STEWART AND WALKER
WHITE (TRUSTEE OF SPRINGALL, AN INSOLVENT) RESPONDENT.
ON APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF
QUEENSLAND. Insolvency Act 1874 (Qd.), (38 Vict. No. 5), sec. 107-Fraudulent preference-
Pressure by creditor-" With a view to" prefer-Intention or motive. BRISBANE,
A debtor, who was unable to pay his debts as they became due out of his Oct. 4, 7, 8.
own moneys, handed to creditors, who were aware of his financial position, and had for some time unsuccessfully used pressure, a series of small cheques payable at extended dates and representing the amount of the debt. The debtor having been adjudicated insolvent within six months:
Held, the payments were a fraudulent preference under the Insolvency Act 1874, sec. 107. The words "with a view to prefer" in that section refer to the intention or purpose of the debtor, and not to his motive bringing
Dictum in Russell Wilkins &Sons Ltd. v. Outridge Printing Co. Ltd., (1906 St. R. Qd., 172), relating to the effect of pressure on the intention to prefer,
APPEAL from a judgment of Cooper C.J. sitting in the Insol- vency jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of Queensland. The insolvent, Springall, trading as the South Brisbane Butter Com- pany, had transactions with the appellants, a firm of butter merchants, during 1906. In April and May 1906 he bought goods from the appellants to the value of £1,091, and gave in part payment a cheque for £519 which was dishonoured. By December 1906 under severe pressure his debt to them had been