Driggs v. Moore

7 F. Cas. 1078, 3 Nat. Bank. Reg. 602
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan
DecidedMarch 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 F. Cas. 1078 (Driggs v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Driggs v. Moore, 7 F. Cas. 1078, 3 Nat. Bank. Reg. 602 (circtedmi 1870).

Opinion

WITHEY, District Judge.

Tonkin & Tre-wartha, of Eagle Harbor, in the upper peninsula of Michigan, being indebted to defendants, merchants of Detroit, for merchandise, and also on a claim transferred to them in favor of Allan Shelden & Co., amounting in' the aggregate to about twelve thousand dollars, on May 9, 1868, to secure the payment thereof, executed to the defendants a chattel mortgage on all or nearly all their personal property, including two stocks of goods at Eagle Harbor. To induce the giving of the mortgage, defendants extended time for payment, so that the first payment of eight hundred dollars would become due July first after the date of the mortgage, and a like sum monthly thereafter until the whole sum of twelve thousand dollars, with interest, should be paid. On July 15. the first installment not having been paid, defendants took possession of the mortgaged property, and a few days after sold the same at public vendue. On August 3, Tonkin & Trewartha filed a petition to be declared bankrupts, and were afterwards duly adjudged to be such. Their assignee, the complainant, files a bill against defendants to recover the value of the property taken and sold under said mortgage, alleging that the mortgage was made within four months before the petition in bankruptcy; that Tonkin & Trewartha, at the date of the mortgage, were insolvent; that it was made with a view to give a preference, and that defendants had reasonable cause to believe their debtors insolvent, and the transaction to be in fraud of the provisions of the bankrupt act. The giving of the mortgage, and the then insolvency of Tonkin & Trewartha, are admitted by the [1079]*1079defendants, but they deny that their debtors made the mortgage with a view to give a preference, and deny that defendants had reasonable cause to believe their debtors insolvent, or that the mortgage was made in fraud of the provisions of the bankrupt law.

The bill of complaint presents a case under the first provision of section 35,—viz: of a transfer with a view to give a. preference; —and it is urged by defendants’ counsel that .this provision is not within the operation of the third paragraph of the section, which declares: “And if such sale, assignment, transfer, or conveyance is not made in the usual and ordinary course of business of the debt- or, the fact shall be prima facie evidence of fraud.” The question is, what “sales, assignments, transfers, and conveyances” are referred to in the clause just read? It follows two provisions, the first of which declares that “any payment, pledge, assignment, transfer, or conveyance,” made within four months by the insolvent debtor, .“with a view to give a preference,” &e., shall be void; the second, that “any payment, sale, assignment, transfer,, conveyance, or oilier disposition,” within sis months by the insolvent debtor of his property, “with a view to prevent his property from coming to his assignee in bankruptcy,” &c., shall be void. It was said at the argument, the clause as to what shall be prima facie evidence of fraud, does not refer to the first provision; among other reasons, .because the word “pledge” is not in the fraud clause, and is in the first provision; and so the word “sale,” employed in the second provision but not in the first, is used in the third or fraud clause. The same reasoning would prevent the third paragraph from applying to either of the former provisions; for the word “payment,” employed in both of them, is not used in the fraud clause, and the words “other disposition,” employed in the second paragraph, are not in the third. The words “sale, assignment, transfer, or conveyance,” employed in the third paragraph, are of comprehensive import, and embrace almost every disposition of property, whether absolute or conditional. Both the antecedent paragraphs refer to and are designed to protect the property of the insolvent, and the clause as to fraud is also designed to the same end. All these provisions relate to the same subject or thing,—namely, the property,—and all three aim to protect property of insolvents from fraudulent disposals. My conclusion is in harmony with the rulings in the courts of bankruptcy so far as decisions have come under my notice, and with the opinion of the supreme court of Massachusetts in reference to a like provision in the insolvent laws of that state. When, therefore, it was shown in this case that Tonkin & Trewartha were insolvent, and gave a chattel mortgage of their goods to secure a debt which they owed, there was established a case of fraud prima facie—for that mode of transfer by a trader of his goods, is not one in the usual and ordinary course of his business, but is unusual and exceptional.

We are now to inquire whether the mortgage was made with a view to give a preference to defendants. Whether it was, rests upon the facts, and I refer to Trewartha’s testimony first He says: “I knew”—May 9, 1868, the date of the mortgage—“if we were called upon to pay all our indebtedness at the time, it would be impossible to do so; our only hope was to continue in business, and by using profits yet to be made, we might pay our debts. Next, Mr. Tonkin testifies: “In March, 1868, on reviewing the state of my business, I felt that if demands were pressed upon me for all the debts I owed, I should fall far short of paying them.” And they say they were averse to giving a mortgage to defendants; they did so only when pressed, and becoming satisfied it was their only way to ward off the blow which threatened their business. Mr. Maynard went from Detroit to Eagle Harbor in May, and obtained from Tonkin & Tre-wartha the mortgage on their goods, as the agent and attorney of defendants. He testifies: “Trewartha said he did not see why we wanted securities, as he had given me a full statement of their standing, and that we could see that they had a surplus of between twelve and thirteen thousand dollars. I said to him that in ease security was given, I should be willing to fix the time and amount of payments to be made to suit their convenience.” He then states that Tonkin “expressed some dislike to giving a chattel mortgage,” and “wanted to know if they could rely upon the defendants giving them additional credit in case they should execute the mortgage. I informed them they could.” Now it turns out that the statement which Tonkin & Trewartha made of their standing to Mr. Maynard, at the time of giving the mortgage, was not truthful; that in fact they owed more than their assets amounted to. They covered up their real condition by a false statement, well knowing the result if their true condition was made known. It may be true that they hoped to work out, and one means to that end was to obtain time in which to pay their debts. The learned counsel for defendants claim that Tonkin & Trewartha’s view was not to give a preference, but to gain time, and, from profits to be realized from trade, pay their debts: that while the mortgage has operated to give defendants preference, it is because of the failure of the mortgagors to realize their hopes and ex-peetations, and is but an incident, and was not the object of the mortgage. It is said, too, their reluctance and aversion to giving a mortgage is evidence that they did not give it with a view to a preference.

If we pause and ascertain first, that the mortgagors knew they were utterly insol[1080]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 1078, 3 Nat. Bank. Reg. 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/driggs-v-moore-circtedmi-1870.