Connecticut Bank v. Greer
Connecticut Bank v. Greer
Opinion of the Court
Opinion op the Court by
Appellant, a judgment creditor of A. L. Greer with an execution returned and endorsed by tbe proper officer “No property” instituted tbis action with, attachment in the Kenton Circuit Court against A. L. and Thomas Greer to subject various parcels of real estate in the city of Covington specifically described in the petition to the satisfaction of its judgment, of which it alleges A. L. Greer is the owner; but that Thomas Greer claimed them under certain conveyances which A. L. Greer had made and called to be made to him with the fraudulent design to hinder and prevent the creditors of A. L. Greer, who was heavily indebted at the time, from collecting their debts, that the considerations recited were pretended, and unreal, and that Thomas Greer participated in said fraudulent design, and accepted the conveyance to carry out and perfect the fraud.
Other creditors of A. L. Greer brought their actions against him and Thomas Greer, and caused attachments to issue all of which together with that of appellant were levied on the property conveyed by the former to the latter, the actions were all consolidated to be heard together, and on final trial, the court below dismissed the petitions of appellant, of the Covington and Cincinnati Bridge Company and of Bichard Ashcraft for the reason as stated in the opinion that there was no proof to sustain the issue presented in the pleadings, and adjudged to John W. Pinnell, Commissioner of the Kentucky Trust Company, the sum of eight thousand eighty-seven dollars 95 cents with interest from the 1st of January, 1866,
As the indebtedness of Thomas Greer to the bank is not controverted in the answers, and is fully shown by copies of the judgment and execution filed as exhibits by appellant, the defect, or want of proof therefore suggested in the opinion must relate to the question of fraud and grounds for the attachment, and whether or not the conclusion of the court below as to these points was correct is the only question involved in this issue.
On the 18th day of April, 1862, a consent order was made in these consolidated cases in the following words: “It is agreed among the parties hereto, that the evidence now in the case, and that hereafter to be taken, may be read, and made to apply in each of these consolidated causes.” By this </rder all the evidence taken in each and all of the cases consolidated was before the court on the trial of appellant’s case, and if it authorized a judgment in
The whole of this very voluminous record has been carefully read, and without entering upon a discussion in detail, or an analysis of the evidence it must suffice that it satisfies ns that the real estate attached by appellant should have been .subjected to the satisfaction of its debt, or to the residue thereof after allowing all proper credits, to be postponed however, to the prior equities and liens of Finnell Commissioner, Cooper, the Pearces, and R. Phillips.
It will be proper to refer the case to the master to ascertain- and report the true amount due appellant from A. L. Greer, and for that purpose it may be necessary to sell the bank stock, and all the stocks and collaterals placed with appellant by A. L. Greer.
Wherefore, the judgment so far as it dismissed appellant’s petition is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a judgment and further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.