Browning v. Deford

60 P. 534, 8 Okla. 239
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 11, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 60 P. 534 (Browning v. Deford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Browning v. Deford, 60 P. 534, 8 Okla. 239 (Okla. 1899).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Tarsney, J.:

On December 15, 1890, the plaintiffs in error took from W. F. Wolfe & Son a chattel mortgage upon a stock of goods and merchandise, situated in Oklahoma City, and went into immediate possession of the same, by one W. L. Harvey, as their agent. The mortgage was obtained by A. H. Vance, one of the plaintiffs in error, acting for himself and as agent and attorney for all the other plaintiffs in error, and the property being placed in his possession by Wolf & Son, wasi by him turned over to W. L. Harvey, who was his brother-in-law, to sell and dispose of for said plaintiffs in error. On the same day, certain of the creditor® of Wolfe & Son commenced attachment, proceedings and caused writs of attachment to be levied on the mortgaged property. Defendant, DeFord, as sheriff of Oklahoma county, levied *241 the attachments, dispossessed the agent oí the mortgagees, and the property was afterwards sold by the defendant under an order of sale from the district court, made in the attachment proceedings. The mortgagees each brought a separate suit against the defendant for the conversion of the property, and on June 29, 1891, a stipulation was made whereby the several suits of the plaintiffs in error should be consolidated into one action, wherein the plaintiffs in error should be plaintiffs; and in •accordance with such stipulation, said several actions were consolidated by order of court, and a consolidated petition was filed therein alleging a separate indebtedness •due to the several plaintiffs from W. F. Wolfe & Son, the making a chattel mortgage by Wolfe & Son to secure the same, the delivery of the mortgaged property thereunder to the agent of the plaintiff®, its seizure and conversion by the defendant, and asking judgment for the value of the several interests of the plaintiffs in the property converted.

To this petition the defendant, DeFord, answered, justifying the seizure of the goods under various writs of attachment placed in his hands for service.

The principal ground of defense relied upon by the defendant was stated in the sixth paragraph of the answer, in which he alleged substantially that in the year 1890, and prior thereto, W. F. Wolfe, Louis H. Wolfe and Frederick W. Wolfe were engaged in mercantile business in Topeka, Kansas, as partners, under the firm name of W. F. Wolfe & Sons; that prior to said date plaintiffs, pretending to be creditors of said firm, had taken notes of said firm for the amount of their indebtedness claimed in this action; that some of said notes were signed by D. A. *242 Harvey, others by John T. Clark, and all of said notes, were signed by plaintiff A. H. Vance; that Clark, Harvey and Vance signed said notes as sureties thereon; that A. H. Vance is a brother-in-law of Louis H. Wolfe, Harvey is. an uncle of said Wolfe, and Clark is the father-in-law of said Wolfe; that the stock in trade of said Wolfe & Sons,, at Topeka, consisted of remnants and broken lots of merchandise, odds and ends of a run-down stock of small commercial value; that it was the wreckage of a former failure of said Wolfe & Sons; that at said time Wolfe & Sons were utterly insolvent and known to be so by all the plaintiffs; that having no means to pay the indebtedness on said notes and knowing that if the same should be paid it would-have to be paid by Vance, H-arv-ey and Clark, Wolfe & Sons combined, conspired and confederated with Vance,. Harvey and Clark, and formed and entered into a scheme and combination with said Harvey, Vance and Clark, for the purpose of protecting and relieving them from their surety -obligations on said notes; that pursuant to said conspiracy, Wolfe & Sons removed their business from Topeka to Oklahoma Territory, and there opened under the name of W. F. Wolfe & Son; that W. F. Wolfe was the-owner of real estate in Topeka of the value of $10,000, which he conveyed to the wife of A. H. Vance, so that the same should be beyond the reach of creditors-; that L. H. Wolf was the owner o-f certain real estate in Topeka of the value of $10,000, which he conveyed to his wife for the purpose of placing it beyond the reach of creditors; that when said firm moved to Oklahoma City, L. H. Wolfe-became the owner of real estate at Oklahoma City of the value of $12,000, which he conveyed to Georgiana H. Wolfe, his mother; that the deeds for said several pieces. *243 of real estate were withheld from record so that the title thereof of record stood in the name® of W. F. Wolfe and L. EL. Wolfe, for the purpose of enabling them to carryout and consummate the conspiracy aforesaid, whereby they could use such real estate as a basis of credit upon which to obtain goods and merchandise from wholesale merchants, which goods and merchandise, when so obtained, should be conveyed by mortgage to the holders of said outstanding notes, and which, being appropriated to-the payment of said notes, would release the said relatives of said Wo-lfe & Son, viz: Harvey, Vance and Clark, from their obligations as sureties1 on said notes, from which obligation® they were financially responsible; that in pursuance of said plan and scheme, Wolfe & Son, after' they opened business in Oklahoma City, made property statements to divers wholesale merchants, including the attachment plantiffs, for the purpose of obtaining credit, which property statement was as follows: “Stock in Oklahoma City, $17,000; Guthrie stock, $35,000; real estate in Oklahoma City, $12,000; Topeka real estate, $20,000, making total firm asset®, $84,000; total liabilities, $27,000.” That it was a part of said plan and conspiracy that when a large stock of good® had been purchased by them, by-mean® of said false -and fraudulent statement, the deeds-, to said real estate, which had previously been made to. Mrs. A. H. Vance, Mrs. L. H. Wolfe and Georgiana H.. Wolfe, and which had remained unrecorded for three years and a half, for -eight months and for six months, respectively, should be placed upon record and the goods and merchandise obtained upon such false and fraudulent property statement should be conveyed by mortgage-to the plaintiffs in error, in satisfaction of said notes;. *244 that said Wolfe & Son, in pursuance of such conspiracy and by means of said false and fraudulent property statement, did purchase and obtain credit for $19,000 worth of goods from said attaching creditors and others; that immediately upon obtaining such goods and credits, the real estate deeds aforesaid were placed upon record and the chattel mortgage under which plaintiffs in error claimed, was executed, and the goods so fraudulently purchased delivered to them under such chattel mortgage. Defendant alleged that isaid goods were sio fraudulently obtained from said attachment creditors; that A. H. Vance, one of the plaintiffs in error, acting for himself and as agent and attorney for the other plaintiffs in error, not only had full knowledge that such goods were wrongfully and fraudulently obtained from said attachment creditors, but that he actively participated in obtaining the same; that he had full knowledge that the mortgage under which plaintiffs in error claimed was executed by Wolfe & Son, with the intent and for the purpose of defrauding, hindering and delaying the creditors of said Wolfe & Son, and that he actively participated in such fraudulent conveyance, to assist said Wolfe & Son in such fradulent purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 P. 534, 8 Okla. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/browning-v-deford-okla-1899.