Luce v. Barnum

19 Mo. App. 359, 1885 Mo. App. LEXIS 234
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Mo. App. 359 (Luce v. Barnum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luce v. Barnum, 19 Mo. App. 359, 1885 Mo. App. LEXIS 234 (Mo. Ct. App. 1885).

Opinion

Thompson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity in which two partnership firms, each claiming to be a creditor of two of the defendants, Margaret J. Barnum and J. Prank Barnum, in a sum named as the balance due upon an open account, join as plaintiffs and seek to establish their respective [360]*360demands against these two defendants, on the ground that these two defendants were, at the time when the credit was given to them, a partnership firm, trading in the grocery business with the defendant, Joseph S. Barnum, as their agent, under the firm name and style of Barnum & Co.; and to set aside a pretended deéd of assignment made by the defendant, Joseph S. Barnum, to the defendant, William O. Gray, for the benefit of the creditors of Joseph S. Barnum, as having been made to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of Margaret J. and J. Frank Barnum, and particularly the plaintiffs.

The plaintiffs allege, as an excuse for not first reducing their respective demands to judgment at law, that the defendant, Margaret J. Barnum, is a married woman, being the wife of the defendant, Joseph S. Barnum ; that her share in the partnership estates of Barnum & Co. was a separate estate, by reason of which fact they are compelled to go into equity to charge the same. They set up that the pretended assignment by Joseph S. Barnum to William O. Gray, will operate to defraud them of the collection of their respective claims, in this, that in the deed of assignment Joseph S. Barnum reserves to himself, as assignor, the exemptions allowed by the statute to the head of a family; and they aver that the goods assigned by him have been converted into money by the assignee,. Gray; that the amount of the money so realized does not exceed $300, and that unless they have the relief prayed for it will be turned over by Gray to Joseph S. Barnum as property exempt to him under the statute. They pray that their respective demands may be established and made a charge upon the fund in the hands of Gray, and that he be required to pay the same into court, etc. This, without perusing the language of their petition, is its substance.

The answers are a general denial, and. a separate answer of Gray, admitting the assignment, denying a knowlege or belief of the facts charged in the petition on which the plaintiffs predicate their right to relief, asserting his good faith in the premises, and stating that [361]*361he has disposed of the assigned property under an order of court and holds the proceeds under the trust imposed upon him by the deed of assignment; that all the pers.ons from whom goods were purchased, except the plaintiffs, have acquiesced in the assignment, and that he holds the funds merely as the assignee of Joseph S. Barnum, for distribution under the statute.

No objection was taken on account of a misjoinder of plaintiffs, and we need not consider whether in this regard the suit is appropriately brought under our code of procedure.

At the trial a jury was called, and, after hearing the evidence, the court refused certain instructions asked by the plaintiff, and put certain questions of its own motion .to the jury. The refusing of the instructions is relied up on as error; but we need not consider this point, because it is well settled that a court is not bound to give instructions to a jury in an equity case.

The questions which the court submitted to the jury are the following:

“1. Was there a co-partnership existing between Margaret J. Barnum and J. Frank Barnum in the grocery business 3
“2. In whose name was the business in controversy conducted 3
“ 3. .In whose name was the property in dispute purchased and held while said business was being carried on 3
“4. To whom did the said property belong 3”

To which the jury returned the following answers : “We, the jury, find upon the issues submitted to us:

“ 1. That there was not, as the jury may find, a co-partnership existing between Margaret J. Barnum and J. Frank Barnum in the grocery business.
“2. That the business in controversy was conducted in the name of Joseph S. Barnum.
“ 3. That while said business was being carried on, the property in dispute was purchased and held in the name of Joseph S. Barnum.
[362]*362“4. Said property belonged to Joseph S. Barnum.”

Objections were filed by the plaintiffs to the rendition of judgment on this verdict, among which we may mention the objection that the jury were required to find whether, as a matter of fact, the defendants, Margaret J. and J. Frank Barnnm, were partners, whereas, the plaintiff relied on the fact that they held themselves out to be such with the knowledge and consent of the defendant, Joseph S. Barnum, at the time when the credits were extended to them, as sufficient to establish the plaintiff’s demand.

The court overruled these objections and entered judgment for the defendants.

The evidence was overwhelming to the effect t (1) That at the time when the respective credits were extended by the plaintiffs to the firm whose business Joseph S. Barnum was conducting, the business was carried- on under the firm name of Barnum & Company; that the names, Margaret J. and J. Frank Barnum, were displayed in large letters above the door; that they were held out to the plaintiffs and to the world as the proprietors of the business, and that the credits were in point of fact extended by the plaintiffs to them. (2) That Joseph S. Barnum had previously failed in business and was involved in debt; by reason of which fact he could not carry on business in his own name. (3) That all the money and goods which were employed in the business came from Margaret J. and J. Frank Barnum. (4) That the proprietary name, in which the business was conducted, was Barnum & Co. This being the state of the proof, whether among themselves Margaret J. and J. Frank Barnum, or Joseph S. Barnum, was the owner of the business, was not a material question.

The record discloses a kind of jugglery with creditors which the law does not tolerate. A man is not allowed to get credit in one character and make an assignment in another character. He can not deal as a partnership, whose funds are all subject to execution, and make an assignment ostensibly for his creditors as [363]*363an individual, so as to reserve from execution the property or its proceeds, which he has realized from credits extended to him as a partnership. Nor can it be doubted that if a party makes a fraudulent transfer of property for the purpose of putting it in such a form that it will be exempt from execution, his creditors may reach the same in the hands of the fraudulent purchaser and apply the proceeds to their demands.. Comstock v. Bechtel, 24 N. W. Rep. 465.

There was plainly nothing in the case which required the judge, sitting as a chancellor, to take the verdict of a jury in order to inform his conscience. A judge ought not to have any doubt as to what conclusion should be drawn from such evidence. If it were an action at law, the verdict would have to be set aside as against the evidence.

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Related

Comstock v. Bechtel
24 N.W. 465 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Mo. App. 359, 1885 Mo. App. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luce-v-barnum-moctapp-1885.