Boice v. Conover

54 N.J. Eq. 531
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 54 N.J. Eq. 531 (Boice v. Conover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boice v. Conover, 54 N.J. Eq. 531 (N.J. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

■ Emery, Y. C.

The dispute in this case relates to the respective’ priorities of two chattel mortgages and of a judgment and execution creditor; one chattel mortgage being held by complainants, one by the defendant Edwin Allen and the execution creditor being the defendant the Mapes Formula and Guano Company. Both chattel mortgages were given by the defendants Cornelius N. Conover and William Allen, partners as Conover & Allen, the complainants’ mortgage being dated on October 21st, 1893, and recorded October 25th, 1893, subsequent to the defendant Allen’s-mortgage, which was dated September 8th, 1893, and recorded September 9th, 1893. The two mortgages cover the same property, and include the partnership stock, horses, wagons &c., goods and fixtures, and also the books of account, debts &o., due or to-become due to the firm. The judgment of the Mapes &c. Company was obtained on December 12th, 1893, in the Middlesex circuit court, for $1,096.61 damages, and $33.50 costs, upon an account due from the firm of Conover & Allen which, as appears from the record of the judgment, was incurred between February 2d and April’ 10th, 1893, and previous to the execution-of either of the chattel mortgages.

Upon execution issued under this judgment, levy was made-upon the goods and chattels covered by the chattel mortgages (but not upon the book accounts and choses in action mortgaged),, and also upon the separate interest of Conover, one of the members of the firm, in certain real estate in Middlesex county; Levy was made on the execution before the filing of complainants’ bill.

On December 28th, 1893, complainants filed a bill to fore[533]*533close their chattel mortgage, disputing the priority of defendant Allen’s mortgage as to $2,000, part of the debt secured by it, on the ground that this portion of the debt secured by Allen’s mort3 gage was the individual debt of "William Allen, one of the part-] ners, and was not a firm debt, and the mortgage was, therefore,! charged to be fraudulent anc( voluntary as to complainants^ mortgage, which was given to secure a firm debt or liability. Upon this bill a receiver of the mortgaged property was appointed, the receiver being Mr. C. H. Eunyon, the attorney of the Mapes company, and the mortgaged property (including the book accounts and debts due) has been sold and collected. Out of the proceeds the receiver has paid to Edwin Allen the sum of $2,017.78, under orders of the court (consented to by complainants); to be applied on that part of the debt secured by Edwin Allen’s mortgage which was not disputed by complainants’ original bill. Subsequently to this sale and collection by' the receiver and to these payments, and in order to reach the funds in court for application on his mortgage, the defendant Edwin Allen (at the suggestion of the court, made when the case was brought to hearing) filed a cross-bill upon his mortgage against the complainants and the Mapes &c. Company, who had not put in any answer to the original bill. In its answer to the cross-bill the Mapes company attacks the Allen mortgage as void for want of a proper affidavit under the statute relating to chattel mortgages, and also as a voluntary mortgage to the extent of $2,000, in that it was given to this extent-by the members of the firm, upon the firm property, to secure an individual debt of one of the partners, and is, therefore, void as against the judgment creditors of the firm, whose debts existed at the time of the mortgage.

The defendant Edwin Allen alleges that the entire indebtedness secured or intended to be secured by his mortgage was a partnership debt or liability, and, as against the execution creditor, defendant also alleges that the real estate of Conover, one of the defendants in execution, is sufficient to satisfy the execution, and claims that this must be first sold before resorting to the goods and chattels of the firm.

[534]*534The Allen' mortgage was given to secure the payment of $4,800 on demand, with interest from the date of the mortgage (September 8th, 1893), and in his affidavit annexed to the mortgage, Edwin Allen, the mortgagee, swears that

"the true consideration of the said mortgage is as- follows, viz., the sum of four thousand eight hundred dollars cash money loaned by this deponent to said Cornelius N. Conover and William Allen, partners, trading as Conover & Allen, at their request and before the execution hereof, and now due and owing from them to this deponent, and the deponent further says that there is due on said mortgage the sum of forty-eight hundred dollars besides lawful interest thereon from the 8th day of September, 1893.”

It is admitted by the answer and the cross-bill of Edwin' Allen, and is undisputed ou the evidence, that at the time of giving the mortgage .neither the firm nor William Allen owed Edwin Allen more than $2,000, and that the $2,800 additional included in the mortgage represented notes to that amount which Edwin Allen had endorsed for the accommodation of the firm, and on which he was liable as endorser, but which were not then due, so that to this extent the true state of the indebtedness and the true consideration of the mortgage were not disclosed by the mortgage or affidavit. The execution creditor insists that this failure to disclose the true consideration of the mortgage avoids the mortgage as to it under the statute, and also that the affidavit that any of the $2,000 indebtedness was due or to become due from the firm was false, in fact, this being a debt due solely from William Allen for the capital advanced by William Allen to the firm. The disputed question of fact in the case is whether the $2,000 was an indebtedness due from the firm or only from William Allen, and upon the whole evidence I reach the conclusion that the debt was not a firm debt, but was due to Edwin Allen from his son William alone and not from the firm. Edwin Allen had no dealings whatever with Conover, the other partner, in relation to the advance of the $2,000, and this money was at different times between June 20th, 1892, and August 3d, 1892, paid or advanced by Edwin Allen to his son William,'the evidence of indebtedness in each case being notes signed by William Allen alone, which were delivered by him to his father and [535]*535were renewed when due by the son’s obligations alone. By the agreement between the partners, each was to contribute $2,500 capital, and in the books of the firm, which were kept by William Allen, he entered the moneys received by him from his father as part of the credit to his account as a partner. So far as William is concerned, this and the other evidence in the case— showing that up to the time of giving the mortgage these advances from his father had not been treated as a partnership liability — is conclusive, and entirely overcomes his present statement that the money was originally advanced as a loan-to the firm. William Allen’s statement that the advances from his father were put in his account so that it could be either way, that I owed it to him or the firm owed it to him,” is of itself sufficient to discredit his present evidence.

As to Edwin Allen’s evidence on this point, it appears that he knew that it would require about five or six thousand dollars to buy the stock or business which the firm proposed to take, and that before the partnership was formed he promised his son to let them have $2,000. One thousand dollars of the amount was advanced June 20th, 1892, on a note for one year, signed only by his son ; $300 on July 15th, 1892, on a similar note.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 N.J. Eq. 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boice-v-conover-njch-1896.