Jaquith v. Davenport

84 N.E. 125, 197 Mass. 397, 1908 Mass. LEXIS 736
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 84 N.E. 125 (Jaquith v. Davenport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jaquith v. Davenport, 84 N.E. 125, 197 Mass. 397, 1908 Mass. LEXIS 736 (Mass. 1908).

Opinion

Coring, J.

These are two of the three actions before this court in Jaquith v. Davenport, 191 Mass. 415. The action against Rico then before the court was disposed of by the decision made at that time. The other two cases went back for a new trial and are now before us on exceptions taken there.

[399]*399The action against Davenport is an action by the plaintiff as assignee in insolvency of the joint and separate estates of Henry A. Davis and Henry C. Hathaway, doing business as partners under the firm name of H. A. Davis and Company, to recover for two sales and three payments of cash as transfers and payments made in fraud of the insolvent laws. The action against Morrill is for the proceeds of one sale of cigars on the same ground.

The principal but not the only question raised by this bill of exceptions is that to the refusal of the judge to rule that the three sales were sales not made in the usual course of business of the insolvents.

1. The petition against Davis and Hathaway was filed on April 25, 1896. The two sales to Davenport were made on March 11, and March 31,1896. The three payments to Davenport (which at the trial had also a bearing on the validity of the. sales to him) were made on November 1, 1895, November 3, 1895, and December 12, 1895. The two sales to Davenport are the subjects of counts two and three, and the three payments are covered by counts four, five and six of the declaration in the action brought against him.

The circumstances leading up to the two sales and the three payments to Davenport are in substance as follows:

Some time in 1893 Davis and one Chard, doing business under the firm name of Chard and Davis, failed. At that time one Oliver borrowed $10,700 of the defendant Davenport, “to settle the insolvent affairs of Chard and Davis, . . . and to help Davis through financial straits.” For making this loan to him Oliver paid Davenport a bonus of $1000. Davenport testified that on March 12, 1896, the balance then due on this loan (originally for $10,700) was $3,275.14.

The three payments here in question come first in the chronological order, and we will state the facts in that connection before taking up the two sales to this defendant.

The first payment complained of came about as follows: One Kelman made a note payable to and held by the insolvents. They indorsed it to Oliver, and Oliver indorsed it to the defendant Davenport, with the agreement that anything received on it should be credited on the balance due on the loan originally of [400]*400$10,700. The note was protested at maturity and afterwards was paid to Davenport by the insolvents as indorsers, and the amount received was credited on March 12, 1896, on the note for $8,276.14, the balance then due on the original loan of $10,700. This payment amounted to $61.02, of which $1.50 were protest fees. This payment was the subject of the fourth count.

The other two payments were similar. The second payment (the subject of the fifth count) was for $60 paid by Davis and Company as indorsers at maturity to the defendant Davenport, the holder by indorsement from Oliver who received it from Davis and Company. The third payment, $300 in amount (the subject of the sixth count), also was paid by Davis and Company as indorsers at maturity. These two notes were received under the same agreement from Oliver, and the proceeds were credited on the balance due on the original loan of $10,700.

The plaintiff’s contention was that the original loan of $10,700, although made in Oliver’s name, really was made to Davis, and that these notes were transferred through Oliver to the defendant Davenport (the transfer to Oliver being without consideration) to be credited when paid on the debt due from Davis to Davenport. As we have said, these payments were made on November 1, November 3 and December 12, 1895, but were not credited on the note originally for $10,700 until March 12, 1896.

The auditor found that during all this time “ Davis ” personally was insolvent. No attempt was made to control this finding by evidence’ at the trial.

The date of the first sale of cigars to Davenport was the day before these three payments, made between three and four months previously thereto, were credited on the Oliver note held by Davenport. The other sale was twenty days later, on March 31, 1896.

The auditor found that “ Davis had been financially irresponsible ” since the insolvency of Chard and Davis in 1893 “ to his present insolvency.” In November, 1895, and perhaps early in October, 1895, Davis and Hathaway began a course of dealing in which the auditor found that Davis and Hathaway were [401]*401partners. This finding was not controverted at the trial. This ,ourse of dealing is described by the auditor as follows : “ Hathaway, whose rating in the books of the commercial agencies was good at that time, made notes, leaving large numbers of them, signed in blank in the hands of Oliver, who was their joint agent, and who, or whose bookkeeper and agent, one Von der Heide, filled them out as occasion required, and Davis then bought goods with these notes signed by ‘Davis & Co.’ and indorsed by Hathaway. The goods so bought were sent to Oliver ostensibly as Hathaway’s goods, were sold by Oliver or pledged on notes signed or indorsed by Oliver, and often these goods were sent direct from the depot or wharf to Oliver’s store or to Hathaway’s room in the warehouse, and often goods were sent from Hathaway’s or Davis’s store to Oliver’s.”

On March 11, 1896, and March 31, 1896, cigars bought in the course of dealing above described were sold to the defendant Davenport. The plaintiff introduced evidence that the two lots of cigars were worth $1,870 and $1,890, and were sold for $1,160 and $1,000 respectively. The plaintiff’s contention was that the difference of $1,100 between the true value and the purchase price was a payment to Davenport on the original loan of $10,700. The amount then due on that loan (according to Davenport’s testimony) was $1,972.30, after the three payments mentioned above and some others had been credited on March 12, 1896. His contention is that the transfer, having been made to give this preference to Davenport, was void. It appeared from the schedules of the insolvents that their assets amounted to $50 and their debts to $29,722.50. The judge was warranted in finding that $29,722.50 was to some extent at least due for cigars bought and not paid for.

The defence, or at any rate the main defence, set up to this claim was that these goods were sold honestly by Davis or Hathaway, or Davis and Hathaway, to Von der Heide, and by him were sold through Oliver as a broker to the defendant. Von der Heide, for seven or eight years before the date of these sales, had been, then was and thereafter for four or five years continued to be, Oliver’s bookkeeper. He had no place of business of his own.

[402]*402If the judge had believed that the two lots of cigars sold to the defendant were in reality the property of Yon der Heide and not the property of Davis or Hathaway or Davis and Hathaway standing in Yon der Heide’s name, when they were sold to the defendant, the request to rule that these sales were “ not in the usual course of business of Hathaway ” would have been rightly refused as immaterial. If the cigars were really Yon der Heide’s cigars, no question could arise as to the sale to Davenport being or not being in the usual course of the business of Hathaway or Davis or Davis and Hathaway.

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Related

Nashawena Trust v. Board of Assessors
501 N.E.2d 506 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1986)
Jaquith v. Morrill
90 N.E. 556 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 N.E. 125, 197 Mass. 397, 1908 Mass. LEXIS 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaquith-v-davenport-mass-1908.