Dickey v. Southwestern Surety Insurance

173 S.W. 398, 119 Ark. 12, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 363
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 173 S.W. 398 (Dickey v. Southwestern Surety Insurance) 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
Dickey v. Southwestern Surety Insurance, 173 S.W. 398, 119 Ark. 12, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 363 (Ark. 1915).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

This case originated in the chancery court of Crawford County as ian action instituted by appellant, W. S. Dickey, -against the Oklahoma Engineering Company, a corporation domiciled in the State of Oklahoma, to subject -assets of that corporation in this State to the payment of a -debt owing by said corporation to appellant, and to cancel a mortgage and other securities executed by s-aid Oklahoma Engineering Company to the Southwestern Surety Insurance Company, another foreign corporation. On July 8, 1912, the Oklahoma Engineering Company entered into -a contract with -an improvement district in the -city -of Van Burén, Arkansas, for the -construction of sewers in that city, and appellee, -at the instance of ¡said Oklahoma Engineering Oomp-any, entered into obligation with the improvement district to guarantee performance of the -contract -on the part of the Engineering Company. The Engineering Company proceeded to perform -said -contract -and purchased from appellant material to be used in the work o-f constructing the sewers. A balance in the ¡sum of $1,646.69 is still due appellant on the -account for the price of said material furnished. On November 27,1912, the Engineering Company executed to appellee a mortgage on machinery and tools which it -owned to -secure advances of money which had ¡already been made to it ¡and to be thereafter made, and further to indemnify appellee company from loss on the aforesaid bond. About the siame time, the Engineering Company made an assignment in writing to -appellee of the ¡amounts due upon estimates from the improvement district. Appellee was joined as defendant in the suit and the prayer of the complaint was that said mortgage to appellee and the assignment of the amounts due upon estimates from the improvement district ibe 'cancelled and set aside as a fraud on the rights of appellant, and that the property be subjected to the payment of appellant’s debt. Appellee filed an answer and cross-complaint, in which all the allegations of fraud were denied .and a foreclosure of the mortgage was prayed for.

After the proof was taken, and before the submission of the case, appellant offered to file an amended complaint setting np the fact that the Engineering Company had forfeited its charter on June 30, 1912, by failing to pay the corporation tax in the State of its domicile, and asked that -the three directors be substituted as defendants and held to account las trustees for the creditors of the corporation pursuant to the statutes of Oklahoma.

The case was heard upon the pleadings and the testimony, .and final decree was rendered dismissing appellant ’s complaint as against the appellee .and awarding to appellee a foreclosure of the mortgage and directing payment over of the funds paid into court under the assignment of estimates due from the improvement district.

(1) The evidence supports the finding that when ap-pellee gave the -bond to the improvement district to guarantee performance of the contract on the part'of the Engineering Company, the latter undertook to indemnify ap-pellee against loss. The contract of the Engineering Company with the improvement district provided for completion of the work on a certain date, and before that date it became apparent that the Engineering Company would not be able to complete performance of its contract. In order to protect itself from loss, appellee agreed to malee advances of money to enable the Engineering Company to complete performance of the contract, and the mortgage and the assignments of estimate® were executed to secure the amounts so advanced. The testimony is very voluminous and a strenuous effort has been made to show that improper motives prompted these 'transactions between the Engineering Company and appellee, hut we fail to find 'anything at all in the evidence which would warrant the conclusion that the transactions were in any wise tainted with fraudulent intention, or that the effect thereof was to cheat, hinder or delay the creditors of the Engineering Company. Appellee was already liable to the improvement district for the performance of the contract, and the agreement to make further advances was prompted alone by that obligation and to protect itself from loss. It certainly had a right to exact security from the Engineering Company, and there is no semblance of fraud in the transaction so far as we are able to discover from the evidence. Certainly, the form of the transaction did not operate as a wrongful interference with the assets of-the corporation so as to amount to a hindrance or defeat of its creditors, and there is, as already stated, nothing in the evidence to show that there was any actual fraud intended. We fail to see any principle upon which the transactions could be declared to Ibe fraudulent or. that would warrant a court of equity in setting aside the security. The evidence is entirely too voluminous to justify an analysis and discussion .in this opinion.

(2-3) It is contended that prior to the assignment, the amount due on one of the estimates was assigned or appropriated to the payment of appellant’s debt and that it should not be included within the securities held by ap-pellee. The facts upon which this claim is based are that some time prior to the time the mortgage and the assignment to appellee were executed, appellant, through his representative in Yarn. Burén, insisted upon payment of his account, and the commissioners of the improvement district showed a disposition to hold back payment of an estimate until appellant’s account should be paid. The sum of $500 was paid on the estimate to the agent of Engineering Company and there was an agreement that the balance should be held by the improvement district pending a settlement with appellant. There was no agreement, either express or .implied, that the money should be appropriated to the payment of appellant’s debt. The most that can ¡be made out of it was that tiie amount should he held up indefinitely until a settlement he made with appellant. This does not constitute an assignment of the amount in the hands of the improvement district nor .an appropriation to the payment of appellant’s deibt. Christmas v. Russell, 81 U. S. 69. In the case just cited, the court said: ‘ ‘ A mere promise, though of the clearest and most solemn 'kind, to pay a deibt out of a particular fund, is not an assignment of the fund even in equity. To make an equitable assignment there should he such an actual or constructive appropriation of the subject-matter as to confer ,a complete and present right on the party meant to he provided for, even where the circumstances do not admit of its immediate exercise. ’ ’ Now, if the improvement district was being sued, there might be more force in .the contention that the agreement to postpone payment until after settlement with appellant barred the right of the Engineering Company or its assignee to recover until after settlement with appellant; hut there being no appropriation of this fund to the payment of appellant’s debt, the parties to that agreement, namely, the improvement district and the Engineering Company, could have rescinded it at .any moment and paid the money over to the Engineering Company or any one to whom it assigned the debt. It is not contended that appellant ¡had ¡any lien which he could assert against the improvement district, or that the money was held back for ¡the purpose of enabling the improvement district to protect itself against .any claim made by appellant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 S.W. 398, 119 Ark. 12, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickey-v-southwestern-surety-insurance-ark-1915.