Clarke v. National Citizens' Bank

76 N.W. 965, 74 Minn. 58, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 865
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 31, 1898
DocketNos. 11,204—(38)
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 76 N.W. 965 (Clarke v. National Citizens' Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarke v. National Citizens' Bank, 76 N.W. 965, 74 Minn. 58, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 865 (Mich. 1898).

Opinion

MITCHELL, J.1

This action was brought by the plaintiff, as assignee of one Cassidy, an insolvent, under section 4 of the insolvency law of 1881,2 to set aside a bill of sale executed by Cassidy to the defendant on April 5, 1895, and to recover payments made by Cassidy to the defendant between that date and the date of the assignment in insolvency, which was executed June 12, 1895.

In plaintiff’s complaint the sole ground upon which the bill of sale and the subsequent payments were assailed was that they constituted an unlawful preference, under the provisions of the insolvency law; and it is important to keep in mind throughout the consideration of the case the distinction between a security given or a payment made which is voidable as to other creditors solely as an unlawful preference under the insolvency act, and one which is voidable on common-law grounds, as being given or made with intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors, or because the security was not filed or recorded or the property was not taken possession of by a mortgagee or pledgee as required by statute. An assignee of an insolvent may, as the representative of creditors, in a proper case, assail a payment made or security given on any of these grounds; but the grounds of attack are entirely different.

The trial court found, in substance, that this bill of sale was given and these payments made by Cassidy with intent to give the de[61]*61fendant a preference upon a pre-existing debt over other creditors, that he was then insolvent, and that the defendant knew that fact. Assuming the bill of sale to have been the only and original security given on the property, and the subsequent payments to have been made out of the proceeds of the property covered by it, or the general funds of the insolvent, and not out of the proceeds of any prior collateral securities, we have no doubt that the evidence amply justified these findings.

But the court found (and for the purposes of this appeal we must assume, as against the respondent, that they are correct) that on December 10, 1894, Cassidy borrowed of the defendant $9,500, and agreed to secure its payment upon meats then in his possession in his packing house in Mankato, and that on the next day, in pursuhnce of this agreement, he executed and delivered to the defendant a warehouse receipt for a large quantity of meats then actually in his warehouse, which he acknowledged, and agreed to put them in store, and hold on account of the defendant as security for the payment of the loan; that Cassidy, having in the meantime become further indebted to the defendant for overdrafts, on January 3, and again on January 26, 1895, executed to the defendant warehouse receipts for further quantities of meats then in his packing house. The court further finds that, the note for $9,500 given for the loan of December 10, 1894, being still wholly unpaid, on April 5, 1895, Cassidy executed to defendant the bill of sale described in the complaint, of a large quantity of meats then in his packing house, also “72,000 pounds of hams now in the hands of George W. Stone, Chicago, Illinois, upon which last mentioned hams said Stone had a lien for $4,000 theretofore advanced,” and that these 72,000 pounds of hams described as being in the hands of George W. Stone were a part of the hams mentioned and described in the warehouse receipt of December 11, 1894. No question is made but that these warehouse receipts and this bill of sale were given merely as collateral security for Cassidy’s pre-existing indebtedness to the defendant, except that the warehouse receipt of December 11, 1894, was given to secure a present loan.

The court also finds that after April 5, and prior to June 1, 1895, there was received by Cassidy and the defendant from sales of said [62]*62meats described in and covered by said warehouse receipts and said bill of sale at different times, and from many persons and firms to whom said meats had been shipped and sold, various sums of money, which were from time to time, as they were received, deposited in the bank of the defendant, to be applied on the note of $9,500, dated December 10, 1894; that there was so received and deposited in the aggregate the sum of $6,923.19 (according to the amended finding), and that the money was actually so applied; also, that on April 23, 1895, the defendant received from Gr. W. Stone, of Chicago, the sum of $700 on account of meats sold to him, which Was also applied on Cassidy’s indebtedness to the defendant. While there is no express finding to that effect, it is fairly inferable from all the findings taken together that this $700 was on account of the 72,000 pounds of hams mentioned and described both in the warehouse receipt of December 11, 1894, and the bill of sale of April 5, 1895.

The court further finds that the warehouse receipts and bill of sale referred to were never filed or recorded in the office of the city recorder of the city of Mankato, wherein Cassidy resided, and that the property therein described was never delivered into the possession of the defendant, but remained in the possession of Cassidy, who, with the knowledge and consent of the defendant, continued up to April 5, 1895, to sell and dispose of the property described in the warehouse receipts, and use the proceeds in his business, without being required by the defendant to apply them in payment óf the indebtedness which the receipts were given to secure. In view of other findings of the court, this can only refer to part of , the property or its proceeds described in the receipts.

There is no finding that there are any creditors who became such after December 11, 1894. There is no finding that any of the warehouse receipts or the bill of sale was executed with intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors. The finding that defendant subsequently permitted Cassidy to sell and dispose of the property described in the warehouse receipts, and use the proceeds in his business, without requiring him to apply them on the indebtedness for which the property was security, is merely a finding of an item of evidence of fraud, which is not at all conclusive. Horton v. Wil[63]*63liams, 21 Minn. 187. Neither is there any finding that the warehouse receipts were given by Cassidy with a view of giving the defendant a preference upon a pre-existing debt.

Upon these findings the court held, as conclusions of law:

(1) That the warehouse receipts and the bill of sale were void as to Cassidy’s creditors.
(2) That the bill of sale executed April 5, 1895, and the subsequent payments of money, constituted an unlawful preference in favor of the defendant over the other creditors.
(3) That plaintiff was entitled to recover of the defendant the amount of these payments ($6,923.19), with interest. And judgment was ordered accordingly.

This amount included the $700 received from Stone out of the proceeds of the 72,000 pounds of hams included in the warehouse receipt of December 11, 1894, as well as in the bill of sale of April 5, 1895. We infer that all of the property covered by the bill of sale had been already disposed of, and hence no judgment was ordered as to it.

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Related

In re P.T.G. Grain Service
185 F. Supp. 332 (D. Minnesota, 1960)
In re Frey
15 F.2d 871 (D. Minnesota, 1926)
Donohue v. Campbell
83 N.W. 469 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
76 N.W. 965, 74 Minn. 58, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarke-v-national-citizens-bank-minn-1898.