Dadeville Oil Mill v. Hicks

63 So. 970, 184 Ala. 367, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 618
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 18, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 63 So. 970 (Dadeville Oil Mill v. Hicks) 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
Dadeville Oil Mill v. Hicks, 63 So. 970, 184 Ala. 367, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 618 (Ala. 1913).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J.

— Appellant filed its bill to have certain mortgages, executed by F. P. Wallace and wife to W. W. Hicks, doing business under the firm name of W. W. Hicks & Co., declared a general assignment; and to enforce the assignment so declared among the creditors of said mortgagors, one or chief of whom was complainant. The suit was submitted for final decree on pleading and proof. The chancellor denied all relief and dismissed the bill upon the ground that the complainant failed in its proof to show that the several mortgages were in effect, or could, by a court of equity, be declared to be a general assignment.

The contention of the appellant was that the several mortgages — one made in 1908, and the last in 1911— should be considered together and as constituting one transaction, and that, being so considered, they constituted a general assignment, and the court should so decree. On this phase of the case the chancellor thus decreed: “The material allegations of the bill are not proven. The mortgage made by Ada E. and F. P. Wallace to respondent W. W. Hicks on 29th February, 1908, cannot be declared any part of a general assignment at the suit of complainant, because .complainant’s debts against said mortgagors did not exist at the time of the execution of said mortgage. And the mortgage made by said parties to the bank cannot be declared a general assignment because it does not .appear to include all, or substantially all, of the property of said mortgagors subject to execution. And the mortgage executed by said parties to respondent W. W. Hicks, on 3d January, 1911, does not appear to be given in payment of, or as security to, any prior existing debt, except possibly in so far as it purports to be an additional security for the debts secured by the first-mentioned mortgage. These several mortgages made in 1908, 1910, [370]*370and 1911 cannot, in the opinion of the court, be construed together so as to constitute them a general assignment, in the absence of proof that they were all in the contemplation of the parties to them at the time of the execution of the first of said mortgages. The payment set up in defense of this suit has not, in the opinion of the court, been established. The suit will be dismissed, without prejudice.” After a careful examination of the record, aided by the able brief of counsel for appellant with its direct references to the pages of the transcript in which certain evidence is to be.found • — which evidence, in the opinion of counsel, proves the averments of the bill — we are not able to agree avitji counsel in their contention, but agree with the chancellor in his finding, as shown by parts of his opinion above set forth, as to what the evidence establishes and what it fails to establish.

The law in this state, on the subject in question, is to be found in the provisions of section 4295 of the Code of 1907, which section reads as follows: “Every general assignment made by a debtor, or a conveyance by a debtor, of substantially all of his property subject to execution in payment of a prior debt, by which a preference or priority of payment is given to one or more creditors, over the remaining creditors of the grantor, shall be and inure to the benefit of all the creditors of the grantor equally; but this section shall not apply to or embrace mortgages or pledges or pawns given to secure a debt contracted contemporaneously with the execution of the mortgage or pledge or pawn, and for the security of which the mortgage or pledge or pawn was given. A general assignment within the meaning of this section shall include, in addition to- the conveyances now defined as such by law, every judgment confessed, attachment procured by a debtor, or other dis[371]*371position of property by which a debtor conveys all or substantially all of his property subject to execution, in payment of, or as the security for, a prior debt, or charges such property with the payment of such debt.” This statute does not make a partial assignment to one creditor inure to' the benefit of all creditors. — Inman v. Schloss, 122 Ala. 461, 25 South. 739. The statute is not intended to declare conveyances fraudulent or void, but simply to blot out intended preferences or priorities; effect is to be given to the instrument or -to the transaction that would be given to it if the statute were incorporated in the instrument or transaction as a part of it. — Anniston Co. v. Ward, 108 Ala. 85, 18 South. 937. The grantee, assignee, mortgagee, trustee, etc., of a general assignment becomes a trustee for all the creditors of the debtor. — Anniston Co. v. Ward, supra.

It is well-settled law that two or more instruments may so refer to, and be connected with, each other that all may be construed as one instrument, and all, taken together, be given the same effect that would be given in law to one instrument embracing all. — Sewall v. Henry, 9 Ala. 30; Holt v. Bancroft, 30 Ala. 200. Where a deed or a mortgage was made shortly before a general assignment, and was intended to be a partial disposition of all the property, the general assignment, when made, is then but a completion of the transaction begun by the execution of the deed or mortgage. One who has determined to make a general assignment of all of his property for the benefit of less than all of his creditors, and does so, cannot evade the statute by making separate deeds or mortgages to different creditors, and so depriving some of his creditors of all right to share in the distribution. In such cases equity will, at the suit of the creditors so denied the right to share, declare all of the separate deeds and mortgages to be a general as[372]*372signment, if they dispose of substantially all of the debt- or’s property, and were intended to have the effect to prefer some of the creditors. For several instruments to be given this effect, however, they must be near together in point of time of execution, or there must be other facts and circumstances showing that the later ones were contemplated or intended when the prior ones were made — something to show that all should be considered together as perfecting or consummating the design or intent to prefer some of the creditors by a disposition of substantially all of the debtor’s property. If it be shown that the several instruments were executed years, or months, apart, and that one had no connection with or relation to the other, and that the subsequent ones were not contemplated when the first were made, then they will not be construed together, as constituting one transaction. Otherwise the court would be making contracts for the parties instead of construing those made by the parties. The statute was never intended to embrace transactions which had no connection or relation one to the other, further than that they were all executed by the same debtor, and that all together might embrace substantially all the debtor’s property.

In the case of Rochester v. Armour, 92 Ala. 435, 436, 8 South. 781, the rule we are now speaking of was declared ; and it was there said: “In the case of Holt v. Bancroft, 30 Ala. 193, the statute we are considering for the first time came before this court for interpretation. The facts of that case were that on May 9, 1854, Holt & Chambers, merchants, made a deed of trust, and thereby conveyed about one-third of their merchandise for the security of one of their creditors. ‘At the time this conveyance was executed, the debtors intended to make a general assignment of all their ef[373]

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Bluebook (online)
63 So. 970, 184 Ala. 367, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dadeville-oil-mill-v-hicks-ala-1913.