Hills v. Stockwell & Darragh Furniture Co.

23 F. 432, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 1938
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Michigan
DecidedMarch 4, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 23 F. 432 (Hills v. Stockwell & Darragh Furniture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hills v. Stockwell & Darragh Furniture Co., 23 F. 432, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 1938 (circtwdmi 1885).

Opinion

Withey, J.

On the twenty-second of December last the plaintiffs sued out a writ of attachment against the property of the defendant, based on an affidavit that the latter had disposed of its property with intent to defraud its creditors, and seized part of the personal property which, in August previous, the defendant had chattel mortgaged to Wilder D. Stevens, in trust to secure five persons, indorsers of its paper, aggregating about $87,000, and also to secure its employes for labor debts, due and to come due. The mortgage covered the entire stock in trade of the company, including lumber, furniture, and per[433]*433sonal effects, and all additions and accretions. It. permitted the company to continuo in possession and carry on its business, but restricted sales to such as should be made in the ordinary course of the wholesale and retail business of the company. The company manufactured furniture. The mortgagees’ interest in the property was to bo kept insured in not less than the amount of the insurance at the date of the instrument, but the company might reduce the insurance in proportion as the value of the property should bo reduced from time to time. All but one of the indorsers were stockholders and directors in the company. The secretary and president are indorsors of part of the paper of the company secured by the mortgage, and executed the mortgage under the authority of a vote of both the stockholders and board of directors.

The instrument recites the date and amount of each piece of paper, when due, and the name of the indorser or indorsers; that the company is indebted to the persons in its employ, and desires that they shall continue in its employment, and desires to secure to them the payment of sums due and to come due to them, and also desires that'the said indorsers of its paper shall continue to indorse renewals of its paper up to at least the first day of January, 1885, which they are willing to do if secured. The company agrees “to take up and pay all such paper subsequently coming due and not renewed; to pay all renewals and all such paper now past due on or before January 1, 1885, unless the same can be renewed, and in that case to pay the renewal or renewals thereof, and to save harmless the said indorsers on such paper from all loss and damage by reason of such indorsements.” In case the company does not pay according to the terms of the instrument, and keep harmless the indorsers, the mortgagee may take possession of and sell the property at private or public sale.

The plaintiffs, by an order nisi, were ordered to show cause why the writ of attachment should not he dissolved and the property discharged. It is incumbent on thorn to make out that the mortgage was executed with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors. The proofs, show (in addition to what has already been stated) that at the date of the instrument the defendant corporation was unable to pay its debts as they matured, and had asked the plaintiffs to extend the debt on which this suit is brought. It liad received notice from the bank where it transacted its principal banking business, and which hold 1580,000 of iho company’s paper, that ton or more thousand dollars, soon to mature, would not be renewed, and the indorsers on that paper had also been notified of such intention on the part of the bank. The company owed more than ñ 12,000 of unsecured debts. One of the officers of the company, produced by the plaintiff, testified in substance that there were three immediate reasons for giving the mortgage: (1) The company had got behind with the men in its employ and they wore getting uneasy; (2) the only indorser of the compa[434]*434ny’s paper not a director, and two of the directors who were indorsers, demanded security if they continued to indorse; (3) defendant’s bank had given notice to it and to the indorsers that certain paper would not be renewed; but it was believed, notwithstanding, that the bank would be satisfied if all the paper it held against the company was secured, and that was the purpose in giving the mortgage. “We thought,” says the witness, “we could then, aided by the time thus obtained, go on and pay what we owed. We had no idea but what our debts would be paid. Our general indebtedness had, within a short time, been largely changed, to the banks by borrowing of them on indorsed paper. We had been accustomed to take our drafts to our bank and have them credited up to us. About this time the bank refused to do this. We had thirty or forty thousand dollars of accounts, half of which were collectible. There is no question made as to the bona fides of the indebtedness intended to be secured by the mortgage.”

It is insisted by the plaintiffs that the mortgage is fraudulent in fact, and fraudulent upon its face as against the general creditors of the defendant. I am unable from the evidence before me to discover any intention on the part of the officers of the corporation to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors. The indebtedness existed and was bona fide; the defendant was unable to pay promptly its debts, due and to fall due, and the indorsers of its paper demanded security before renewing their indorsements. It does not affect the question if the company could never pay its debts in full; for the legal right of an insolvent debtor to secure one or more creditors in preference to others, where no fraud is intended, is settled in Michigan by many decisions. The mere fact that the security operates incidentally to hinder and delay other creditors in collecting their debts does not affect the security. Both facts may and should be considered in determining whether fraud was intended.

The statutes of Michigan relating to chattel mortgages and to conveyances fraudulent against creditors, as construed by the supreme court of the state, constitute rules of property, binding as well upon the national as upon the state courts. This mortgage did not.hinder or delay creditors, within the meaning of the statute, unless It was made with a fraudulent intent; -and if it was not made with a fraudulent intent, its execution was no ground for an attachment of the defendant’s property. The statute declares that the question of fraudulent intent shall be a question of fact, and not of law, and I find there was in fact no fraudulent intent. The mortgage was given to secure indorsers of bona fide indebtedness of the company, and of persons to whom bona fide debts were owing, and nothing in all that was done indicates a purpose inconsistent with honesty and fair dealing on the part of the officers of the corporation, or any of the beneficiaries under the mortgage. The corporation contemplated continuing in business through the assistance the mortgage would incident[435]*435ally afford, enabling it to obtain renewals of its paper, and giving it time through such credit to convert its stock and work out. It does not matter whether such hope was justified by the circumstances ; if such was the purpose, and nothing more, a fraudulent intent can not be predicated of the facts.

But the principal contention by the plaintiffs is that the instrument is constructively or'presumptively fraudulent, for two reasons: (1) That it neither fixes nor contemplates a time certain within which the indorsed indebtedness of the corporation is to come due and payable ; (2) that the mortgage is executed by the president and secretary of the company, who on the face of the instrument are beneficiaries of its provisions. It is also true that other of the beneficiaries are directors in tho corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. 432, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 1938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hills-v-stockwell-darragh-furniture-co-circtwdmi-1885.