L. Miller & Co. v. Goodman

40 S.W. 743, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 244, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 37
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 40 S.W. 743 (L. Miller & Co. v. Goodman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
L. Miller & Co. v. Goodman, 40 S.W. 743, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 244, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 37 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

JAMES, Chief Justice.

Appellee alleged that he was the assignee of C. J. L. Meyer & Sons Company, a private corporation created under the laws of Illinois, domiciled at Chicago, Illinois, and engaged in the manufacture and sale of lumber, doors, sashes, blinds, etc. That the goods sold by said corporation to defendants (appellants) were sold by and through A. C. Petri & Bro., of Dallas, Texas, who were at said time solicitors of business and buyers for its goods. The petition claimed $1110.47, but plaintiff admitted that the account was entitled to a discount reducing it to $958.38. Judgment was rendered in the District Court against appellants for such sum and interest. There is. no brief for appellee.

*245 It is assigned as error that a special exception should have been sustained to the petition, because it failed to allege that the corporation (a foreign corporation) had complied with our statutes of 1889 to admit of it engaging in business in this State or prosecuting an action in the courts of this State; also, that it was error to render judgment for plaintiff, in the absence of evidence showing such compliance. These assignments, we think, are not well taken, because it devolved on defendants to allege and prove that the corporation was so circumstanced as to deprive it of the right to recover for the goods it had sold defendants. Defendants alleged such matter, but there is not a particle of testimony in the record on the subject. Murfree oil Foreign Corporations, sec. 96. It therefore becomes unnecessary to discuss the effect of said statute upon a suit brought by a foreign corporation or its assignee, where there has been no compliance with its requirements.

The corporation, like any other person, could make an assignment for creditors. Burrill on Assignments, see. 64. This is a common law rule, and therefore it was not necessary for plaintiff either to allege or prove the condition of the laws of Illinois with reference to assignments. An assignment, if shown, would be prima facie evidence of the plaintiff’s title to recover.

There was evidence that the corporation, prior to any assignment, drew a draft on defendants for the amount of this claim, in favor of its president, which the latter testified he discounted with a certain bank; and it is contended by appellant that plaintiff ought not to have recovered, by reason of this testimony showing a previous transfer of this particular account. In view of the fact that this draft was made in 1889, and there is nothing to show that it had ever been asserted by the bank, and any right of the bank to collect it had evidently been allowed to become barred, the court was warranted in concluding from the circumstances that the draft was a contrivance or a temporary expedient that had served its purpose, and did not really assign the claim.

Another question is raised by appellant. It appears that the corporation was largely indebted to A. C. Petri & Bro. at the time of the alleged assignments, and that that firm sued and garnisheed appellants, who answered that they owed this claim, less the discount, to “C. J. L. Meyer & Sons Co. or assignees.” The assignee was made a party to the proceeding, and appellants allowed judgment to be rendered against them, and paid the judgment. There was no plea of payment in this case. If we consider’the evidence introduced on this subject, and give it full effect, we are of opinion that payment of said judgment is, as held by the District Court, no defense in this case.

The weight of authority seems to be that an assignment made in one State operates to pass title to the personal property in another State, subject to the demands of the local creditors in the latter State. Upon this view of the law Petri & Bro. would have been entitled, through their garnishment, to collect this claim from appellants, and apply it to their judgment, as against the assignee.

*246 But we do not consider a decision of this question necessary, in view of another rule which the Supreme Court has adopted as the law of this State, known as the trust fund doctrine. It appeared that the corporation failed, and made an assignment. When a corporation is so conditioned, its assets constitute a trust fund for creditors. This court believed, and such were all the authorities we found on the subject, that the rule merely disabled the corporation or its officers from doing any act calculated to defeat an equitable distribution of the corporate assets, among its creditors, and that a creditor might obtain a lien or preference by virtue of the statutes of garnishment and attachment; but in this we were not sustained by the Supreme Court. Moon Bros. Carriage Co. v. Waxahachie Grain & Implement Co., 35 S. W. Rep., 337, 1047. The Supreme Court has gone so far as to say that this doctrine is a rule of public policy in this State. Fowler v. Bell, 35 S. W. Rep., 822. It is with us and the other courts of this State to accept this decision and give it full force and effect. The doctrine as applied to this case made this claim a part of a trust fund for creditors, and no creditor could acquire a lien on it, or appropriate it by garnishment or otherwise, and defendants are not protected by the judgment accomplishing this, to which the assignee was not a party.

We are not unmindful of the different attitude the assignee of a corporation in this State would sustain in the State of Illinois, in a similar case. In that State it is held that a foreign assignment has no operation there, as against the interest of local creditors. Heyer v. Alexander, 108 Ill., 385. And, in reference to the trust fund theory, the courts of that State hold that it does not affect a creditor’s right to secure a preference by pursuing statutory remedies. Rosebloom v. Whitaker, 132 Ill., 81.

The copy of the deed of assignment should not have been admitted in evidence. The objection that it wasacopy, and not the original, and that no reason was given why the original was not produced, was well taken. In the absence of any showing that it was lost, or had become an archive, so that the original could not be procured, secondary evidence of its contents was not admissible. Harvey v. Edens, 69 Texas, 424. But other evidence was allowed to go in without objection, showing that the corporation had made an assignment to plaintiff. We find that defendants’ answer in the garnishment case referred to C. J. L. Meyer & Sons Company as defunct. Brice, one of defendants, testified that he 'was informed before he filed said answer that C. J. L. Meyer & Sons Company had failed, and made an assignment, and that before judgment in that proceeding he knew it had made an assignment from other sources. C. J. L. Meyer testified as follows: “It is true that I made an assignment, as asked; that is, C. J. L. Meyer & Sons Company made an assignment to James B. Goodman, the plaintiff.” From this uncontradicted evidence, and disregarding the copy introduced, the judge’s conclusion of fact that the C. J. L. Meyer & Sons Company made an assignment to plaintiff, and that their assets passed *247 to him, is sustained. There is ample proof in the record that C. J. L. Meyer Sons & Company was a corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W. 743, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 244, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-miller-co-v-goodman-texapp-1897.