Churchill v. Hill

26 S.W. 378, 59 Ark. 54, 1894 Ark. LEXIS 30
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 21, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 26 S.W. 378 (Churchill v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Churchill v. Hill, 26 S.W. 378, 59 Ark. 54, 1894 Ark. LEXIS 30 (Ark. 1894).

Opinion

Battle, J.

Hill, Fontaine & Co. brought this action against Churchill Bros., in the Independence circuit court, to recover $4,452.29, and at the same time filed an affidavit to the effect that the defendants had sold, conveyed or otherwise disposed of their property with the fraudulent intent. to cheat, hinder or delay their creditors, which was signed and sworn to by A. H. Joblin, as their agent. A bond was also filed, and an order of attachment was issued, and the property of the defendants was levied on by the sheriff in obedience to the same.

The defendants filed in the circuit court a motion to discharge the attachment, and a traverse of the affidavit which set forth the grounds of the attachment. After this, on the 19th of November, 1891, the defendants notified the plaintiffs in writing to produce A. H. Joblin, who made the affidavit on which the attachment was sued out, before an officer authorized to take depositions, within the next ten days, for the purpose of cross-examination. The plaintiffs having failed to comply with this demand, the defendants moved the court to suppress the affidavit, which motion was overruled.

On the 21st of January, 1892, plaintiffs filed an additional affidavit, in which they set up two additional grounds of attachment: First, “that the defendants, Churchill Bros., had, prior to this suit, removed a material portion of their property out of the State, not leaving enough therein to satisfy creditors”; and, second, * ‘ that on the 29th day of December, 1890, after the institution of this suit, the defendants made an assignment, by means of which they conveyed or otherwise disposed of their property with the fraudulent intent to cheat, hinder or delay their creditors.” The defendants also controverted this affidavit.

William C. Ashley, who was the assignee in the assignment made by the defendants, was allowed to intervene.

The plaintiffs took judgment for the amount sued for; but the traverse of the defendants was tried before a jury. In the trial, A. H. Joblin, who made the affidavit for plaintiffs, testified and was cross-examined. There was also adduced the deed of assignment, bearing date a day subsequent to the institution of this action, by which the defendants conveyed to William C. Ashley, for the benefit of their creditors, all their stock of merchandise in a certain store, and “all their choses in action of every kind, character and description, consisting of chattel mortgages, notes and accounts,” in the same store house, of the value of about $8000, in trust, however, “ that said William C. Ashley shall be required to-sell all the property assigned to him * * * at public auction, within one hundred and twenty days after executing a bond which he is required to execute by law, first having given at least thirty days notice of the time and place of such sale.” Other evidence was adduced.

The following, among other instructions, was g'iven, over the objections of the defendants, to the jury: “The jury are instructed that the law regulating the assignment of property for the benefit of creditors, as amended in the year 1883, requires notes and accounts assigned to be held for collection, and not to be sold at public auction within one hundred and twenty days from the filing of the assignee’s bond, as other property is required to be; and the jury are further instructed that the deed of assignment in this action, in providing and requiring that all the property assigned, including the notes, accounts and mortgages, should be sold at public auction within one hundred and twenty days after the execution of the bond the assignee is required by law to execute, was in violation of the law of assignments, and made the deed fraudulent in law, and they will sustain the attachment.”

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs upon the issue in the attachment. A motion for a new trial was filed by the defendants and Ashley, which being denied, exceptions were noted; and, within the time allowed therefor, a bill of exceptions was signed and duly filed ; and defendants and Ashley appealed.

The bill of exceptions, as originally drawn, contained no reference to the motion for a new trial, and preserved no exceptions to its overruling. To avoid the efEect of this, the appellants, at a subsequent term of the trial court, after the appeal was taken, procured the following nunc pro tunc order, which they have brought here by certiorari:

“Now on this day comes on to be heard the motion of the defendants for an order nunc pro tunc to amend the bill of exceptions, filed herein by the defendants, by inserting therein the facts, as shown by the record of the court, that a motion for a new trial was duly filed in this cause, that the same was overruled, and exceptions were noted thereto at the time of the overruling of said motion ; and the court having heard arguments of counsel, and being sufficiently advised in the premises, and being of the opinion, from an inspection of the record of this court, and its personal knowledge, that the defendants did file their motion for new trial in apt time, and that said motion was overruled, and that they duly saved their exceptions to such ruling in overruling their motion for a new trial; it is considered and ordered by the court that said bill of exceptions be taken and considered as. overruled as of the day that the said bill of exceptions was filed, and that the defendants have leave to insert, by interlineation at the proper place in the said bill of exceptions, the following recital: ‘ And a motion for new trial was duly filed herein, which was by the court overruled, to which ruling exceptions were duly noted by the said defendants.’ And to the ruling and decision of the court in granting said motion and in permitting the insertion of said amendment to said bill of exceptions the plaintiffs excepted, and asked that their exceptions be made of record, which is done.”

From this order of amendment appellees have taken a cross-appeal.

Three questions are presented for our consideration :

First. Did the trial court err in allowing'the bill of exceptions to be amended ?

Second. Did it err in refusing to suppress the affidavit of Joblin ?

Third. Did it err in instructing the jury?

1. Amendment of bill of exceptions.

First. Did the court err in allowing' the bill of exceptions to be amended? In Martin v. Railway, 53 Ark. 250, it is said that “all the authorities seem to concur in holding that the court in which the record is made has the saíne power to amend the bill of exceptions by a nunc pro time order to cause it to speak the truth that it has over any other part of the record”; but that “it is not the office of an amendment to create or originate something new, but only to perfect that which is imper-? fectly done.” In that case the direction to the clerk in the bill of exceptions to copy certain documents was too indefinite to identify them, and the court held that, if the documents could be identified aliunde, the trial court might, after the lapse of the term, by a nunc pro tunc order, amend the bill of exceptions so as to correct the call for them, and thereby make them a part of the bill. In this case the record of the trial court shows that a motion for a new trial was filed, and was denied, and that appellants excepted to the action of the court in denying the same.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 S.W. 378, 59 Ark. 54, 1894 Ark. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/churchill-v-hill-ark-1894.