Harvey Blair & Co. v. Brown

116 N.C. 631
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 116 N.C. 631 (Harvey Blair & Co. v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harvey Blair & Co. v. Brown, 116 N.C. 631 (N.C. 1895).

Opinion

MONTGOMERY, J.

(after stating the facts as above): During the progress of the trial the plaintiffs introduced evidence tending to show that the deed of assignment from Brown to Jones was preferred and executed on the 21st day of November, 1890, and withheld from record till the morning of the 27th of November, 1890, and that after the execution of' said deed, and before the recording thereof, the assignor Brown executed and delivered' to one J. M. Monger the following power of attorney :

“This is to certify that John M. Monger is our agent to contract for us for the purchase of goods, collect all amounts due us, and generally to do and act for us in as full a manner as if we gave our consent to each individual act of his.
“November 21, 1890. L. T. Brown.”

That said Brown at the time of the execution of the deed of assignment and said power of attorney had on hand a large assortment of goods, the greater part of which he had purchased within the thirty days prior to the assignment, and that said J. M. Monger, immediately after the execution of the said power of attorney, went south, and in a section in which the said Brown had not heretofore purchased goods, and purchased goods for the said Brown on credit to the amount of $6,000, and that said Jones, assignee, knew of these transactions.

There was also evidence introduced by plaintiffs tending to show that one Terrell, agent for R. G. Dun’s Mercantile Agency, called on Jones, assignee, who was doing business in Sanford, N. C., and in the same town in which the said Brown was doing business, between the 21st and 27th [636]*636of November, 1890, and informed Mm, Jones, of Ms agency, and that he was seeking information of tbe standing, etc., of the business men of Sanford for his firm, and that said Jones informed Mm that the said Brown was, in his opinion, worth about $5,000; that he (Brown) was doing a very good, straightforward business, and that his store was one of the largest in the town.

Plaintiffs also introduced evidence tending to show that one J. S. Plarper, traveling salesman of Harvey, Blair & Co., one of the plaintiffs, during the month of October, 1890, called on the defendant Jones for information as to the financial standing of the said Brown, and in response thereto Jones informed said Harper that Brown was worth about $.5,000, and that at said time, and at the time of the information given by Jones to Terrell as aforesaid, said Jones held unrecorded mortgages on all the real and personal property of said Brown to secure an alleged indebtedness of $5,500.

The defendant Jones testified upon cross-examination by the plaintiffs that a short time prior to November, 1890, 'he, Jones, had disposed of all of his property with intent to defraud one of his creditors.

There was also evidence tending to show that the true indebtedness from Brown to Jones, was not $5,500, the amount preferred in said deed of assignment, but was a sum much less thau that amount.

There was also evidence tending to show that a short time before the execution of the deed of assignment, and while the said Jones held the unrecorded mortgages on all the real and personal property of the said Brown, said Brown represented to Sweetzer, Pembroke & Co., of New York, that he was worth from $5,000 to $7,000 over and above all exemptions and liabilities, and that he purchased goods on a credit upon faith of these representations.

[637]*637There was also evidence tending to show that thoughv the assignee Jones was authorized in said deed of assignment to pay Brown, assignee, $500 in money in lieu of his personal property exemptions, upon an execution issued against said Brown after the execution of the deed of assignment, said Brown demanded, selected and had allotted to him his personal property exemptions in property to a large extent not conveyed in the deed of assignment. ^

The plain tiffs then insisted that there was before the Court sufficient evidence of a combination and conspiracy between the assignor and the assignee to defraud the cred-' itors of the assignor, to admit the declarations of the assignor made subsequent to the deed of assignment. His Honor was of that opinion, and so ruled. Upon this, the plaintiffs introduced as a-,witness for themselves J. M. Brown, who testified as follows :

“ I am a brother of L. T. Brown. I had a talk with him at my house after the assignment, the next spring after it was made. He said the assignment was all a damned fraud, and that he would not come to Court because it would ruin him and injure Mr. Jones. He told me this a dozen times.” To all of which the defendants excepted.

The plaintiffs then introduced a witness, one N. B. McBride, by whom they proposed to prove a conversation that he had with the assignor after the execution of the deed of assignment. The defendants objected; objection overruled; defendants excepted.

This witness was then permitted to testily, as follows, to-wit:

“ I had a conversation with Brown, assignor, after the assignment. It was at Greensboro, jn April, 1892. He said he wanted to go home to see Jones, and if Jones would give him his house and his lot back he would let things go on as they were, and if they did not he would go on' the [638]*638■stand and burst it up, for it was a fraud from beginning to end; that he was due Jones $2,000, and that he made the assignment to pay that debt. Tie said to Mr. Douglass that if Jones did not come to terms he was going to employ some one to burst it up. Mr. Douglass told him to stop, when he began to talk, for he was employed on the other ■side.”

To this the defendants excepted.

The plaintiffs then introduced as a witness one M. B. Buchanan, by whom they proposed to prove similar declarations of Brown, the assignor, after the assignment. The defendants objected; objection overruled; defendants excepted.

The witness was then permitted to testify, as follows, to-wit: »

“I heard a talk between Brown and McDonald ; Brown ■said he owed Jones some money, but not so much as he •claimed, and if he did not give him back his house and some money he would go on the stand and break the infernal fraud; 'that he was strapped and had nothing. This was at Greensboro in the spring after the assignment.”

The defendants excepted to the ruling of His Honor on the sufficiecy of the testimony going to show the eonspir.acy ; and they also objected to the introduction of the declarations made by the assignor after the execution of the ■deed of assignment. The Court did not sustain the exception and overruled the objections to the testimony, and in so doing committed no error. “ In order to make the declarations of the assignor after the assignment competent ■evidence, it must be shown that the assignor and the assignee are combined in a common conspiracy to defraud the assignor’s creditors, and this common purpose must be established by evidence other than the declarations them■selves.” Burrill on Assignments, Sec. 362, and the cases there cited.

[639]*639The defendant introduced as a witness J. G. Bynum who testified that on the 27th of November, 1890, and after said deed of assignment had been executed, to wit, on the night of the same day, he sent a telegram to one J. M. Monger.

The defendants then introduced one G. E.

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Bluebook (online)
116 N.C. 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvey-blair-co-v-brown-nc-1895.