Gregory Grocer Co. v. Young

53 Kan. 339
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 53 Kan. 339 (Gregory Grocer Co. v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregory Grocer Co. v. Young, 53 Kan. 339 (kan 1894).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

JohkstoN, J.:

Young & Conboy, retail merchants at Still-well, became financially embarrassed, and, being pressed by creditors, secured a number of them by the execution of chattel mortgages on their stock of goods, and another was secured tby a mortgage upon real estate. On January 13, 1890, the -failing firm mortgaged its stock of goods to secure a debt of :$>1,032, which it owed to the W. B. Grimes Dry Goods Com[341]*341pany, and four days later it secured the claims of three other creditors, amounting to $1,269.30, by a mortgage upon the stock of goods, and, with the consent of the mortgagors, J. W. Crosswhite was put in charge of the mortgaged property as the agent of the mortgagees. On January 20, 1890, the store building and the lots were mortgaged by Young & Con-boy to another creditor”to"secure a claim of $300. On January 17,1890, the Gregory Grocer Company applied to the failing firm to have its debt, which amounted to $444.97, protected, and to be put upon an equality with the secured creditors; but this request was denied, although there is testimony that Young AqConboy offered to secure the grocer company by a mortgage upon the store building and lots, which were afterward mortgaged to another creditor; but this security was declined, and the grocer company brought an attachment proceeding and caused a levy to be made on real estate subsequently mortgaged to another creditor.

The grounds for attachment were, that the defendants had or were about to dispose of their property with the purpose of defrauding, hindering and^delaying their creditors. Upon motion by the defendants, the court, after hearing the evidence, dissolved the attachment, and from an examination of the evidence we think it is sufficient to sustain the ruling. It is conceded that the defendants were justly indebted to the creditors to the full amount of the claims which were secured; and it further’appears, that the mortgagees have been in possession of the property, by their agent, since the execution of the mortgage, onjjanuary 17,1890. There is little testimony tending to show bad faith on the part of the mortgagors, or that the mortgages to their creditors were given with the fraudulent purpose of delaying and defrauding the plaintiff, or any other creditor. The failing firm may have made promises to the plaintiff which were broken, and may not have dealt frankly with it in communications which were had about the time the mortgages were given, but the fact, if it be one, that they did not desire to secure the plaintiff’s claim, does not impeach the good faith of the transaction, nor afford [342]*342grounds for attachment. The right of failing debtors to give preference to one or more creditors, by payment or security, has been settled in a long series of decisions, and the fact that such preference may operate prejudicially to other creditors, and to some extent hinder them in the collection of their debts, is not a sufficient ground to sustain an attachment. (Miller v. Manufacturing Co., ante, p. 75.)

Plaintiff claims that the mortgage to the W. B. Grimes Dry Goods Company was made with the understanding that Young & Conboy were to continue in business the same as before, and to be supplied with goods from time to time by the mortgagees, and testimony that a statement of this kind was taade by one of the firm was before the court. This was met, however, by the testimony of Young & Conboy, that they had no interest in the mortgaged property, or proceeds of the sale thereof, other than as mortgagors, and that, while they were temporarily assisting the mortgagees in possession in disposing of the goods and in collecting the book accounts, the proceeds of the sales and collections were to be applied, and were being applied, to the payment of the several mortgages in their order, and that all this was being done in good faith. The fact that the mortgagee may allow the mortgagor to retain the possession of the property will not avoid the mortgage, where the mortgage has been made in good faith, and where the proceeds of the sale or sales are to be used only for the purpose of paying the mortgagors’ debts and the necessary expenses of keeping the property and converting the same into money. (Leser v. Glaser, 32 Kas. 553.)

In opposition to the claim of a purpose to delay and defraud the plaintiff, there is the testimony of Young & Con-boy that they offered plaintiff security on unincumbered property sufficient to have paid their debt before the attachment proceedings were begun. A recital of the testimony would be unprofitable; but an examination of the whole of it fails to satisfy us that ruling of the court was erroneous. Its order and judgment will be affirmed.

All the Justices concurring.

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Related

Leser v. Glaser
32 Kan. 546 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1884)

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Bluebook (online)
53 Kan. 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-grocer-co-v-young-kan-1894.