Consolidated Barb Wire Co. v. Guthrie National Bank

51 P. 233, 6 Kan. App. 775, 1897 Kan. App. LEXIS 421
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedDecember 20, 1897
DocketNo. 120
StatusPublished

This text of 51 P. 233 (Consolidated Barb Wire Co. v. Guthrie National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Barb Wire Co. v. Guthrie National Bank, 51 P. 233, 6 Kan. App. 775, 1897 Kan. App. LEXIS 421 (kanctapp 1897).

Opinion

Milton, J.

This action was commenced by the Guthrie National Bank and J. W. McNeal, its president, against John A. Eaton and Thomas J. Eaton, partners under the firm name of the Farmers’ Bank, to recover the sum of $1525, which said plaintiffs claimed by virtue of a chattel mortgage: The Eatons filed an answer showing that they had in their possession the amount of money sued for, resulting from the sale under the first mortgage, covering the same merchandise in the city of Guthrie against which the said plaintiffs held the second mortgage, and that the Consolidated Barb Wire Company was an adverse claimant without collusion with them ; and asking that they be permitted to pay the money into court, that the Wire Company be made a party, and that the controversy be litigated between said adverse claimants. The Wire Company, which had succeeded to the interests of several other mortgagees, became a party, and filed its answer, claiming $1138 of said fund. After the evidence was introduced, the court made findings of fact and conclusions of law and rendered judgment in favor of the Guthrie National Bank for the full amount of the said fund held by Eaton & Eaton. To reverse this judgment the Wire Company brings these proceedings.

Counsel for plaintiff in error presents a single assignment of error in his brief, namely, that the third [777]*777conclusion of law made by the court is erroneous. Said conclusion is as follows :

“That the plaintiff is entitled to the $1525 now in the hands of the defendant, the Farmers' Bank, as against any right, title or interest which th6 inter-pleader, the Consolidated Barb Wire Company, may have in and to the said fund.”

The following statement is from-the findings of the court:

“August 21, 1890, Eaton & Eaton took possession of two stocks of hardware, one at Winfield, Kan., and the other at Guthrie, Okla., under two separate chattel mortgages securing the same indebtedness, both of which had been executed on August 16, preceding, by Randall & Lyon, on said stocks of goods, to secure a debt of $8500 due the mortgagees as bankers. Said mortgages were filed, in the proper,offices on the day possession of the goods was thus taken. In the morning of the same day, and after Eaton & Eaton were in possession of the store at Guthrie, Lyon, one of the firm of Randall & Lyon, executed and delivered to J. W. McNeal, president of the Guthrie Bank, for said Bank, a second mortgage in the firm name on each of the stocks of goods, to secure a debt of fifteen hundred dollars due said Bank. This mortgage, was immediately filed for record in Guthrie and a copy thereof was filed in Winfield on the next day. In the evening of August 21, Randall, for the firm of Randall & Lyon, gave to the Wire Company and several other creditors mortgages in various amounts upon both stocks of goods, and the said mortgages were filed in Winfield at ten o'clock p. m. of the same day. They do not appear to have been filed in Guthrie.
After taking possession of the Winfield stock, Eaton & Eaton began immediately to sell the same at private sale and to collect accounts due the mortgagors. September 18, 1890, they sold the Guthrie stock at public sale, after due advertising thereof, to a party representing a number of creditors of the mortgagors, for the sum of $6818. Up to about October 1, 1890, [778]*778Eaton & Eaton had realized out of the private, sales made by them from the Winfield stock the sum of $2076. On October 4, they sold the residue of said stock at public sale, after due notice, for the sum of $4900. From the book accounts they had collected $223.33, and the aggregate amount received from these three sources was $7200. This, together with, the proceeds of the Guthrie sale, made.the total amount received by Eaton & Eaton, $14,018. The evidence shows that an unsecured creditor had attached a portion of the Guthrie stock after the Eatons took possession, and that the latter reserved $2000 of the .proceeds of the sale, by depositing said amount in their bank at Winfield, to await the result of the litigation. They also deposited $1525, the amount the Guthrie Bank claimed was due it from said proceeds, and have ever since stood ready to pay the last-named amount to the party or parties legally entitled thereto. From the proceeds of both sales, Eaton & Eaton paid the expenses thereof and of the litigation referred to, which resulted in their favor, fully satisfied three chattel mortgages, and applied the sum of $1766 then remaining on hand from the proceeds of the Winfield stock, in part payment of the amount due the St. Louis Wire Mill Company upon its mortgage and of the debt secured by the mortgage of plaintiff in error. The latter has received payment of but little more than one-half of its entire claim, while five-sixths of that of the St. Louis Wire Mill Company is paid.”

From the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error, it would appear that the doctrine of the marshaling of assets was invoked in favor of the plaintiff below, and that the judgment of the court was affected by the application of that doctrine; while counsel for the defendant in error, the Guthrie National Bank, admits that the doctrine cannot properly be applied under the facts of this case. Counsel for plaintiff in error argues that this doctrine cannot be invoked in favor of the plaintiff below, on account of the fact that the laws of [779]*779two separate jurisdictions are involved. He also contends that if the Guthrie Bank ever had such right it lost the same by failure to make its claim before the • Guthrie stock was sold. Both of these propositions seem to have some merit. This is not a clear case for the application of the doctrine of marshaling of assets ■in favor of plaintiff below, as it appears that Eaton & Eaton and plaintiff each had liens upon both stocks of merchandise. There is also a conflict between junior lien holders as to one of the funds. But it is a case where, as between the Guthrie Bank and the Wire Company, the equitable rights of the said parties can be discovered and declared. This controversy is between the parties last named only, and results from an effort on the part of each to have a rule suspended as to itself and invoked as. to its antagonist.

In discussing the nature of the equity in a cas.e where the doctrine of the marshaling of assets is applicable, the American and English Encyclopedia of Law (vol. 14, p. 686) states this proposition :

" The equity of the j unior creditor is not against the paramount creditor, but against the debtor himself. By its exercise, the junior creditor prevents the debtor from retaining the singly charged estate free from both debts.”

And in a note it further says :

“ The equity being against the debtor, it is equally against his judgment creditors whose liens were obtained subsequently to the lien of the junior creditor in whose favor the equity is enforced.”

A writer in the ‘American Law Kegister (vol. 27, p. 739) states the rule as follows :

“ If a paramount incumbrancer of two funds, by his election of remedies, disappoints a junior creditor, who has a lien upon one of them only, the latter shall, to that extent, be substituted to the lien of the paramount [780]*780incumbrancer upon the other fund bound by it, as against the debtor and all claiming under him by lien or title subsequent in time.”

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Related

Bragunier v. Beck & Corbett Iron Co.
41 Kan. 542 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1889)
Long v. Moore
22 N.W. 97 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1885)

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Bluebook (online)
51 P. 233, 6 Kan. App. 775, 1897 Kan. App. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-barb-wire-co-v-guthrie-national-bank-kanctapp-1897.