Bown v. Frank

256 P. 190, 121 Or. 482, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 108
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 256 P. 190 (Bown v. Frank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bown v. Frank, 256 P. 190, 121 Or. 482, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 108 (Or. 1927).

Opinion

BURNETT, C. J.

On January 25, 1921, O. B. Frank executed and delivered to the Adjustment Bureau of the Portland Association of Credit Men, at Portland, Oregon, the following document:

“Know All Men by These Presents, That whereas, O. B. Frank, engaged in business at Rose-burg, Oregon, under the name and style of-, party of the first part, is unable to meet his obligations in full, in the ordinary course of business, and desires to transfer his assets in trust for the benefit of his *484 creditors in order to obviate litigation and court proceedings.
“Now, Therefore, In consideration of tbe premises, and the sum of One Dollar and other good and valuable considerations to him in band paid by tbe Adjustment Bureau of tbe Portland Association of Credit Men of Portland, Oregon, party of tbe second part, tbe receipt of which is hereby duly acknowledged, tbe said party of tbe first part does hereby sell, assign, set over and transfer unto tbe said party of the second part, all of tbe following described personal property, to-wit:
“A stock of confectionery located at Eoseburg, Oregon, together with all fixtures used in and about said business, subject to that certain mortgage given W. D. Bell on certain of said fixtures. Also, all accounts and bills due and owing, or to become due and owing to said party of tbe first part.
“To Have and to Hold, All of tbe described personal property unto tbe said party of tbe second part, bis representatives and assigns forever.
“This transfer is made nevertheless in trust for tbe uses and "purposes following, to-wit:
“First — To take possession of all of said personal property and make a complete inventory thereof;
“Second — To insure tbe same against loss by fire;
“Third — To sell and dispose of said stock of merchandise at retail sales or in bulk as may to tbe said party of the second part seem most advantageous and to collect said notes and accounts by legal process or otherwise;
“Fourth — Out of tbe proceeds arising from said sales and collections to pay tbe actual and necessary .expenses incurred in carrying out this trust;
“Fifth — Out of tbe proceeds remaining after tbe payment of such expenses, to pay all of the creditors of said party of tbe first part in full, if sufficient funds be realized therefor, and if not, then pro rata in accordance with tbe amounts of tbe respective claims and demands of said creditors and without preference except as is fixed by law;
“Sixth — To return tbe overplus, if any there be, to tbe said party of tbe first part.
*485 “In Witness Whereon, Said party of the first part has hereunto set his hand and seal this 25th day of January, 1921.
‘ ‘ (Signed) O. B. Frank. ’ ’

For brevity’s sake the grantee in that instrument will be called “The Association.” It took possession of the chattels mentioned upon which, at the time, the defendant Bell, garnishee herein, had a chattel mortgage unpaid and overdue. Afterward, on February 7, 1921, the Association, in consideration of the sum of $500 to it paid by Bell, sold and delivered to him those very chattels and he took possession of them. Subsequently, the plaintiff herein instituted this action against Frank to recover for herself and her assignors the balances due them for labor and services performed for him. A writ of attachment was issued and served upon Bell as garnishee, seeking to attach in his hands the personal property involved. Frank did not at the time of the execution of the instrument furnish a list of his creditors and there was no effort by or on behalf of Bell to notify Frank’s creditors of the proposed transaction embodied in the written transfer. Neither was there any attempt of that kind made at the time of the sale by the Association to Bell.

Answering the notice of garnishment accompanying the service of the writ of attachment, Bell declared, in substance, that he had no property of any kind in his possession or his control belonging to the defendant Frank. This answer being unsatisfactory to the plaintiff, she filed allegations and interrogatories, calling upon Bell for more definite answers. The allegations comprised a repetition of the allegations of the original complaint against Frank and, in addition thereto, the history of the issuance of the writ of attachment and garnishment *486 and the transfer' to the Association and thence to Bell, which the plaintiff declares did not comply with sections of the statute known as the Bulk Sales Law and that Frank did not furnish, nor his grantee receive, a list of creditors of the defendant “as required by Section 8161, Olson’s Laws of Oregon, nor five days before nor any time before the sale or transfer of the said property by said defendant Frank, to said corporation hereinafter mentioned.” In fact, all of the acts of the defendant, the Association and Bell are declared to be not “as provided by Section 8162, Olson’s Oregon Laws, or otherwise or at all.” These amount to mere conclusions of law and not averments of fact.

Answering the allegations and interrogatories, the statements respecting the indebtedness alleged to be due to the plaintiff and her assignors are denied. Further answering the allegations, the garnishee charges that:

“ * * at the time said assignment for the benefit of creditors was made by the said defendant to said adjustment bureau this plaintiff and her assignors had full knowledge of the same, and that this plaintiff and her assignors thereupon filed their claims against the said defendant with said adjustment bureau, claiming the same to be preferred claims for wages, and that the same have been accepted as such by said adjustment bureau.”

The plaintiff did not deny any of the averments of the answer to the allegations and interrogatories but contented herself with exceptions to the new matter amounting to a demurrer which the court sustained and, without making any findings of fact on the issues raised by the denials, entered judgment against the garnishee overruling his motion to dismiss the garnishment and directing sale of the property involved in the assignment.

*487 For the want of findings of fact and conclusions of law on the issues of fact propounded hy the answers to the allegations and interrogatories, the judgment, so far as it affects the garnishee or the property claimed to have been attached, is erroneous and of no effect: Turner v. Cyrus, 91 Or. 462 (179 Pac. 279).

Again, it is alleged in the answer and not denied by the plaintiff that she and her assignors presented their claims to the Creditors’ Association to whom Frank executed and delivered the instrument quoted and that they were accepted as preferred claims. On that point it is held in Kerslake v. Brower Lumber Co., 40 Or. 44 (66 Pac.

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Related

Brownson v. Lewis and Bunnell
377 P.2d 327 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1962)
Liberman v. Low
36 P.2d 791 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
256 P. 190, 121 Or. 482, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bown-v-frank-or-1927.