Fechheimer v. Baum

43 F. 719
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Georgia
DecidedJuly 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 43 F. 719 (Fechheimer v. Baum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fechheimer v. Baum, 43 F. 719 (circtsdga 1890).

Opinion

Speer, J.

The character of this case is outlined in the decision of the court given on the application for injunction, and reported in 37 Fed. [720]*720Rep. 167. After granting the injunction and appointing a receiver, the cause was referred to the standing master, with instructions to that officer — First. To audit and ascertain the several liens, or alleged liens, ppon the fund in the custody of the court, and to report to the court the entire amount, including principal, interest,, and attorneys’ fees due on each, and the relative dignity and priority of said liens. Second. To report to the court as to the right of Fechheimer & Co., Claflin & Co., and Gibian & Co. to a recaption of the goods sold Baum & Bro. and Baum & Co., and, if such recaption is allowed, to ascertain the particular goods upon which it is to operate, and how much of the fund there is to allow therefor. Third. To report also as to the claim of Comer & Co. to the, uncollected notes, accounts, and choses in action now in the hands of the receivers, the title of which is claimed by Comer & Co. under an assignment of Baum & Bro. and Baum & Co. to them. Fourth. To take and state the accounts of all the general creditors before the court, and to report as to the amounts, if any, to be paid each. The master, after full and protracted hearing, has reported that the salesdf goods made by Fechheimer & Co., by Claflin & Co., and Gibian & Co., to the Baums were legal and valid, and that the charges of fraud by which the complainants sought to rescind such sales were not sustainable from the evidence. The master further finds that the mortgage executed and delivered by Baum & Bro. and Baum & Co. to Comer & Co.-, dated the 13th and recorded the 20th of November, 1888, is a legal, valid mortgage, according to the Code of Georgia, and entitled to priority over'all other claims; and, further, that the assignment dated November 16, 1888; by the Baums, of all their book-accounts, notes,and mortgages to Comer & Co. is a legal, valid assignment under the law of Georgia. ' The master concludes:.

■■First. That the defendants H. M. Comer & Co. are entitled to a decree against the fund in the custody of the court for the sum of twenty-eight thousand six hundred and fifty-four dollars and thirteen cents, ($28,654.13,) the same being the principal, interest, and attorneys’ fees stipulated in the mortgage which was executed by N. B. Baum & Bro. and Baum & Co., and delivered to the'said H. M. Comer & Co. November 13, 1888, and recorded Within the time prescribed by law. Second. That the remaining specialty creditors of N. B. Baum & Bro. and Baum & Co., whose mortgages are enumerated in the second class of liens, are also entitled to have and recover the full amount of their debts, with the stipulated interest and attorneys’ fees. Imease of a deficit in the fund in the custody of the court, then, in conformity with section -1.956 of the Code, the court will distribute the proceeds to the mortgagees according to their claims, an exception to be made in favor of the minor mortgage of' Dennis Doke, should the proceeds of the sale of the land subject to this lien be sufficient to satisfy its claim. Third. When the mortgage creditors have been paid, if a surplus remain, the simple contract creditors, the master reports, are entitled to the priority of the distribution of the surplus.: ' The creditors who' filed the original bill have no preference thereby over those.who came' in by intervention as parties complainant.

A number of exceptions have been filed to the report of the master, ánd the cause has been fully heard upon argument on the report and the' exception® thereto.' ' In View -of the importance of the cause, the [721]*721court has taken time for consideration, and, after careful inquiry, has reached conclusions which may be stated as follows: The Baums were merchants, having places of business at Irwinton and Toomsboro in this district. They had been dealing for a number of years with H. M. Coiner & Co., a firm of commission merchants of Savannah. In the course of this business, and, so far as the evidence has disclosed, without any intentional fraud on the part of Comer & Co. in the negotiations which led to the arrangement, Baum & Bro. executed to Comer five notes, dated March 10, 1888, each for $3,200, bearing 8 per cent, interest from maturity, and due, respectively, September 15, October 1, October 10, November 1, and November 10, 1888; also four notes of N. B. Baum & Bro., indorsed “Baum & Co.,” each for 85,000, with interest from maturity at 8 per cent., three of them dated Savannah, October 12, and one Toomsboro, November 13, 1888, and due, respectively, November 20, December 1, December 10, 1888, and January 12, 1889; and also one note of Baum & Co., indorsed “N. B. Baum & Bro.,” for $2,000, with the same interest, dated March 10, 1888, and due October 20, 1888; thus making 10 notes, aggregating in all $38,000. On March 10, 1888, which, it will be observed, was of even date with several of the notes, the Baums executed to Comer & Co. a -written agreement which recited that in consideration of advances to them by Comer & Co. amounting to $18,000 as evidenced by the five notes of $3,200 and one for $2,000 above mentioned, and to secure the payment of the same, the Baums agreed to deposit as collateral security notes and mortgages of good planters and others equal in amount to twice their indebtedness, and also to transfer their insurance policies to Comer & Co., and also’ to ship all cotton they control during the season to them, and further agreeing that all advances over the $18,000 be paid first out of the proceeds of the cotton shipments, and agreeing finally that in case they become financially embarrassed, or fail to meet the notes, they would give Comer & Co. a first lien or mortgage on all their real estate and their stock of merchandise. On December 13, 1888, the complainants filed their bill against Baum & Bro. and Baum & Co. under the statute of Georgia, (section 3149a of the Code,) by which it is competent for a creditor whose debt is due and unpaid to put his debtor, who is an insolvent trader, into the hands of a receiver. The bill also alleged on the part of several complainants that as to the purchase of their goods there was such fraudulent representation on the part of the Baums as to their solvency and means that it was manifest the purchase was made by the Baums without any intention of paying therefor, and as to all such goods in possession of the defendants those contract creditors prayed a rescission of the trade and recaption. On December 28, 1888, the complainants filed an amendment to their bill, in which they charge that Comer & Co. were participants in this fraudulent conduct, and that the debt of Comer & Co. was a pretended debt, and that Comer & Co., with actual notice of the insolvent condition of the Baums, received the liens and mortgages upon which they rely; that the defendants deliberately bought a large stock of goods on with the intent not to [722]*722them; that they deliberately schemed'and planned to get an immense stock on hand, and, confederating with Comer & Co., created the preferences and liens above mentioned, which covered the entire stock of goods, as well as all other property owned by the defendants, and that in these frauds Comer & Co. participated.

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Bluebook (online)
43 F. 719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fechheimer-v-baum-circtsdga-1890.