National Shoe & Leather Bank of Auburn v. Small

7 F. 837
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJune 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 F. 837 (National Shoe & Leather Bank of Auburn v. Small) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Shoe & Leather Bank of Auburn v. Small, 7 F. 837 (D. Me. 1881).

Opinion

Fox, D. J.

This bill is instituted by two national banks located in Androscoggin county, in this district, against L. L. Small, the assignee, under the insolvent law of ibis state, of the estates of Joshua M. and Mary A. Wagg, and Nathaniel I. Jordan, assignee of Samuel P. Irving and Hartwell K. Wagg, copartners in the shoe business at Auburn, under the style of Irving & Wagg, praying to be subrogated to the rights of Joshua M. and Mary A. Wagg under a certain chattel mortgage made and executed to them by Irving & Wagg on the tenth of July, A. D. 1879, to secure said Joshua M. and Mary A. Wagg the payment of certain sums loaned by them to Irving & Wagg, and also to save them harmless from all liability on account of any indorsements made or to be made by them for the benefit of said Irving & Wagg; the complainants having afterwards discounted for Irving & [838]*838Wagg their notes, indorsed by Joshua M. and Mary A. Wagg, upon , which they ave chargeable as joint promisors, and which are overdue ami unpaid. The holders of certain other notes of Irving & Wagg, upon which Joshua M. and Mary A. Wagg are liable a 3 indorsers, are also made parties defendant to this proceedir g.

The assignee of Irving & Wagg appears, and in his answer admits—

That the claimants are the holders of the “paper of Irving & Wagg, as set forth in their bill; that a mortgage was made by them to Joshua M. and Mary A. Wagg, but that said mortgage was not recorded until August, 1881, and that at the time of its execution [as he alleges] it was fraudulently agreed by the part<es to said mortgage that, notwithstanding said mortgage was to be given as aforesaid, it should he held secret, and should not be recorded; that Irving & Wagg might nevertheless continue manufacturing and pi rchasing on credit to be obtained from parties who would be ignorant of the existence of said mortgage, and who would rely on said property as unencumbered for the payment of the debts to be so contracted, and that in the event said Irving & Wagg should at any future time becon e insolvent, said mortgage should be put upon record, and said future creditors thus deprived of the means of obtaining payment of their seve: al debts; that in pursuance of this fraudulent agreement the mortgage vas kept secret, and Irving & Wagg continued in business, purchasing , in credit from parties who gave credit to them mainly on the fact that , heir property was unencumbered property.”

■ It appears that Irving & Wagg failed July 12,1880, owing nearly $20,000, the most, if not all, of which debts were incurred subsequent to the giving of the mortgage. The mortgage purports to convey all the stock,—

“ Raw or in process of manufacture, now in their shop, with all the machinery and furniture, and other personal property of whatever description, belonging to the morí gagees, now in their shop; also all stock and materials now on hand, or ■ vhich may be hereafter purchased by us and put into said shop for the purpose of being manufactured into boots and shoes.”

The condition of the mortgage is—

“ That if said Irving & Wagg shall well and truly indemnify and save harmless said Joshua M. and Mary A. Wagg from and against any and all liability to which they or ei her of them may be subjected by reason of having indorsed a certain promissory note of even date herewith, given by said Irving <& Wagg tu John W. May, for the sum of $600, payable in one year, with interest semi-annually at 7 per cent., and shall [839]*839also pay to said Joshua M. and Mary A. Wagg, or to either of them, any and all moneys which they, or either of them, may hereafter loan to said Arm, and shall also save them harmless from liability on any note or notes hereafter indorsed by them for the benefit of said firm, and shall keep said property insured in the sum of at least §2,000, for the benefit of said Joshua M. and Mary A.. Wagg, then this bill of sale should be void.”

May is one of the defendants, and so is Jamos S. Jordan, who subsequently loaned $1,000 to Irving & Wagg on then-notes, indorsed by Joshua M. and Mary A. Wagg.

It is shown that Irving & Wagg commenced business in May, 1879, with a capital only of some $700, borrowed of Joshua M. Wagg by his son, Hartwell, who was a member of the firm. In July, the firm being in need of money, Hart-well K. Wagg applied to John W. May for a loan of $600, proposing to give the note of the firm, indorsed by his father and mother, saying that ho intended to secure them for this and any other liabilities they might afterwards incur by a mortgage of the firm property. Hartwell soon after informed his father what he proposed doing, and that he would give him the contemplated security, which should also cover about $900 previously loaned by the father. The father assented to the arrangements, and when spoken to by May about it, told him “to make it all right so as to secure them,” authorizing him to take the mortgage and keep it for him till he called for it. May thereupon made the $600 loan to the firm, taking their note, indorsed by Joshua M. and Mary A. Wagg. This mortgage was signed by Irving & Wagg, in the presence of May, and witnessed by him. From all the testimony I am satisfied that, at that time, the mortgagors expected that the mortgage would not he immediately recorded; but as it would injure their credit, and they then hoped to continue in business, they intended it should be on that account withheld from the record for the time being, and were to be informed when it was placed on record.

Irving’s testimony is “that Hartwell Wagg agreed with him, at the time he signed the mortgage, that the mortgage should not then go on record, as it would affect their credit, and that he should be informed when it should be put [840]*840on record. ” Hartwell Wagg, in his examination, also states “it was kept from record until August, 1880, to help the credit of Irving & Wagg.” There can be no doubt, therefore, that the mortgagors expected that the mortgage would not be recorded immediately, and were apprehensive of serious consequences to their cj edit if it should be done. Whatever might have been the expectations of the mortgagors in this behalf, and however fraudulent may have been their purpose and design, the rights of the mortgagees—there having been a complete execution and delivery of the instrument by its makers to May, for the benefit of the mortgagees, and having subsequently incurred liabilities as indorsers, within the condition of the mortgage, to the amount of near $4,000—are not to be impaired by fraudulent purposes of the mortgagors, unless the mortgagees in some way became parties thereto and assented to such fraudulent purpose. This is most positively and directly denied by. both of the mortgagees, who assert that nothing was ever said, by either of them, about withholding the mortgage from record; that they never made any such agreement with either Irving or Wagg, and never had any such understanding, but were at full liberty to record the same at any moment; and in this respect these statements are corroborated by the testimony of May, who declares that he never made any such agreement, and that, at the time the mortgage was executed and delivered to him by the mortgagors, there was nothing said about not recording it; that after the instrument was completed, in a day or two, he informed Joshua M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 F. 837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-shoe-leather-bank-of-auburn-v-small-med-1881.