Mott v. Coughlan
This text of 68 Mo. App. 229 (Mott v. Coughlan) 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.
Opinion
This action is for the alleged conversion of certain personal property which was levied upon by [231]*231defendant Coughlan as constable under a writ of attachment. Plaintiff claimed the ownership of said property under a mortgage to him for the benefit of creditors. Defendant claimed that said mortgage was fraudulent. Plaintiff had judgment, from which defendant prosecutes this appeal.' The errors assigned relate solely to the instructions given, it being conceded that no questions for review arise upon the evidence.
“The court instructs the jury that if they find from the evidence that the chattel deed of trust, read in evidence was made by Sidney B. Cohn and William J. Hughes in good faith and for the purpose of securing a bona fide indebtedness to M. A. Cohn and Arthur B. Cohn.”
By the expressions in “good.faith” and “for the purpose of securing a bona fide indebtedness,” every element of fraudulent intent or purpose on the part of the grantors is necessarily excluded (Sammons v. O’Neil, 60 Mo. App. loc. cit. 540, 541), for it could not be that they made a mortgage in good faith and to secure a bona fide indebtedness, and at the same time entertain a purpose to defraud others. Such a con[232]*232ception would do violence to the necessary import of the terms used. If the grantors intended no fraud, there could have been none in the transaction, because fraud consists in an intent to that effect on the part of the grantors and a participation in such intent by the beneficiai’ies, and if there was no such intent, there could have been no participation therein. Distilling Co. v. Ellis, 63 Mo. App. loc. cit. 21, and cases cited; Alberger v. White, 117 Mo. 347. Moreover the court gave qualifying instructions to the effect that the mortgage was invalid if made to the use of- the grantors, unless the jury found that the beneficiaries did not share in such intent, but took it “only” so far as sufficient to secure the payment of their own notes against the mortgagors.
Finding no reversible error on the trial of this case, the judgment will be affirmed.
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68 Mo. App. 229, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mott-v-coughlan-moctapp-1897.