Heineman v. Hart

20 N.W. 792, 55 Mich. 64, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 430
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 20 N.W. 792 (Heineman v. Hart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heineman v. Hart, 20 N.W. 792, 55 Mich. 64, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 430 (Mich. 1884).

Opinion

Campbell, J.

This suit in equity was brought by complainant as receiver under an insolvent assignment made January 29, 1883, by the firm of Leopold & Co. (consisting of Asa F. Leopold and Albert Austrian), to Robert Hart, who resigned the office of assignee. Its object is to set aside a chattel mortgage purporting to have been made on the 19th of the same month by Leopold & Co. to defendant, as fraudulent against creditors. The court below gave a decree in favor of complainant, setting aside the mortgage. From this decree defendant appealed.

It was claimed on the argument that the assignee could not attack the conveyances or other transfers of his assignors for fraud, and that the receiver stands in the same disability. However this may have been under the old system of voluntary assignments, our present statutes (How. Stat. ch. 303) have intervened to regulate the whole subject, and by sec-[67]*67lion 3 [§ 8711] it is declared that the assignee may recover any property or equity which could be reached by creditors. This removes any difficulty, and authorizes such a suit as this.

Upon the case as presented by the record there is not much involved except a conflict of testimony. Upon the material questions the two partners are the chief witnesses, and contradict each other upon many facts. Upon others, which are quite important, they do not differ. The witness Leopold made out a plain case which, if true, would leave no doubt ■of the fraudulent character of the chattel mortgage in a legal point of view. Austrian’s testimony does not give the same •account of the later transactions. The circuit judge, who heard the testimony and saw the witnesses, was persuaded of the wrongful character of the dealings. We should feel disposed, in a conflict of testimony, to hesitate before disregarding his conclusions. Upon a careful examination of the record we feel satisfied with his determination. It will not be necessary to discuss the facts at length, beyond indicating in •a general way the character of the controversy.

The firm of Leopold & Co. was formed in the spring of 1882, and was at first composed of Leopold and one Kunkle, who were equal partners, and each put in $5000. Leopold borrowed his funds of his father, Aaron F. Leopold. In July, 1882, Kunkle sold his share to Albert Austrian for $5339.78. No inventory was made, but it seems to have been thought a good bargain for Austrian. The latter borrowed of Emil Hart, the dé'fendant, $6000 a part of which he paid Kunkle to make up the entire price left after applying some other funds, of about $1900 already turned over, and the balance it is claimed he put into the firm. This loan of $6000 was in two notes — one on demand, and one indorsed by Austrian’s brother, which matured a week or two before the mortgage in controversy.

On the 19th day of January, 1883, Leopold & Co. gave their firm chattel mortgage to defendant for this entire sum of $6000, with interest at ten per cent., payable the next May. This mortgage was recorded on the 23d of January. Some questions arose concerning the date of delivery, but in [68]*68the view we take they are of minor importance. At the same time they executed a mortgage to Aaron F. Leopold for the $5000 which his son borrowed of him. Aaron Leopold does not appear to have asked or desired this, and has not claimed it, but has given it up.

A few days after these mortgages were given, Albert Austrian went to Chicago for the express purpose of trying to get extensions from creditors there, in which he did not succeed. He thereupon returned and the assignment was at once made. There is a conflict of testimony as to how far this assignment had been contemplated previously, in ease no extension should be granted, and also as to the supposed pecuniary condition of the firm. Austrian claims they were neither insolvent nor supposed to be, and that all of their difficulty grew out of failures to collect claims which were not supposed to be in peril when he went to Chicago. Leopold contradicts this very fully.

There was an inventory taken hy Hubert Hart, afterwards the assignee, in January, 1883, which at the full prices at which he then valued the assets, made them amount to $44,-844.39. This included debts due the firm of $17,890, which consisted chiefly of a large number of small accounts. The cash on hand was $2136.93, and the goods in stock were put at $19,407.06. The remaining assets, $5408.02, consisted of store, warehouse and barn, horses, store fixtures and the contents of the barn. The liabilities were summed up at $32,-844.39. This left an apparent balance of $12,003.32. The partners, as between themselves and the firm, seem to have stood on nearly the same footing, so as to he about equally interested, Leopold having about $520 more than Austrian. After the assignment the same Hobert Hart made an inventory in which he reduced the value of the same articles largely, appraising the goods at a reduction of about $3400, and the accounts, of nearly $8000. The whole amount of assigned assets which came into his hands was by his estimate about $23,000.

It will be seen from this that at the highest valuation, and making no discounts from the accounts, the firm, in [69]*69January, 1883, was worth just about $12,000, which would give each of them $6000 if their accounts were even, but which left Austrian, by the books, worth a few hundred dollars less. Any shrinkage in values would of course reduce this balance of assets over liabilities.

Under these circumstances, on the 19th of January, 1883, if that is the true date, these partners gave to defendant a firm liability and chattel mortgage for $6000 to secure an individual debt of Austrian. Assuming as true the contradicted statement that it had been all along understood that the firm would be willing to do this, it is quite clear that up to this time it had not been done, and equally clear that there was no consideration moving to the firm to support it. It covered all and more than all of Austrian’s interest in the firm, at the .largest estimate made without shrinkage. At the same time a $5000 mortgage was made to Aaron Leopold for the debt due him by the other partner. The effect of this was to reduce the firm property to within a small amount of the nominal excess of assets over debts, and to put the available assets in the store out of reach of creditors, if the mortgages were to stand.

It was under these circumstances that Austrian went to Chicago to get an extension, and says that he had no idea of insolvency, although making the assignment a few days subsequently.

In our judgment his story is not probable, and if it were it would not remove some very serious facts. No man in his senses could imagine that there could be no risk of shrinkage in so large a body of scattered accounts, and no one could safely trust to meeting over $30,000 of debts out of a mortgaged stock and the real estate, horses and barn stock in the inventory. The direct effect of these mortgages was to withdraw nearly $12,000 from the partnership funds to which créditos had a right to look, for the personal benefit of the partners. That all this was done, and the stock tied up by mortgages under which it could be at once taken into the possession of the mortgagees, with no suspicion of insolvency, and no purpose of depriving creditors of their security, does [70]*70not seem to us credible. The facts in their best aspect were such as to put it in the power of the mortgagees to wind up- and destroy the business at any time.

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.W. 792, 55 Mich. 64, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heineman-v-hart-mich-1884.