In re the Assignment of the George D. Winchell Manufacturing Co.

1 Ohio N.P. 136
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedMay 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio N.P. 136 (In re the Assignment of the George D. Winchell Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Assignment of the George D. Winchell Manufacturing Co., 1 Ohio N.P. 136 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Hollister, J.

This cause comes here on appeal from the probate court.

The George D. Winchell Manufacturing Company, hereinafter called “ assignor,” boro wed from Ida H. Upson $10,000 on March 1, 1892. On July 12, 1893, the assignor, in pursuance of a resolution of its board of directors, executed and delivered to her its promissory note as follows:

“$10,000.
“ On demand, for value received, we promise to pay to Ida H. Upson, or order, ten thousand dollars, with interest from date till paid at seven per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually in advance. And we hereby authorize and empower any attorney at law of any court of record, at any time after this note becomes due, to appear for us without process, in any court of record, and confess judgment for the said amount, interest and costs in favor of the legal holder, indorsee or assignee hereof, and release all errors which may occur in the legal proceedings herein authorized, and we also release all right of appeal, stay of execution and the power and privilege of holding any personal and real property exempt from execution for the enforcement of said judgment; and said attorney is hereby authorized to enter such release in said judgment.”
“ Witness our hand and seal this twelfth day of July, A. D. 1893.
“ The Geo. D. Winchell Mfg. Co.,
“By Geo. D. Winchell, Pres’t.”
The note is indorsed : “ Interest paid to September 1, 1893.”

On the eighteenth of September, 1883, the directors held a meeting, at which, as appears by the minutes, “the president stated that the meeting of the board had been called for the purpose of considering the financial condition of the company, and taking such steps as were necessary to protect the stockholders and creditors from lossand thereupon a resolution to make a general assignment for the benefit of creditors was unanimously adopted, which resolution was accompanied by the following preamble: “ Whereas, the financial condition of The George D. Winchell Manufacturing Company is such that it can no longer continue business without serious loss to its stockholders and jeopardy to the interests of its creditors,” etc.; “now be it resolved, etc., that the assignment be made.” Among other resolutions was the following: “ Be it resolved by the Board of Directors of The George D. Winchell Manufacturing Company, that the president of said company be, and he hereby is, authorized to enter judgments by confession or cognovit, and other notes past due to the following persons and in the following order: One to John C/Wick and Henry Wick; two to John C. Wick and Henry Wick, as executors, on notes for certain sums ; three to Ida H. Upson for the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000) on a cognovit demand note dated July 12,1893, demand having been made and payment refused.”

The meeting of the directors was held at the office of the assignor at 10 o’clock a. m. The deed of assignment was filed at 2 o’clock p. m. the same day. Previously thereto on that day the petition of plaintiff for judgment on her note was filed, and simultaneously the answer of the assignor by John F. Fisk, an attorney of record in this county, was filed, confessing judgment as provided in the note. A judgment entry was made at once awarding execution, which was levied by the sheriff on all the real and personal property of the assignor, and was returned by him at 1:45 o’clock p. m. These papers and proceedings appear to be regular in all respects.

Thereafter the sheriff turned the property levied on_ over to the assignee on an agreement made by the judgment creditors with the assignee, [138]*138under the sanction of an order of the probate court, entered September 28, 1893, which order contains this language : “ And it further appearing to the court that said judgment creditors have consented that the assignee herein may take possession of said property subject to said levies under said execution and judgment upon condition of retaining their respective liens acquired thereby, it is hereby considered by the court and so ordered that the assignee herein, John E. Bruce, be and he is hereby authorized and directed to sign articles of agreement with said judgment creditors and said sheriff whereby, .upon the surrender to him, the said assignee, of the property levied upon as aforesaid, the respective liens of said judgment creditors shall be preserved, and the moneys arising from the sale of said property be applied so far as it may reach to the payment of said liens in their order as above, upon the order of this court.”

It is claimed by counsel for Mrs. Upson that this agreement, made by the assignee, the representative of all of the creditors, under sanction of the court having jurisdiction of the subject-matter, is binding on the general creditors. While there may be many reasons why the disposition of the property of an insolvent concern may be more advantageously made by an assignee than by the sheriff, quite sufficient to support an agreement to that effect made by competent persons, yet the assignee’s powers are limited by the provisions of the statute regulating the administration of the assets of the insolvent. Davis v. Davis, 11 Ohio St. 386, 391; and while it is true that the probate court may, under the ruling in Sayler v. Simpson, 45 Ohio St., and by the authority of section 6145 as amended, 89 O. L. 135, consider questions of equity arising in fixing the priority of liens, there is no authority in that court to judge in advance, by sactioning such an agreement, on such questions, and shut out the general creditors from the day in court to which they are entitled. Sayler v. Simpson, supra.

The entry of September 28th, recognizes this in that part of the order requiring the liens to be paid upon the order of the court. In the entry there is no finding of priority of lien, or existence of lien. It recites, by way of preamble, that all of the property has been levied on by virtue of certain judgments, including Mrs. Upson’s, but that is no finding upon a hearing regularly had in the exercise of the jurisdiction of that court in ascertaining the existence and priority of liens in matters of assignment, and does not, as I think, work an estoppel as against the interests of the general creditors, however far it may operate to bind the acquiescing judgment creditors.

But whether it does or not, and assuming that the contention of the general creditors on that point is correct, then the case turns on whether or not the confession of the judgment was in effect the giving of a preference by the corporation to Mrs. Upson, and void under Rouse v. Bank, 46 Ohio St. 493.

It cannot be doubted but if the note had been given on the day of assignment, and judgment taken at once in pursuance of its powers and the resolution of the directors passed that day, the principles on which that case was decided would have been directly applicable, for the judgment ereditor offered no evidence to rebut the presumption that the concern was insolvent, and had ceased to carry on its business, raised by the fact that the inventory of its assets showed them to be less than the liabilities, and by the declaration of the corporation solemnly made on the day of its assignment. But the case at the bar is different. Mrs. Upson acquired her rights when the judgment note was delivered to her, July 22,1893.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Chalmers v. Stewart
11 Ohio St. 386 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1842)
P. C. Hanford Oil Co. v. First National Bank
21 N.E. 483 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio N.P. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-assignment-of-the-george-d-winchell-manufacturing-co-ohctcomplhamilt-1894.