Chipman, Calley & Co. v. Stern & Co.

89 Ala. 207
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 89 Ala. 207 (Chipman, Calley & Co. v. Stern & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chipman, Calley & Co. v. Stern & Co., 89 Ala. 207 (Ala. 1889).

Opinion

CLOPTON, J.

On November 30, 1887, Adam Curtis, a merchant engaged in the retail boot and shoe business in Mobile under the name of A. Curtis & Co., sold and trans[209]*209ferred his entire property, not claimed as exempt, to Chip-man, Calley and Co. Appellees, who were, prior to, and at the time of the sale, creditors of A. Curtis & Co., by the bill assail the transaction as fraudulent. The consideration paid was the payment and satisfaction of an indebtedness due by Curtis & Co. to Chipman, Calley & Co., and their promise and agreement to pay debts due by him to other named persons, amounting in the aggregate to'$6,445.43. The transaction was evidenced by three different written instruments —a bill of sale to the stock of goods, book accounts, and store fixtures and equipments; an assignment of the leasehold interest in the store-house then occupied by Curtis, and an agreement for the satisfaction and payment of the specified debts.

Complainants do not controvert the rule, well settled by repeated decisions of this court, that an insolvent debtor may prefer one or more of his creditors, to the exclusion of the others, and that an absolute sale of the whole of his property, in payment of an antecedent bona fide debt, at a reasonably fair price, not reserving or securing to himself any benefit, or trust by which he may be benefitted, is valid, and will be sustained, whatever may have been his intentions, and whatever notice the preferred creditor may have of such intentions. Neither is the transaction rendered fraudulent by reason of an express stipulation, that the purchasing creditor will pay debts due to other specified creditors, and such debts are in fact paid.—Hodges v. Coleman, 76 Ala. 203; Levy v. Williams, 79 Ala. 171; Rankin & Co. v. Vandiver, 78 Ala. 562.

In the original bill, the main attack was made on the alleged grounds, that the value of the stock of goods, accounts and fixtures was greatly in excess of the amount of the indebtedness to Chipman, Calley & Co., and of the debts assumed to be paid, and that a secret understanding existed, whereby a benefit was reserved to Curtis. The amendment to the bill specifically charges, that the transfer of the leasehold interest was upon a secret consideration to be paid to Curtis, or was without consideration, and operated to secure a benefit to him, and to put the leasehold beyond the reach of his creditors. The amount and bona fides of the debts, the payment of which constituted the consideration price of the property, are not controverted.

The amended bill alleges that, at the time of, and contemporaneously with the making of the bill of sale, Curtis, in [210]*210addition to the goods and other property mentioned therein, sold or transferred to Chipman, Calley & Co. the leasehold interest in the store-house; and the evidence shows that all the written instruments were executed on the same day, and constituted one and the same transaction, and that the property mentioned in the bill of sale, and the leasehold, were included in the sale. In the trade, the stock of goods was estimated at seventy-five cents on the dollar of the invoice, or cost price, the book-accounts at $250, and the store-fixtures and equipments at $388.08, making an aggregate of $5,997.43.

Having carefully considered the evidence relating to the value of the property, we are forced to differ with the chancellor as to his conclusion in this regard. The weight to be given to the opinions of witnesses, of the value of property, depends on their experience in dealing in such property, and their knowledge of its condition. All the witnesses, with one exception, examined on part of complainants as to value, and several examined by defendants, were unacquainted with the stock of goods, or its condition. It therefore becomes material to ascertain, as nearly as practicable, the real condition of the stock at the time of the sale. The evidence shows that a part of the stock on hand consisted of goods recovered by Curtis, after being burned out in 1886; that the goods which he purchased prior to March, 1887, had been on hand from eight to fourteen months, sales having been made therefrom, which were not replenished, and a portion shop-worn; and the amount of the goods purchased from the first of August to the time of the sale, was about two thousand dollars. From the fact that the part of the stock taken by Curtis as exempt was valued by him at five per cent, less than the original cost, it is evident that they were selected from the new goods. From the testimony of the witnesses who knew the stock, and of those who examined the portion shipped to Boston, it sufficiently appears that the stock of boots and shoes at the time of the sale consisted of several hundred dollars worth — about nine hundred — which were greatly damaged by fire and water, some worthless; one-half or more of the balance was broken stock, which had not been replenished, and some shop-worn; the remainder being new goods in the original condition, from which some sales had been made. The hypothesis of the witnesses who testified that the depreciation in value at the expiration of fourteen months business would not exceed ten [211]*211or fifteen per cent., was, that the stock of boots and shoes had been bought and kept in store in the usual course of trade, with the usual replenishing of the same in consequence of sales; and the hypothesis on which defendant’s witnesses, based their opinion of the value was the condition of the stock substantially as we find it to have been. Generally, the controlling determination of the value of property is, what it would sell for in the market; not the depreciation in value, the business being continued. "When the witnesses on both sides were asked, for what sum the stock would have sold, if sold in bulk for cash, they generally agree that it would not have brought more than seventy-five cents on the dollar of the original cost.

Also, there were other articles of property included in the sale, the book-accounts, store-fixtures, and leasehold. The sale was an entirety, each kind of property being an integral part. In such case, it should not be declared fraudulent, because the parties may have placed on one kind of property a valuation materially (less than its real value, if the valuation placed on the other kinds of property exceed their real value to such extent that the market value of the entire property does not exceed the consideration paid. The inquiry is, was all the property sold at a reasonably fair price, taken as a whole ? It' is evident that the store-fixtures and equipments were estimated greatly in excess of their value, at least $300. Calley testifies, that he estimated, if the loss on the lease did not exceed three hundred dollars, his firm would come out fairly well, but that he regarded the value of the leasehold as merely nominal, because the chance of re-letting the store for the balance of the year was so unfavorable. This accords with the testimony of the real-estate dealers, who testified that, the time for renting having passed, the leasehold possessed no fixed value, from the fact that whether or not the store could have been rented depended upon contingencies which might or might not arise. On account of the happening of unforeseen contingencies — a fire, and the change of location of a merchant — they did realize $377.50 in addition to two months occupancy.

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Bluebook (online)
89 Ala. 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chipman-calley-co-v-stern-co-ala-1889.