Dunham v. Stevens

60 S.W. 1064, 160 Mo. 95, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 12, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 60 S.W. 1064 (Dunham v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunham v. Stevens, 60 S.W. 1064, 160 Mo. 95, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 43 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

VALLIANT, L.

This is a controversy between creditors as to the priority of their respective liens on a stock of goods of their insolvent debtor. Plaintiff claims under a chattel mortgage; defendants under certain attachments and executions, and one of them under a mortgage. Plaintiff’s mortgage being first in time is therefore first in right unless the defendants make good their charge that it is fraudulent.

The suit is in equity to foreclose the plaintiff’s mortgage and incidentally to have a receiver appointed to hold and dispose of the goods as a decree may direct. The mortgagor and the attaching creditors are defendants; the former’s answer is a general denial; the latter set up in their answers their respective claims and state that the plaintiff’s mortgage “was originally given by the mortgagor and taken by plaintiff, and has been at all times since used by plaintiff and defendant Stevens for the purpose and with the effect to hinder, delay and defraud creditors of Stevens,” and that Stevens was allowed by plaintiff to handle the goods as a retail stock of merchandise buying and selling in the usual course of trade, applying the proceeds as he saw fit and never accounting to plaintiff therefor; in the course of which he incurred the debts sued for by defendants for merchandise which was put into the [100]*100stock in trade, except one debt which was incurred before the date of plaintiff’s mortgage. Upon these allegations issue was joined.

Erom a preponderance of the evidence we deduce the following as the facts:

In 1893 the plaintiff was doing a retail business in his own name at 114 West 8th street, Kansas City, dealing in stationery and engineers’ supplies; Stevens was in his employ as clerk. Negotiations between them resulted in plaintiff’s selling the stock and business to Stevens for $400 cash, and a note and a mortgage on the stock for $5,149, dated October 1, 1893. The note was payable in installments of $50 monthly. The mortgage was duly recorded and the plaintiff went to Philadelphia to live, leaving defendant Stevens in possession carrying on the business. By the terms of that mortgage it seems that Stevens was allowed free control of the business, buying and selling in the usual course of trade without being required to render any account to the plaintiff. In the latter part of October, 1894, the'plaintiff having been advised that his mortgage was obnoxious to the Missouri statutes in regard to fraudulent conveyances, returned to Kansas City and demanded a new mortgage for the remainder of the debt which then amounted to $4,835.06; thereupon a new note for that amount and the mortgage in question to secure it were executed, dated November 1, 1894. The new note was payable $35.06 on its date and in $50 monthly installments thereafter, with interest graduated at four per cent per annum for the first year, five for the next, and so on increasing one per cent each year until it should reach eight per cent, the maker having the privilege of increasing the amount of the monthly payments .if he so desired.

The mortgage covered the stock of merchandise, store, fixtures and trade appliances and all additions thereto and con-[101]*101tamed a power of sale by tbe mortgagee in case of default. It contained also this clause: “Said party (meaning the mortgagor) is to have the privilege of selling said stock ef goods in the usual course of trade and business, but said party of the first part shall on the first day of each month from and after the date thereof, account to said second party for the proceeds of said sales less the actual and reasonable expenses thereof, which shall in no case exceed the sum of one hundred and fifty seven dollars for any one month, and which proceeds are to be credited upon said indebtedness and upon said payments.” In other respects there was nothing unusual in the provisions of the mortgage.

This mortgage was duly recorded and the plaintiff returned to Philadelphia and remained there until about the date of the commencement of this suit, August, 1896.

Stevens testified that when the new mortgage was given plaintiff told him it would make no difference in the course of their dealings; he would go on just as he had done under the first mortgage; but the plaintiff denied that there was any understanding or agreement other than that expressed in the mortgage. In fact the course of dealing was different under the second mortgage from what it had been under the first. Under the first mortgage Stevens paid the monthly installments of $50 to plaintiff but rendered no account of his sales. Under the second mortgage, the one in question, he rendered monthly accounts of the business, showing sales, purchases, expenses, collections, etc., but from its date to the commencement of this suit, November, 1894, to August, 1896, he paid only $85 on the debt. He wrote frequent letters to plaintiff explaining his inability to pay, indicating that it was the unsatisfactory condition of the business. The monthly statements rendered showed that with the selling and buying the stock in trade was kept approximately to the value it was on [102]*102November 1, 1894, never quite up to that value and never much below it, the lowest being $4,470.34, October 1, 1895, the highest $5,090.28, January 1, 1896, and $4,686.26, May 1, 1896, which was the last rendered. The statements showed the expense of running the business, and usually the expense items aggregated more than the limit, $157, specified in the mortgage, but there was nothing to indicate that they were extravagant or unnecessary.

There were eighteen of these statements in evidence which showed sales aggregating $10,345.40, purchases $10,071.79, expenses $3,179.29. The average of monthly sales was about $575, that of the purchases about $560, and that of the expenses about $175. The apparent discrepancy in these figures, showing as they do the sales and purchases nearly equal, leaving the stock on hand May 1, 1896, $4,686.26, while over $3,000 had been taken out for expenses, is doubtless attidbutable to the fact that the sales are tabulated at a discount of 30 per cent, indicating the difference between the cost and the selling price, which, discount is shown on the face of the statements, and it aggregates somewhat over $3,000. The statements and letters of Stevens accompanying them were sufficient to induce the plaintiff to believe that the business was not earning rhore than the cost of conducting it with reasonable economy. Plaintiff made requests on Stevens for payments and had a friend, Mr. Eoff, in Kansas City, to call on him several times to try to get payments and to see how the business was going, but Stevens always represented that the business was making nothing and he could not pay, but hoped for an improvement. Plaintiff knew that Stevens was buying goods but did not know he was buying on credit, supposed that he was buying with the proceeds of his sales to keep np the stock which was the understanding between them. Stevens testified that he deposited the proceeds of his sales in bank to his own credit [103]*103and cheeked it out as he desired, and bought the goods on credit, but the evidence does not show that plaintiff knew that.

In the summer of 1896 plaintiff came to Kansas City to look after the matter and told Mr. Stevens that he would have to take possession under his mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
60 S.W. 1064, 160 Mo. 95, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunham-v-stevens-mo-1901.