Chamberlain Banking House v. Turner-Frazer Mercantile Co.

92 N.W. 172, 66 Neb. 48, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 407
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1902
DocketNo. 12,119
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 92 N.W. 172 (Chamberlain Banking House v. Turner-Frazer Mercantile Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chamberlain Banking House v. Turner-Frazer Mercantile Co., 92 N.W. 172, 66 Neb. 48, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 407 (Neb. 1902).

Opinion

Day, C.

Tbe Turner-Frazer Mercantile Company brought this suit in the district court for Johnson county against tbe Chamberlain Banking House to subject to tbe payment of plaintiff’s judgment against Renshaw & Co. certain funds arising from tbe sale of a stock of goods and fixtures which was made by tbe defendant bank under an alleged fraudulent chattel mortgage executed to it by Renshaw & Co. Similar suits were instituted by Noyes, Norman & Co., and eight other creditors of Renshaw & Co., each claiming a prior lien upon the funds arising out of the sale. For the purposes of trial and decree, the several cases were consolidated. A trial Avas had to the court, resulting in a judgment in favor of the several plaintiffs; the decree fixing the amount due each, and further ordering that the defendant pay into court the sum of <|2,681.23, with interest at seven per cent, from November 6, 1895; that said sum be distributed pro rata; among the several plaintiffs. To review this judgment the defendant has brought the case to this court on error.

It appears from the testimony that on November 6, 1895, and for some months prior thereto, F. D. Renshaw, under the name and style of Renshaw & Co., was the [50]*50owner of a general stock of merchandise and fixtures, and was carrying on a general store in the town of Crab Orchard, Nebraska. Upon' that date he was indebted to the Chamberlain Banking Company in the sum of $1,079.15. Be was also indebted to Charles M. Chamberlain, who was the cashier and manager of the defendant bank, upon five promissory notes, aggregating $582.85, and was further indebted to said Chamberlain in the. sum of $519.23, by reason of a liability as indorser upon a number of notes which had previously been discounted by the said Chamberlain. It also appears that Renshaw was owing a number of wholesale houses for goods purchased, his debts being largely in excess of his assets. It appears that on November 6,1895, the defendant and said Chamberlain demanded payment or security of their respective claims, and during the negotiation, v;hich lasted through the day, threatened to attach the stock unless security for their claims was furnished. Renshaw insisted that if his goods were seized or attached he would claim out of them the exemptions to which he was entitled under the law. It was finally agreed between the parties that defendant would advance to Renshaw an additional $500, which was accordingly done, and Renshaw thereupon executed and delivered to the defendant a demand note for $2,681.23, the exact amount of defendant’s and Chamberlain’s claims, together with the $500 advanced by the bank; and to secure the payment of this note executed and delivered to the defendant a mortgage upon his entire stock of goods and store fixtures. The defendant and Chamberlain surrendered to Renshaw the notes each held against him, and Chamberlain also surrendered the notes upon which Renshaw was indorser. By a subséquent arrangement between the bank and Chamberlain, the bank paid to Chamberlain the amount of his claim against Renshaw. The note and mortgage were executed in the evening, and the following day the defendant demanded payment of its note, and in default thereof took possession of the stock under the mortgage. It also appears that at the time of [51]*51the execution of the mortgage to the defendant, Renshaw gave a mortgage to the Symns Grocery Company, subject to the mortgage in favor of the defendant, and on the following day executed other chattel mortgages to a number of creditors, all subject to the lien of the two mortgages above described. The value of the stock was shown to be about $4,100, and brought at the mortgage sale, after deducting the expenses thereof, $3,184. No question is raised in this action as to the validity of the mortgages made subject to the first mortgage.

One of the errors now complained of is the overruling of defendant’s demurrer to the amended petition. In support of this demurrer three propositions are advanced: (1.) That there is no sufficient allegation that Renshaw & Co. was indebted to the plaintiff at the time of the execution of the mortgage. The amended petition charged in apt language that in December, 1895, the plaintiff recovered a judgment against Renshaw & Co. for $353.75, which was in full force and unsatisfied, and that the said judgment was for goods, wares and merchandise sold and delivered by the plaintiff on credit, September, 1895. We think this was a sufficient allegation that the debt was created before the execution of the mortgage! (2.) That the facts alleged were not sufficient to constitute a fraud, and the statement in terms that the transaction was fraudulent is a mere conclusion. This objection is not good for the reason that the petition alleges that a fictitious indebtedness was included in defendant’s mortgage with the intent to defraud. Renshaw’s creditors. It is also alleged that $500 in money was paid by the bank to Renshaw at the time of taking the mortgage, and was included in it with the intent by both parties to place such sums beyond the reach of Renshaw’s creditors, and to hinder and delay the latter in the collection of their claims. (3.) That the petition does not show that plaintiff has exhausted its legal remedies. The basis of this claim seems to consist in the fact that the petition only .alleges execution from the county court and the re[52]*52turn of nulla lona. The petition, however, alleges that the goods taken under the assailed mortgage constituted all the property and were the sole means of Renshaw for the payment of his debts. It also alleges that the property had been sold and disposed of by the banking house before the commencement of this action. There was, therefore, when the suit was begun-, nothing to attach or levy upon. And (4) plaintiff’s only legal remedy was by proceedings in aid of execution. • The right to take proceedings in aid of execution under the statute is merely cumulative, and does not prevent a resort to equity. Monroe v. Reid, 46 Nebr., 316. The demurrer seems, therefore, to have been rightly overruled.

The principal question raised, and the one strenuously argued, is that the evidence does not support the finding of fact made by the trial'court as to fraud in the mortgage. The finding is as follows: “The court further finds that on the 6th day of November, 1895, the defendants Chamberlain Banking House and Chas. M. Chamberlain knew or were possessed of sufficient information from which they should have known that F. D. Renshaw & Co. were in failing circumstances and that the taking of the chattel mortgage by them in the manner heretofore described would have the effect to hinder and delay the other creditors of the said F. D. Renshaw & Co., and that the payment by the Chamberlain Banking House to the said F. H. Renshaw & Co., the sum of $500, at the time of making of said chattel mortgage, and of the additional sum aggregating the amount due from F. D. Renshaw & Co. to Chas. M. Chamberlain, was in fraud of the other creditors of the said F. D. Renshaw & Co., and rendered the chattel mortgage and the lien attempted to be secured thereby null and void.” It might be added that, there is a claim put up that the facts found here are not sufficient to avoid the mortgage. The latter contention, however, is not strongly ‘urged and can hardly be sustained. If at the taking of this mortgage, $500 in money was advanced by the mortgagee, and included in the [53]

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.W. 172, 66 Neb. 48, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chamberlain-banking-house-v-turner-frazer-mercantile-co-neb-1902.