Kit Carter Cattle Co. v. McGillin

11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 413
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedDecember 22, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 413 (Kit Carter Cattle Co. v. McGillin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kit Carter Cattle Co. v. McGillin, 11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 413 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Hale, J.

The case of the Kit Carter Cattle Company against Edward M. McGillin and others comes into this court on appeal by defendant William J. McGillin.

The plaintiff, after the trial below, dropped out of the case, and no claim is made here in his behalf. The issues which have been tried, are [414]*414made upon the cross-petition of McNabb, assignee of the E. M. McGillin Company, and the cross-petition of the creditors of the company, suing in their behalf.

We have spent so much time in the reading of the extensive briefs- and in the examination of the evidence, that we have not formulated any very extensive opinion in the case. I will state the facts necessary 'to the conclusions reached, and then the conclusions.

The E. M. McGillin Company was incorporated under the laws of this state, on December 26, 1891. The object and purpose of the corporation was to deal in general merchandise at wholesale and retail. After its incorporation, it prosecuted its business in the city of Youngstown until September, 1895; it then closed out its business in- that city, and removed to the city of Pittsburg, in the state of Pennsylvania. It continued to prosecute the business for which the corporation was formed in the latter city until April, 1896. On April 10, of that year, at a meeting of the board of directors held in Pittsburg, a resolution was passed, authorizing the delivery of judgment notes to four of its creditors : one to W. J. McGillin, for the sum of about $23,000; one to Shade & Company, for $4,567.50; one to Arbuthnot, Stephenson & Co., for $1,400; and one to Mary O’Neil, in trust for the National Bank of Pitts-burg, and A. Mellon & Son, doing business in Pittsburg, $20,000, aggregating in all about $50,000.

All these notes, as I have said, were dated April 10, 1896; they .were due one day after date; they were held until they became due, by the president of the corporation ; and were then delivered into the hands of an attorney, and judgment in the courts of Pennsylvania entered upon these cognovit notes. A levy was made upon the entire property of the corporation.

After the levy, an agreement was made between these judgment creditors looking to the purchase of the property at the sheriff’s sale, and the running of the business after the sale, that these judgments might be realized. The substance of that agreement was that one Mitchell, as trustee, was to attend the sale and purchase the property for and on behalf of these judgment creditors, and he was to see to it that the property did not sell for less than $20,000. It was then agreed that, having purchased the property, the business should be presecuted by him in Pittsburg until sufficient was realized to pay off the judgment creditors, other than W. J. McGillin. When that was done, the trustee, who was to purchase this property, was to assign the remainder of the property over to W. J. McGillin.

This agreement was carried out. The trustee purchased the property, continued to prosecute the business in Pittsburg until July 13, 1896, carrying it on in the usual way, purchasing and replenishing the stock. On July 13, 1896, these creditors, the bank in Pittsburg, Mellon & Sons, and Schade, having realized the amount of their judgments, or the judgments that were taken in their behalf, the assignee, in pursuance of the original agreement, transferred all the remaining property over to W. J. McGillin, who ran the business for awhile in Pittsburg. He then removed all the property,including fixtures, f.ormerly, belonging to the E. M. McGillin Company, and which had been assigned to him in the way I have named, to Cleveland. He caused to be organized the E. M. McGillin Dry Goods Company, and this property was made over to that company.

[415]*415That company continued to do business here in this city in the usual way of running a dry goods business, until March 1, 1898, buying and selling, and using the property precisely as if he owned it. When the dry goods company sold out all the property, including merchandise and fixtures, to Samuel Weil, for the sum of $52,000, after paying the debts of the dry goods company, there remained in the hands of the dry goods company, or belonging to it or somebody else, $36,000.

Soon after the giving of the notes in Pittsburg as I have stated, the company made an assignment, a general assignment for the benefit of creditors, in Pittsburg. It filed no copy of the deed of assignment, in Youngstown, Mahoning county. But some of the creditors, believing that to be the home of the corporation, caused a copy of the deed of assignment to be filed in the probate court of Mahoning county. The probate court took jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and removed the assignee that had been appointed in Pittsburg, so far as he had the power to do, and appointed Mr. McNabb as trustee for the benefit of the creditors.

It will be seen, then, that all the property of this corporation at the time of the transactions that are questioned here, was located in the city of Pittsburg, in the state of Pennsylvania. The judgment creditors were all non-residents of Ohio, except Schade; two of them resided in Pitts-burg, Pennsylvania.

The notes were given ostensibly for antecedent debts which the corporation, The E. M. McGillin Company, owed at the time.

The trustee, having been appointed by the probate court of Mahoning county, prosecutes this action in behalf of the creditors of the E. M. McGillin Company, to gain possession of the amount remaining from the sale made by the dry goods company in March, 1898, claiming it to be the property of the E. M. McGillin Company.

Not questioning, or stopping to question, the regularity or legality of the appointment of the trustee by the probate court of Mahoning county, it it best, perhaps, to consider the rights and claims of the creditors of the E. M. McGillin Company as against these judgment creditors. Whether that is done upon the petition of the assignee or the petition of the creditors, it makes no difference. . Certain rights must be examined into and determined as between these two claimants.

The proposition largely relied upon by the assignee in behalf of the creditors, is based upon the proposition of law announced in Rouse, Trustee, v. Merchants National Bank, 46 Ohio St., 493, the syllabus of which is:

“ A corporation for profit, organized under the laws of this state, after it has become insolvent, and ceased to prosecute the objects for which it was created, cannot, by giving some of its creditors mortgages on the corporate property to secure antecedent debts without other consideration, create valid preferences in their behalf over the other creditors, or over a general assignment thereafter made for the benefit of creditors.”

It is claimed that this rule of law became and was a part of the organic law of this corporation, which must govern it. And it may be conceded that if this transaction which we are investigating, that took place in Pittsburg, had taken place within this state, it would have been an attempt to make an unlawful preference in .the favor of one creditor against the others, and could be at. least questioned by the creditors, ««d. at their instance, held Up invalid. But this transaction did [416]*416not take place in Ohio.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kit-carter-cattle-co-v-mcgillin-ohiocirct-1900.