purpose of hindering,
delaying, and defrauding the complainant and other creditors of
Samuel H. Thatcher.
The case made by the pleadings and proofs, so far as need be
noticed, is this: on May 7, 1874, one Samuel Kaucher recovered a
judgment in the District Court of Arapahoe County, Colorado,
against Samuel H. Thatcher, for $2,710.40. A certified copy or
abstract of this judgment was duly filed for record, and was
recorded in the office of the clerk and recorder of the county on
June 18, 1874. From this judgment, Thatcher prosecuted a writ of
error to the supreme court of the territory, and executed a
supersedeas bond, with sureties, in the sum of $3,500. That
judgment was affirmed by the supreme court of the territory.
Thereupon Thatcher
Page 151 U. S. 273
prosecuted a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the United
States, and, as appears from the record of the case in this Court,
executed a supersedeas bond, with sureties, which suspended the
execution of the judgment of the court below. It is shown that the
sureties on the supersedeas bond or bonds were protected by
securities placed in their hands by Thatcher. The case was heard in
this Court at the October term, 1877, and on December 17, 1877, the
judgment of the territorial supreme court was affirmed, and a
mandate issued for the execution of the judgment. On January 29,
1878, execution issued on this judgment against Thatcher, and was
levied upon the lands in controversy in the present case as the
property of the defendant, and pursuant to that levy the premises
were sold by the sheriff of Arapahoe County, and were purchased by
the appellee, Lewis C. Thatcher, for the debt and interest,
amounting to about $3,850. A certificate of purchase was given to
the appellee, and thereafter, on November 25, 1878, a sheriff's
deed was made to him for the premises.
Prior to the affirmance of the Kaucher judgment in this Court,
Samuel H. Thatcher, by warranty deed dated November 13, 1876,
conveyed the premises in question to his brother, Lewis C.
Thatcher, who was then a resident of the City of St. Louis,
Missouri, in consideration for the conveyance being the sum of
$4,000, for which the grantee executed to the grantor his two notes
for $2,000 each, payable two and three years from date of the sale.
The deed was duly recorded November 18, 1876, in the register's
office of the county.
On November 18, 1875, the complainant loaned to Zella Glenmore
the sum of $2,700 for one year, with interest at the rate of five
percent per month, payable monthly, for which she executed a note,
with Samuel H. Thatcher as her surety. This note was secured by a
chattel mortgage on the household furniture of Zella Glenmore,
worth from $5,000 to $6,000, and by a deed of trust executed by
Samuel H. Thatcher on 320 acres of land in Douglass County,
Colorado, of the value of about $3,000. The interest on this note
appears to have been paid, except a portion of the last month of
the year during which the note had to run. At the maturity of the
note,
Page 151 U. S. 274
the complainant seized the furniture covered by the chattel
mortgage executed by Zella Glenmore, for default in payment, and
caused the same to be sold at auction, realizing therefrom the net
proceeds of $1,519.43, which were applied upon the note. The
complainant on November 30, 1876, also caused the Douglass County
lands owned by Thatcher to be advertised and sold under the deed of
trust, and the same were bid in by the appellant for $320, and on
December 27, 1877, he received a deed from the trustee conveying to
him the lands thus sold.
On November 25, 1876, the complainant commenced an action in
attachment against Thatcher and Zella Glenmore on the note, and on
July 23, 1877, he obtained judgment against Thatcher for the sum of
$2,170. The ground of this attachment was that Samuel H. Thatcher
had disposed of his property to defraud his creditors. The
attachment was levied upon the same property covered by the
conveyance of November 13, 1876, to the appellee, and, after
recovery of judgment in the attachment proceedings, it was sold
under special execution, and bid in by the appellant for the sum of
$1,800, of which sum $1,694.10 was paid over to or applied on the
complainant's debt. Thereafter, on July 19, 1878, a sheriff's deed
was duly executed to complainant for the premises thus sold.
The complainant alleges in his bill that at the time he conveyed
the premises to his brother, Lewis C. Thatcher, Samuel H. Thatcher
was insolvent; that said conveyance was made for the purpose of
hindering, delaying, and defrauding his creditors, and that it was
without consideration, and therefore void as against the
complainant.
He further alleges that the purchase made of the property in the
name of Lewis C. Thatcher, under the Kaucher execution, in January,
1878, was collusive and fraudulent as between Samuel H. and Lewis
C. Thatcher; that the $3,850 paid to the sheriff at that sale, and
in satisfaction of the judgment, was the money of Samuel H.
Thatcher, and that the conveyance made by the sheriff to Lewis C.
Thatcher was a part of the fraudulent scheme on the part of Samuel
H. Thatcher
Page 151 U. S. 275
to hinder, delay, and defraud the complainant in the collection
of his debt.
The answer denies all of these allegations of fraud and states
that the purchase of the property by Lewis C. from his brother was
in good faith, without any knowledge or notice on the part of the
appellee that any fraud was intended; that the consideration was a
fair and reasonable one for the property, and that it was duly
paid, and that the notes executed for the purchase money were paid
and were taken up by him. The answer also alleges that the
defendant furnished the money with which to purchase the property
when sold under execution issued in the Kaucher judgment.
Upon these questions testimony was taken on both sides. Among
other proofs introduced, the complainant examined the appellee in
his own behalf, or as his own witness, touching the transactions
and conveyances called in question. In this examination, as a
witness for the complainant, the appellee stated that the purchase
was made without notice of any fraud on the part of his brother;
that the negotiation leading to the purchase was made partly
through an attorney (H.R. Hunt), and that the notes given for the
consideration had been duly paid by him; that in purchasing the
property from his brother, it was to be free and clear from all
encumbrances, and the deeds contained such warranty; that he knew
of the existence of the Kaucher judgment before making the purchase
and taking the conveyance; that he was advised that that judgment,
if affirmed, would not be a lien upon the property, but it was
understood and agreed between his brother and himself that if the
judgment should be affirmed, and thereby become a lien on the
property, then some provision should be made for his protection
against the lien. The question of the lien of that judgment in case
of its affirmance in the appellate courts was a matter upon which
there was a difference of opinion, and the appellee testifies that,
in view of that uncertainty, he forwarded money to his brother from
time to time, while the Kaucher suit was pending, for the purpose
of having it in readiness to meet the judgment if it was a lien,
and, in the event it was not a lien upon
Page 151 U. S. 276
the property, the money could be used for the payment of the two
notes which Samuel H. Thatcher held against the appellee for the
original purchase money of the property.
When the Kaucher judgment was affirmed, and the execution issued
thereunder was levied upon the property, the appellee directed that
it be purchased in his name and for his account, and the money
which he had from time to time placed in the hands of his brother
for that purpose, amounting to about $4,000, was applied in that
way, to the extent of $3,850, and credited on his notes, the first
one being surrendered by his brother, and the second, which had
been transferred by Samuel H. Thatcher to A. Jacobs & Co., on
which a partial payment had been credited, was taken up and paid by
the appellee.
It was clearly stated by the appellee that the money he placed
in the hands of his brother, Samuel H. Thatcher, to be used to
satisfy the Kaucher judgment or to purchase the property sold under
the execution of that judgment was to be endorsed on the appellee's
notes executed for the price of land if the funds were required to
be and were so used.
It is further shown by the deputy sheriff who levied upon and
sold the lands in controversy under the Kaucher judgment that
Samuel H. Thatcher informed him, before the sale under the
execution took place, that his brother, the appellee, would buy the
property, and that Samuel H. Thatcher would bid for the property
for and in the name of his brother.
There is no testimony going to show that the value of the
property at the time of its purchase in November, 1876, exceeded to
any great extent the sum of $4,000. There was testimony taken to
show that six or eight years later, the value exceeded $4,000, but
that during that period, prices of real estate in and around Denver
had greatly advanced. It does not appear, therefore, that there was
any gross inadequacy in the price of the property.
It further appears that the appellee took possession of the
property, through his agents, soon after its purchase, and
continuously thereafter paid taxes on the same.
The allegation of insolvency on the part of Samuel H.
Page 151 U. S. 277
Thatcher at the time of the conveyance of the property to his
brother is not established by the proofs. The only indebtedness of
Samuel H. (aside from that of the complainant's and of the Kaucher
judgments) which is shown to have been in existence in November,
1876, was a note for the sum of $1,000, with a small amount of
interest thereon, which he owed to Gray & Eicholtz, of Denver,
amounting in all to about $1,015. This indebtedness was protected
by a note of $1,350, made by Anna C. McCormick, secured by a deed
of trust upon twenty acres of valuable land owned by her and lying
near the City of Denver. On his indebtedness to Gray &
Eicholtz, Samuel H. Thatcher, on November 15, 1876, paid the sum of
$1,000, leaving but $15 due. Subject to that balance of $15, this
note for $1,350, owned by Samuel H. Thatcher, was attached by the
complainant under the attachment proceedings above referred to, and
was sold thereunder to the complainant for the sum of $80, who,
after paying Gray & Eicholtz the balance of $15, enforced the
deed of trust covering the twenty acres of land which secured the
note, and, under the trustee's sale, purchased the same on January
10, 1879, for $1,600.
The appellant credited Samuel H. Thatcher in this transaction
with only the sum of $80, which he bid for the note of Anna C.
McCormick, and it is exceedingly doubtful whether the proceeding to
subject this note was sufficiently valid to have divested Samuel H.
Thatcher of his title thereto, or to confer a title on the
complainant, who credited the indebtedness of Samuel H. Thatcher
with only the sum of $80. It admits of a very grave question
whether the complainant should not have credited Samuel H. Thatcher
with the sum of $1,600, for which the land securing the note was
sold. If the complainant is chargeable with that amount, and with
the sum of $1,694.10 for which the property in controversy was sold
under his execution sale, then the judgment of $2,170 has been more
than satisfied, so that he would have no equity in this case. But,
without going into that question, it is shown that every debt that
Samuel H. Thatcher owed at the time of the conveyance of the
property to his brother in November, 1876, was well secured. The
complainant's debt of $2,700, for
Page 151 U. S. 278
which Samuel H. Thatcher was security, was secured by property
reasonably worth $8,000, while the debt to Kaucher for about the
same amount was secured by collaterals placed in the hands of the
sureties on the supersedeas bonds, and the remaining debt to Gray
& Eicholtz, of $1,015, was protected by ample collateral in the
shape of the Anna C. McCormick note of $1,350, bearing interest at
the rate of twenty percent per annum (which was lawful under the
laws of the Territory of Colorado), secured by a deed of trust on
twenty acres of valuable land, which at the trustee's sale the
complainant bid in for $1,600.
The appellant claims as a badge of fraud that on January 11,
1878, Lewis C. Thatcher appointed his brother, Samuel H. Thatcher,
his attorney in fact. This instrument was duly recorded January 29,
1878, and empowered Samuel H. to bargain, sell, convey, or exchange
for other lands and property all his (Lewis C. Thatcher's) lands in
the State of Colorado, and to execute all deeds or other
instruments in writing therefor, and also to purchase and acquire
by exchange other lands in that state, such other lands to be
acquired in the name of Lewis C. Thatcher, and the title to be
vested in him.
The proofs establish that Lewis C. Thatcher held other lands in
the State of Colorado to which this power of attorney had
application, as well as to the lands described in the deed of
November 13, 1876, from Samuel H. Thatcher to his brother, the
appellee. There is nothing in the fact of the execution of this
power of attorney, or in its provisions, to raise any presumption
of fraud in the original purchase.
The only proof introduced by the complainant tending in the
slightest degree to contradict the testimony of the appellee was a
loose conversation held between the appellant and the appellee in
February, 1879. This conversation, as stated by the appellant in
his testimony, in no way tends to establish fraud in connection
with the conveyance of November 13, 1876, as alleged in the bill.
and besides, it is positively contradicted by the appellee. The
statements made by Samuel H. Thatcher in 1878 to his sureties on
the supersedeas bonds,
Page 151 U. S. 279
and to the deputy sheriff of Arapahoe County, tending to show
that he entertained a strong dislike for the appellant, and was
disposed to obstruct the collection of his judgment, are not
sufficient to show fraud, even on the part of Samuel H. Thatcher;
but, having been made in the absence of Lewis C. Thatcher, and long
after the date of the conveyance, they were clearly incompetent as
against the appellee.
It is claimed for the appellee that as the appellant called and
examined him as a witness touching the conveyance of November,
1876, and the consideration therefor, and of the payment of that
consideration, he thereby represented him as worthy of belief, and
cannot impeach or impugn his credit, or his general character for
truth, under the authorities. 1 Greenleaf ยง 442;
Jones v.
People, 2 Colo. 356. Without going into the question as to how
far or to what extent, if any, the appellant was concluded from
impeaching the credit of the appellee after having introduced and
examined him as a witness touching the matters in question, it is
sufficient to say in this case that the testimony of the appellee
has not been contradicted in any substantial or material respect,
and, treating it as worthy of belief and uncontradicted by any
independent proof, it establishes that the purchase from his
brother of the lands in question was free from fraud. The
testimony, taken as a whole, falls far short of establishing the
allegation of the bill that the conveyance of November 13, 1876,
was made for the purpose of hindering, delaying, or defrauding the
complainant or the creditors of the grantor.
The relationship of the parties does not, of and in itself, cast
suspicion upon the transaction or create such a
prima
facie presumption against its validity as would require the
court to hold it to be invalid without proof that there was fraud
on the part of the grantor participated in by the grantee. This
proposition is so well settled that authorities need not be cited
in its support.
But again, the statute of Colorado on the subject of liens
(1862) in force at the time of these transactions provided that
judgments should be a lien on the judgment creditor's real estate
not exempt from execution, owned by him at the time,
Page 151 U. S. 280
until the lien expires, and
"the lien shall continue for six years from the entry of the
judgment, unless the judgment shall be previously satisfied:
provided, that execution be issued at any time within one year on
such judgment, and from and after the said six years the same shall
cease to be a lien on any real estate as against a
bona
fide purchaser, or subsequent encumbrance by mortgage,
judgment, or otherwise,
provided that in case the party in
whose favor any such judgment shall have been entered shall be
restrained by injunction out of chancery or order of any judge or
court, either from issuing execution or selling thereon, the time
which he shall be so restrained shall not be deemed or considered
as any part of said six years."
By the first section of the Act of February 13, 1874, it is
provided that
"when a judgment shall be rendered in any district or probate
court of this territory, the clerk of such district court or the
probate judge, shall, upon demand, give to the plaintiff, his agent
or attorney, an abstract thereof setting forth the name or names of
plaintiff or plaintiffs and defendant or defendants in full, the
title of the court, the date when the judgment was rendered, and
the amount of the same, with damages and costs, which shall be
signed by such clerk or probate judge and attested by the seal of
the court, and when so executed, such abstract may be filed for
record in the office of the clerk and recorder of the county where
such judgment is rendered or in any county in the territory, and
from the date of such filing, and not before, such judgment shall
become a lien upon all the real estate of defendant in the county
where such abstract may be recorded, and not until such abstract
shall be so filed, nor in any county other than the one in which so
filed."
The Kaucher judgment having been filed for record, and having
been recorded as required by this section, the lien upon the real
estate of Samuel H. Thatcher in controversy in this suit attached
at once, as held in
McFarran v. Knox, 5 Colo. 220.
But the execution was not issued within a year from the
rendition of the judgment, for the reason that it was
superseded
Page 151 U. S. 281
by the order of the district court and of the supreme court, by
the allowance of the supersedeas bonds, which suspended all
proceedings under the judgment. This suspension of the proceedings
comes fairly within the proviso of the act of 1862, above quoted,
and the execution, after the affirmance of the Kaucher judgment by
this Court, having been issued within a year from the date of its
affirmance and within six years from the date of the judgment,
gives the lien of that judgment priority over the complainant's
attachment and judgment, so that the sale made under the Kaucher
execution conveyed a superior title to that which the complainant
acquired either by his attachment or by his execution, levy, and
sale.
It is clearly established, as we think, that Lewis C. Thatcher
furnished the money to pay off the Kaucher judgment, or to purchase
the property sold under the execution issued thereon; that Samuel
H. Thatcher acted only as his agent in making the purchase and in
paying over the money to the sheriff, and that the Sheriff of
Arapahoe County was so informed before that execution sale was
made. Under these circumstances, and in the absence of any
fraudulent collusion on the part of Samuel H. Thatcher and Lewis C.
Thatcher in the transaction, we think that Lewis C. acquired a
title to the property superior to that which complainant acquired
under his attachment and execution sale, and that the complainant
cannot, even as an unsatisfied creditor of Samuel H. Thatcher,
successfully attack this purchase of Lewis C. Thatcher on the
ground of fraud or of bad faith on the part of the appellee.
Now without going into the equitable considerations set up in
the second amended answer, which induced the court below to
consider that the complainant could not enforce his judgment
against the appellee, 34 F. 435, we are satisfied that the proofs
fail to establish that the transactions by which Lewis C. acquired
the property in controversy were fraudulent, as alleged, and that
the complainant is not entitled to have the conveyances made to the
appellee, either by Samuel H. Thatcher or by the Sheriff of
Arapahoe County, set aside.
The judgment of the court below is therefore
Affirmed.