Harper & Kirschten Shoe Co. v. S. & B. Shoe Co.

16 Ohio App. 387, 1922 Ohio App. LEXIS 212
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 16 Ohio App. 387 (Harper & Kirschten Shoe Co. v. S. & B. Shoe Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harper & Kirschten Shoe Co. v. S. & B. Shoe Co., 16 Ohio App. 387, 1922 Ohio App. LEXIS 212 (Ohio Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Funk, J.

This action was commenced by plaintiff under the “Bulk Sales Law,” Sections 11102, 11103 and 11103-1, General Code, in the court of common pleas of Lorain county, against The S. & B. Shoe Company, on an open account for $331.31, and interest from an average due date, for which amount plaintiff asked judgment against the shoe company and against the defendant A. M. Brenner as the purchaser in bulk of the stock and fixtures of The S. & B. Shoe Company, asking to have him “declared to be a trustee of said stock of merchandise and fixtures, or the proceeds of any part thereof, that may have been sold, for the benefit of plaintiff and any other creditors of the said The S. & B. Shoe Company who intervene herein; that a receiver be [389]*389appointed to take charge of said stock of merchandise and fixtures and the proceeds of any part thereof that may have been sold and to convert said stock and fixtures remaining unsold, into cash under the order of this court, and hold the proceeds thereof that may have been sold and to convert said stock and fixtures remaining unsold, into cash under the order of this court, and hold the proceeds thereof for payment of any judgment that may be rendered herein for plaintiff or for any other creditors of The S. & B. Shoe Company, who may intervene herein, or for the payment of any judgment of any other creditors of The S. & B. Shoe Company, rendered in this court or properly proved in this court, that the said defendant A. M. Brenner be ordered and required to account to the receiver for the proceeds of any of said stock and fixtures he has sold, that an accounting be ordered for the determination of the amount thereof, and for such other and further relief as is proper.”

The record shows that judgment was entered by default against The S. & B. Shoe Company on April 25, 1921, for $331.31, and interest, as prayed for;, that no receiver was ever appointed; and that on October 7, 1921, a jury was waived and the cause submitted to the court upon an agreed statement of facts. The court below found A. M. Brenner to bo a trustee for the benefit of plaintiff, to the amount of his judgment and costs, of such stock and fixtures and the proceeds of any part thereof that may have been sold by him, and ordered that Brenner pay out of such proceeds the judgment and costs rendered against the shoe company.

From this finding the defendant Brenner appealed to this court, and a transcript of the proceed[390]*390ings, together with the agreed statement of facts, are now before this court.

The plaintiff has filed a motion to dismiss this appeal for want of jurisdiction, and has submitted its brief, in which it urges that this court has no jurisdiction under Section 6, Article TV of the Constitution, for the reason that the right created by the bulk sales law did not exist at common law and that the right and the remedy are both purely statutory and not equitable in their nature. The only case cited by it is Wagner v. Armstrong, 93 Ohio St., 443. It is further argued in the brief that “A question analogous to this appears in Hollowell v. Schraden, 28 Cir. Dec., 597, in which it is held that an action to foreclose a mechanics lien is not cognizable in equity for the reason that a mechanic’s lien upon real property is wholly a creature of the statute. ’ ’

We take up first the “analogous” argument that “a mechanics lien is not cognizable in equity” because “a creature of statute.”

We have carefully examined the decisions in Ohio along this line and find that the great weight of authority is to the effect that the question of the appealability of a case does not depend on whether or not the right and remedy are created by statute, but upon the broader principle as to whether or not the basic principle of the statute is equitable in character and based upon some equitable doctrine. We are convinced that this is the law in Ohio.

We call attention to the fact that the decision in the case of Hollowell v. Schraden, supra, cited by the plaintiff, was by a divided court. From an examination of the authorities we are of the opinion that the dissenting opinion of the court of appeals [391]*391judge in the Hollowell v. Schraden case is the sounder argument. We are supported in this position by the supreme court of Ohio, as, in 96 Ohio St., at page 599, it reversed the majority opinion of the court of appeals on authority of Wagner v. Armstrong, 93 Ohio St., 443. See also Eggar v. Corwin, 30 C. D., 467, page 475, and authorities there cited, which bear out this conclusion. There is thus no doubt that it is the law in Ohio that a mechanic’s lien is equitable in character and actions under it appealable.

Applying this rule to the bulk sales law, and reasoning not only by analogy from the law concerning mechanics’ liens, mortgages and partition, but also from an examination of the reason for the bulk sales law, we have come to the conclusion that the bulk sales law is an outgrowth of an equitable doctrine to protect an unpaid seller of merchandise from a fraudulent transfer of such stock of merchandise.

For many years it has been the recognized law of Ohio that an unpaid seller of merchandise had a lien upon the goods sold if the sale was tainted with fraud or the goods purchased without reasonable hope or expectation of being able to pay, or with the intent of not paying. The doctrine of stoppage in transitu by the seller of merchandise is also a long well-recognized principle. These remedies are all more or less equitable in character. The bulk sales laws of the various states are analogous in principle to both common law and precedent, and are in a large measure declaratory of the common and precedent law of sales of personal property, and provide the privilege of applying for an order declaring that the purchaser shall become in certain [392]*392events a trustee for and accountable to the creditors for merchandise purchased in bulk.

The primary idea of a trustee and an accounting to creditors is in its very nature of an equitable character, and is founded in equity. It will be noticed that in the instant case the prayer of the petition is that the purchaser be declared a trustee, that a receiver be appointed, and for an accounting for the merchandise and fixtures, or the proceeds of such merchandise as may have been sold by the purchaser Brenner.

It is certainly conceded that actions for a receiver and for an accounting, and for declaring one a trustee for the benefit of someone else, are all equitable in their nature, and are generally, if not always, found in a court of chancery. The only authorities we need cite for this, aside from the reason for the rule itself, as above suggested, are the following two cases: Romeo & Co. v. Nasif, 26 C. C. (N. S.), 542, and United Sales Promotion Co. v. Anderson, 100 Ohio St., 58. In the latter case it appears in the statement of the ease that it was “on appeal” from the common pleas court to the court of appeals. However, we might add that we see no reason why the ease of Wagner v. Armstrong, supra, is not applicable by analogy as well to the bulle sales law as to the mechanic’s lien law, as applied by the supreme court in the case of Hollowell v. Schraden, supra, and no reason why we could not properly base our holding in this ease on that case without the aid of the above two cited cases.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ohio App. 387, 1922 Ohio App. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-kirschten-shoe-co-v-s-b-shoe-co-ohioctapp-1922.