Citizens' State Bank v. Council Bluffs Fuel Co.

57 N.W. 444, 89 Iowa 618
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 18, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 57 N.W. 444 (Citizens' State Bank v. Council Bluffs Fuel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens' State Bank v. Council Bluffs Fuel Co., 57 N.W. 444, 89 Iowa 618 (iowa 1894).

Opinion

Kinne, J.

The plaintiff began ah action by attachment in the lower court against the defendant, and garnished C. F. Luce as a supposed debtor. The garnishee answered, denying any indebted to the defendant, averring that he owed it no money or property, and that he did not have in his possession or under his control any property, rights, or credits of the defendant; that he knew of no debts owing to the defendant, or property, rights, or credits belonging to it, and in the control or possession of others. He further stated thát he had had in his possession property that formerly belonged to the defendant; that he took it under and by virtue of a chattel mortgage executed by the defendant to Mrs. M. M. Seckel; that he advertised and sold said property, as provided in the mortgage, and applied the proceeds of sale on the mortgage debt.

The plaintiff filed a pleading, controverting the answer of the garnishee, in which it averred that said Luce, when garnished, had in his possession personal property, consisting of coal, lime, hair, wood,. and [620]*620other property, including book accounts and notes, belonging to the defendant, of more than three thousand dollars in value; that, subsequent to said garnishment, said garnishee converted said property by a pretended sale thereof, applying the proceeds to his own use; that in the receipt of said property, prior to said garnishment, said Luce and the defendant were acting jointly with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud the defendant’s creditors; that a chattel mortgage, executed by the defendant, and under which Luce claimed to have taken possession of the property, was fraudulent and void, having been executed with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud the plaintiff, a creditor of the defendant, and the alleged sale was a part of said fraudulent scheme.

The garnishee filed an answer to this pleading, wherein he averred, in substance, that the property taken by him was taken as the agent of M. M. Seckel, by virtue of the mortgage heretofore mentioned; that, by virtue thereof, he had taken possession of it in her name, prior to being served as garnishee, and that he disposed of said property under the direction of the mortgagee, and in accord with the conditions' of the mortgage; that he had no personal interest in the property, and no power to postpone or delay its sale; that the entire proceeds of said sale were received by the mortgagee, and applied in satisfaction of her mortgage; that, prior to said garnishment, the plaintiff had knowledge of said mortgage, that it was unpaid, and that the garnishee, as agent for the mortgagee, was about to take possession of and sell the property, yet took no steps to prevent the same.

On the issues thus formed, the cause was tried to a jury, which found a verdict against the garnishee, from which he alone appeals. The appellant excepted to certain evidence; to the action of the court in refusing instructions asked, and to instructions given by the [621]*621court; to the refusal of the court to submit interrogatories asked by garnishee, and to the submission of interrogatories by the court to the jury; to the overruling of his motion in arrest of judgment, and for a new trial, and for judgment in favor of said garnishee.

i. chattel mortftyscontested men!^proceed-ms' I. It is insisted that the remedy .of a creditor of an alleged fraudulent chattel mortgagor, who desires to test tbe validity of the mortgage, is either by a proceeding in equity to set aside and cancel the mortgage, or in the manner pointed out by chapter 117, Acts of the Twenty-first General Assembly; that such creditor has no right to test, the validity of the mortgage by garnishment proceedings. Chapter 117 of Acts of the Twenty-first General Assembly, provides a mode for taking, on execution or by attachment, mortgaged personal property, by tender or deposit of the amount of the mortgaged debt. It also provides for contesting the amount due upon the mortgage. There is, however, nothing in said chapter that undertakes to limit the right of • a creditor of a mortgagor, when the mortgage is alleged, to be fraudulent,' to the remedy therein provided <fco determine the fraudulent character of the mortgage. That such was not the legislative intent is also clear from the reading of section 4 of said act, which provides: “But nothing contained in this act shall in any way affect the right of any creditor to contest for any reason the validity of such mortgage.” Here, then, the purpose of the legislature to preserve to creditors all rights they possessed before the passage of the act as to testing the fraudulent character of the instrument is made manifest. The purpose of the act was not to-control the right of creditors to attack a fraudulent mortgage, but rather to enlarge the rights of creditors by providing a way by which an execution or attachment might be levied upon mortgaged property, regardless of the character of the mortgage. Prior to the [622]*622passage of this act, chattel property in the hands of the mortgagor, with the right of possession in the mortgagee, was not subject to process by creditors of the mortgagor, except as to the mortgagee. Rindskoff v. Lyman, 16 Iowa, 260; Campbell v. Leonard, 11 Iowa, 489; Gordon v. Hardin, 33 Iowa, 550; Vanslyck v. Mills, 34 Iowa, 375; Buck-Reiner Co. v. Beatty, 82 Iowa, 355. Prior to the passage of the law spoken of, a mortgagee in possession of property, taken by him by virtue of a valid chattel mortgage, was not amenable to the process of attachment by garnishment as to property thus held, except as to the surplus remaining after payment of the mortgaged debt. Doane v. Garretson, 24 Iowa, 351; Davis v. Wilson, 52 Iowa, 187; Hoffman v. Wetherell, 42 Iowa, 89; McConnell v. Denham, 72 Iowa, 494; Buck-Reiner Co. v. Beatty, 82 Iowa, 355.

In Danforth v. Harlow, 76 Iowa, 237, it was claimed that said chapter 117 rendered the giving of notice of ownership under Code, section 3055, to an officer holding property by virtue of an execution or attachment, unnecessary; but this court held such notice was not dispensed with. It said: “But the officer of the plaintiff in execution may have been of opinion that the mortgage was void for some reason. The evident purpose and design of that statute was to give junior creditors a right to subject the property after payment of the mortgage.” In Buck-Reiner Co. v. Beatty, 82 Iowa, 357, it was held that the right possessed by a creditor of the mortgagor to reach the surplus in the mortgaged property, above the amount of the mortgage debt, was not taken away by chapter 117 of Acts of the Twenty-first Gfeneral Assembly, and that such a garnishment would not be displaced by one who, as an attaching creditor, under that act, acquired a lien.subsequent in point of time to the garnishment. In Hibbard v. Zenor, 75 Iowa, 479, it was expressly held that the levy of an attachment on mortgaged chattels, when [623]*623the attaching creditor contests the validity of the mortgage, is not void for a failure to tender or deposit the amount of such mortgage, as is required by chapter 117 of Acts of the Twenty-first General Assembly. Now, before the statute under consideration was enacted, it is clear that property fraudulently chattel-mortgaged by a debtor might be reached by a direct proceeding, by the levy of. an execution or attachment thereon, or by a proceeding in equity to set aside the mortgage for fraud. These rights are still possessed by a creditor under such circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
57 N.W. 444, 89 Iowa 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-state-bank-v-council-bluffs-fuel-co-iowa-1894.