[103]*103
Judgment affirmed,.
The original petition alleged that the petitioners were creditors of C. S. Smith in sums set forth in the petition, making an aggregate of $2,464.91, for goods, nearly all of which were delivered to said Smith within the preceding sixty days, and a very large proportion of them within the month preceding the filing of the petition. Petitioners shipped the goods to Smith because of the confidence they had in him, on account of continued business dealings, and also on account of his representations to them as to his solvency and ability to pay for the goods. The representations were in many instances made in person to petitioners, and otherwise, to induce them to extend the credit and deliver the goods. At the time he induced them to deliver the goods he was absolutely insolvent and never intended to pay for them ; he knew of the special confidence that each of petitioners reposed in him, and that they were delivering the goods to him under the belief, from his conduct and representations, that he was solvent. When he obtained the goods his purpose was not to pay for them, but to defraud petitioners, for on the 15th day of February, 1892 (the month in which the petitiou was presented), in collusion with his special friend and merchant neighbor Dinkier, and with his brother Ira L. Smith, C. S. Smith executed two mortgages, one to Dinkier to secure an alleged indebtedness of $981 10, the other to secure an alleged indebtedness of $1,025.95. These mortgages are without consideration, and were taken by Dinkier and Ira Smith with full knowledge of the insolvency of C. S.- Smith, and that his purpose in executing the mortgages was to delay and defeat petitioner’s and other creditors in the collection of their debts, for the pretended mortgagees now claim and state to petitioners that the mortgages were given to secure a past due indebtedness contracted some months and years before their execution, and yet Dinkier stated a short while before the execution of the mortgages that said Smith was not indebted to him in any sum. Altmayer & Plateau, knowing of the intimacy between C. S. Smith and Dinkier, as. Smith had applied to them to give him credit, made inquiry of Dinkier as to Smith’s standing, and asked whether Smith was indebted in any sum. Dinkier replied that he was not, that he had quit selling goods at wholesale. On their going to him after they had learned of the execution of the mortgages, and demanding to know why he had made such a statement when he claimed that the mortgages were given to secure a past due indebtedness, he replied that it never occurred to Mm at the time of the inquiry that Smith was indebted to-him for borrowed money. Dinkier has no property other than a small stock of merchandise which would not, if put upon the market, bring as much as the homestead laws would, allow him, so that petitioners charge him to be insolvent so far as [extends] his ability to respond to any judgment they might obtain in the event the proceeds of the property covered by his mortgage should go into his hands. As to Ira L. Smith petitioners charge that within the last few years he failed in business, has not a dollar’s worth of property in his own name, and his mortgage is a sham and a fraud upon them. The mortgages cover the entire stock of groceries in the storehouse, and also the fixtures, which is all the property now in possession of or owned by C. S. Smith, except what he has fraudulently concealed and the cash in his possession, and which is the only fund out of which petitioners can collect anything upon their demands. The goods are now in the hands of the deputy-sheriff under a foi-eelosure of the mortgages. There is not more than $1,200 or $1,500 worth of the property, and if put up and sold by the sheriff it will not bring more than fifty cents on the dollar. The stock now consists largely and almost exclusively of the goods delivered to said Smith by them as above stated, and they desire to reclaim their goods so far as the same may be now in the store, etc. Dinkier and the Smiths are all in collusion, for while the mortgages were executed on the 15th day of February, and at the same time and place, drawn by the same person and attested by the same witnesses, the mortgages were pocketed and not delivered to the clerk for record until February 22d. They were then delivered to the clerk at the same time, and the same entry of filing is on each ; ■they were recorded the same day, and immediately foreclosed ; and between the time of the execution and record said Smith continued to buy of petitioners goods on credit, and placed them in the' stock, and between the 15th and 22d a considerable portion of petitioners’ goods, as shown by the bill of particulars attached, went into the store. On the very date and at the very time the mortgages were executed, affidavits of foreclosure were drawn up and dated on the 15th, but these also were pocketed with the mortgages and kept secret, the purpose being to foreclose the same at any moment, in the event any creditor should attempt to file' a creditor’s hill, so that it could then be set up that said Smith was no longer a trader and that the bill could not therefore lie. This is a fraud upon the law, and defendants cannot by this collusive arrangement deprive petitioners of the right to have the goods placed in the hands of a receiver, especially as their goods, to which they desire to assert title, are mixed and mingled in one common stock, and more especially as their claims for the balance are past due, and payment thereof has been demanded of O. S. Smith, by whom payment was refused. In order to carry out said collusive arrangement, Dinkier and Ira L. Smith on February 23d filed a joint petition to the ordinary, asking for a quick sale of the goods, and notwithstanding the statute requires ten days notice, C. S. Smith, in collusion with the mortgagees, acknowledged service thereon the same day and waived all further service, consented to the granting of the order on that day, and on that day an order was granted, directing the goods to be sold on March 5th, when they will be sold and the proceeds paid upon the pretended mortgages, unless restrained by the court. Within the last three months petitioners alone have delivered O. S. Smith goods to the amount of $2,464.91, and they believe there are other creditors who have delivered him goods in large amounts. He now claims he is indebted to the two mortgagees $2,000, while his stock on hand does not amount to more than $1,000 or $1,500, while he states there is nothing on his books because he sold only for cash. This would be a deficit of about $3,000, and petitioners charge that Smith has in his possession, power, custody or control, lai'ge sums of money which he realized from the sale of their goods fraudulently obtained from them. He has recently removed from the store aud concealed large quantities of goods. While he is not a wholesale dealer, on February 12th he shipped to his brother, J. G-. Smith, large quantities; and on February 18th, even after the execution of the mortgages, he shipped his brother large quantities ; and on the 17th and 18th days of February, shipped quantities of goods to other parties.
Dinkier answered, denying the charges of fraud. He alleges that C. S. Smith, at the time of the execution of the mortgage',' justly and honestly owed him and now owes him the amount evidenced by notes and accounts set out in the mortgage. For the note which he holds against C. S. Smith dated March 24, 1891, and indorsed by I. L. Smith, he paid in cash to C. S. Smith $400, and C. S. Smith upon the receipt thereof gave him the note indorsed by I. L. Smith, for said amount, and the note was for the consideration aforesaid. On January 1, 1892, O. S. Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI