Meeker v. Hays
Meeker v. Hays
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The evidence shows Hays was insolvent, that about noon the sale was passed and the intervenor entered into possession. Hays absconded immediately and the attachment was executed a few hours after. The intervenor offered no other evidence of the validity of the consideration mentioned in the notarial act, than its recitals and his own statements when he took possession of the store. He offered several witnesses to prove he was not entirely un[21] known. One represents him as a man who “trades in most any thing,” but from the statements of them altogether, it appears his operations had been previously confined to speculations in shoes, tinware, lumber and wood in flatboats. They say he pays his debts, when he owes any, and one witness has known him to be worth money.
The question is one of fraud. The judge who tried the cause saw and heard all the witnesses. He decided the sale was “ made in fraud of Hays’s creditors,” and with a view to protect his property from their claims. We have examined the evidence, and believe his judgment correct.
The judgment of the commercial court is, therefore, affirmed, with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Meeker & Lewis v. Hays & Al.
- Status
- Published