Graham v. Stark

10 F. Cas. 939, 3 Ben. 520
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 F. Cas. 939 (Graham v. Stark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. Stark, 10 F. Cas. 939, 3 Ben. 520 (N.D.N.Y. 1869).

Opinion

HALL, District Judge.

This is a proceeding by the assignee of Mrs. Martin, to set aside certain mortgages, executed by her prior to the filing of the petition on which ■she was adjudged a bankrupt. The creditor’s petition, on which such adjudication was made, was filed on the 5th day of 'November, 1868; and she was adjudged, a bankrupt on the 2d day of February, 1869.

Mrs. Martin,' a married woman, had, by her husband, De Lancey Martin, as her gen•eral agent, carried on the business of buying and selling hats, furs, gloves and furnishing goods, in her own name, and, professedly at least, on her separate account, for some years prior to May 28th, 1868. Her husband, in the conduct and management of this business, acted according to his own discretion, without any active interference or controlling supeivision of the bankrupt. Indeed, the husband testified that the business was left wholly to him; that she knew nothing about the state of affairs in the store, except what he communicated to her; and she testified that he had the sole charge of the business.

The stock kept on hand was generally worth from 810,000 to $15,000, and the annual sales were ordinarily from $15,000 to $20,000. In the course of this business Mrs. Martin contracted debts from time to time; and, on the 2Sth of May, 1S68, such debts, including those secured on real estate, exceeded $10,500, and De Lancey Martin testified that such debts might "have been nearly $12,000. At that time the stock of goods on hand was probably worth about $7,000, and she had a few dollars in cash, and notes and accounts worth in all about $1,500. She had, besides, a house and lot in Penn Yan, worth from $3,000 to'$3,500, on which were two mortgages amounting to $1,600 or $1,700, both of which were overdue. Among her debts, owing to more than twenty different parties, (the larger portion of. which debts was overdue,) was :'the- debt due to the respondent, Elizabeth B. Savage, of $4,804.27, for money borrowed in 1865, and in the spring of 1866. It was borrowed to' pay debts in New York, and was used for that purpose.

There was also among such debts a debt of $1,111.63 to the respondent, Oliver Stark; $1,000 of which- was owing upon a note which he had discounted for her, and • on which one Bridgen, a brother-in-law of the bankrupt, was an accommodation, endorser, and which note was to become due June 22d, 1868. The original'discount had been made two or three years before;, and it had been renewed, from time to time, on notes payable in sixty days or three months, until the then existing note was given about the 20th day of March, 1868. The remaining $111.63 was for,an overdraft by the bankrupt, which had occurred about a month before. '

On or about the 28th of May-, 1868, the bankrupt gave her promissory note of that date to the respondent, Savage, for $4,804.27, payable one day after that date; and, at the same timé, executed to her a chattel. mortgage of that date, upon the bankrupt’s whole stock of goods, conditioned for the payment of $4,804.27, according'to the-terms 'of siich note. ...

In addition to this chattel mortgage, -the bankrupt also executed a mortgage upon her house and lot, to secure $1,000 of such debt, payable one day after date, as collateral security to said chattel mortgage. This mortgage, though executed at the same time with the chattel mortgage, was dated on the 30th day of May, 1868. At the same time the bankrupt executed to the respondent, Stark, another chattel mortgage, on the whole of her stock of goods, to secure to him the payment of $111.63, one day after date, and the [941]*941payment of the aboye mentioned note of $1,000, on which the brother-in-law of the bankrupt was an accommodation endorser.

After the execution of these instruments, and about the 2d of June, 1868, the bankrupt went to the Western states, and remained absent from this state until the 15th of October of that year, and until after an attachment had been levied upon her property at Penn Yan. A day or two before her return, she executed a deed in fee of her house and lot at Penn Yan, to one Blackman, without consideration paid at the time. Blackman had, however, sent her small sums of money for her expenses, at three or four different times, while she was absent from the state, but the-amount he had so sent does not appear.

After the execution of the .mortgages to the respondents, De Lancey Martin, as the agent of the bankrupt, continued in the possession of the stock of goods mortgaged, with the knowledge and assent of the mortgagees; and he continued to sell the goods mortgaged, at retail, as usual, until the 6th of October, 1868. He also bought new goods, defrayed current expenses, including payments for his own board, paid small debts to various persons, and kept the books of the establishment, and otherwise carried on the business of the bankrupt, the same as before the mortgages were given.

On the 6th of October, the respondents took possession of the goods mortgaged and turned De Lancey Martin, the bankrupt’s husband and agent, out of the store. They then, by their own, agent, continued the business and sold at retail, for three months, or thereabouts; and then sold the remainder of the goods to De Lancey Martin for $1,000; and four notes of $250 each, payable at 4, 6, 8, and 10 months, were given for the price of such goods.

The change of possession on the 6th of October, was made in the morning of that day; just before an attachment, which had been issued against the bankrupt, was levied on such of the notes and accounts, which had belonged to her, as yet remained on hand.

For some years prior to May, 1868, Mrs. Savage, the respondent, had lived in the bankrupt’s house as her tenant; and Mr. and Mrs. Martin had boarded with Mrs. Savage — the amount charged for board and for rent being nearly equal. Mrs. Savage continued to occupy the house, and Mr. Martin continued to board with her, until after possession was taken under the chattel mortgages on the 6th of October, 1868. In July, 186S, Mrs. Savage purchased a mortgage of $600, and interest on Mrs. Martin’s house and lot; and in November she purchased the other mortgage on the same, of $1,000, and interest. Both these purchases were made with the proceeds of the sales of the property mortgaged to her by the bankrupt on the 28th of May, 1868. In March, 1869, Mrs. Savage' commenced an action to foreclose these mortgages, and the $1,000 mortgage executed to her as before stated; but her proceedings in that action were stayed by injunction.

It appears from the testimony of De Lancey Martin, that when the money was borrowed from Mrs. Savage, and when Mr. Bridgen endorsed the $1,000 note, it was agreed that they should be secured; that Mrs. Savage had asked for security for her debt one or two months before the bankrupt went west, and that she spoke about it, and asked for such security several times before it was given, — urging that she wanted the bankrupt to give her security before she went away.

Bridgen had also frequently urged that the $1,000 note should be paid; and he had asked in the spring of the same year that security should be given in case it was not soon paid.

Having thus given the more prominent and undisputed facts of the case, the controverted questions of fact and law will now be discussed; and in doing this, further reference to the evidence bearing upon these questions of fact will necessarily be made.

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Related

Sartwell v. North
10 N.E. 824 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1887)

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 939, 3 Ben. 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-stark-nynd-1869.