Hockaday v. Drye.

1898 OK 61, 54 P. 475, 7 Okla. 288, 1898 Okla. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 30, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1898 OK 61 (Hockaday v. Drye.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hockaday v. Drye., 1898 OK 61, 54 P. 475, 7 Okla. 288, 1898 Okla. LEXIS 37 (Okla. 1898).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Tarsney, J.:

The trial 'court made findings of fact *290 substantially as follows: That on December 12, 1896, James J. Drye, one of the defendants in error, was doing business in the town of Shawnee, dealing in general merchandise, and possessed of a stock of goods, the proceeds from the sale of which are in controversy in this action. That at said date said Drye was insolvent, and made a deed of assignment to one Robert N. White, as assignee, for the benefit of all his creditors. Said assignment was made and executed between the hours of A and 5 o’clock P. M. on said day, was duly executed and acknowledged, and was filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of Pottawatomie county at 5 o’clock and 33 minutes P. M. of that day. That previous to> the execution of the assignment Drye was indebted to one Annie L. Brown in the sum of about $4,000. That said indebtedness was an actual and subsisting indebtedness. About one hour and a half before the execution of said assignment, Drye paid to said Annie L. Brown, upon account of said indebtedness, the sum of $3,700. That at the time of making said payment Drye had determined to execute the assignment for the benefit of all his creditors. That said fact was then known to said Annie L. Brown. The payment to said Annie L. Brown was for a Iona fide indebtedness, made in good faith, and intended as part satisfaction of said indebtedness. That on said day said Robert N. White, assignee, accepted said trust, and took possession of said stock of goods. That immediately after the execution of said assignment and the taking possession of the property by the assignee thereunder, the plaintiffs in error, to whom the said Drye was indebted in various sums, respectively, commenced actions thereon, and sued out writs of attachment against the property of said Drye, and the sheriff, under said *291 writs, dispossessed the assignee, and took possession of said property. That the attachment suits of plaintiffs in error the bank of Shawnee, Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Go., and Hockaday, Harmon & Roe were all commenced on December 12, 1896, after the execution and recording of said assignment, and after the assignee had taken possession of the property assigned, and the writs therein were levied on the same day, except that in the case of Hockaday, Harmon & Roe, which was levied on December 14th. That the attachment proceedings of the other plaintiffs in error, Tootle, Wheeler, and Hotter, were instituted on the 14th day of December, 1896, and the attachment writ therein was. levied on the same day. That on said 12th day of December said Dyre was indebted to the defendants in error in various sums respectively, and on said 14th day of December the. defendants in error Richardson, Roberts, Brynes Dry-Goods company commenced attachment proceedings, and .said property was also levied upon under such proceedings. That under said writs the property remained in the hands of the sheriff until December 15, 1896, when, upon application of the plaintiffs in the attachment proceedings, a receiver was appointed, who qualified on December 29th. That on December 30, 1896, each of the plaintiffs in error obtained judgment in their respective attachment suits against the defendant Drve, and the attachments therein were sustained. That prior thereto the property seized under the several writs of attachment was., by the sheriff, by order of court, sold, and the proceeds thereof, some $6,500, were turned over to the receiver. Ou December 31st defendants in error Richardson, Roberts, Byrnes Dry-Goods company dismissed their attachment proceedings, and on January 7, 1897, leave of court therefor he- *292 ing had, filed in the attachment case of Hookaday, Harm-on & Roe -against James J. Drye, (that being the ease in which the receiver was appointed,) their interplea. Afterwards defendants in error Fried man Bros & Schafer, Wurtheimer-S-wartz Shoe Co., Equitable Manufacturing company, and- Charles Mayer & Co., als-o general creditors of said Drye, filed therein, with leave of court, their in-terpleas-; all of said interpleas, alleging an indebtedness due fr-o-m Drye to the interpleaders on the 12th of December, 1896, the insolvency of Drye, the making by him of the assignment for the benefit of creditors, and the previous payment by him to Annie L. Brown of the said sum of $3,700, and asking that a receiver take oh-arge of the proceeds • of the goods s-old under attachment, and distribute the -same to the creditor's of said Drye pro rata. In the1* s-aid inte-rple-as they alleged the validity of said assignment. They also alleged that the said payment to Anna L. Brown was made in contemplation of a general assignment, and constituted -a preference therein; and that by reason thereof the property assigned became a trust fund to be administered by the court with the aid o-f a receiver.

On motion filed, the court required the interpleaders Richards-on, Roberts, Bryn-es Dry-Goods Company and Friedman Bros & Schafer to elect upon which caus-e of action -stated in their respective interpleas they would rely, viz. whether they would rely upon the validity of the general assignment, or upon the allegation that said assignment failed by reas-o-n of its being preferential; and said interpleaders elected to rely upon s-aid latter cause of action. No motion to- require an election was filed in the matters of the interple-as- of defendants in error, Wurtk-eimer-Swartz Shoe company, Equitable *293 Manufacturing company, and Charles Mayer & Co.; and each of said latter interpleas were identically the same in setting up the validity of the assignment and the alleged preferential payment as 'causes of action with the other interpleas against which said motions to elect were filed and sustained.

The trial court made a special finding of fact that said James J. Drye never at any time made, executed, and filed in the office of the register of deeds of Pottawatomie county any inventory of Ms property, nor any schedule of Ms creditors, as required by law. These several in-terpleas were tried before the court as one cause, and the court, after finding the facts as above stated, found, as a conclusion of law, that the transaction by which said deed of assignment was executed was upon and contained a trust or condition by which one of the creditors — Annie L. Brown — was to receive a preference or priority over the other creditors; that said preference was a part of said assignment, and both constituted one transaction; that the said assignment, upon its execution and filing for record, vested a trust fund in the court of all the assigned property to be administered in equity; that the rights of all the general creditors attached thereto; that said property was not subject to attachment at the date of the levy of the attachments; that the levies of such attachments should be set aside, and that the court should administer the funds arising from the sale of the attached property as a trust fund in equity, for the equal benefit of all the creditors, in proportion to the amount of their respective demands. The plaintiffs in error duly excepted to the findings of fact made by the court, and also' to the conclusion of law, and bring the case here for review.

The first contention of plaintiffs in error which we

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Bluebook (online)
1898 OK 61, 54 P. 475, 7 Okla. 288, 1898 Okla. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hockaday-v-drye-okla-1898.