Putnam v. Osgood

51 N.H. 192
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 51 N.H. 192 (Putnam v. Osgood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Putnam v. Osgood, 51 N.H. 192 (N.H. 1871).

Opinion

Bellows, C. J.

The first question is, whether this mortgage, under the circumstances, was originally valid as against the creditor at whose suit the goods in question were attached.

The mortgage was made February 8,1867, and was of a stock of goods in a country store, together with some wagons, harnesses, sleighs, and wood ; and, from the additional report of the auditor, it appears that at the time it was executed each party had an understanding in his own mind that the mortgagor was to be permitted to cany on trade as usual in the store, although this understanding was not communicated by either to the other until after February 8; tliat the mortgagor did proceed to sell the goods in the usual course of business, at his store, with the knowledge of the mortgagee and without objection on his part; that, between the date of the mortgage and the attachment on February 22, 1867, he sold to the amount of upwards of $600 ; that nothing was said between them before the attachment, nor was any act done or neglected which would have rendered it inconsistent for the mortgagee to have taken possession of the mortgaged property at any time, had he seen fit so to do.

From the acts of the mortgagor and the silence of the mortgagee the auditor finds that, between the 8th and 22d days of February, it [198]*198was agreed that the mortgagor should continue business in the store as usual, so long as tlie mortgagee should make no objection to it.

In the former opinion it was held that if it should be found as matter of fact that the parties had agreed that the mortgagor might continuó to carry on his business at that store, and to sell the goods so mortgaged, as before, on his own account, the case would come within the principle of Ranlett v. Blodgett, 17 N. H. 298; and the question is, whether the finding of the auditor comes up to that statement.

It is urged, on the part of the plaintiff, that-it does not, because the plaintiff retained the right to take possession of the goods at any time, and because, also, the agreement, whatever it was, was not made when the mortgage was executed, but subsequent thereto.

In respect to the first suggestion, it will be observed that in Ranlett v. Blodgett the mortgagee’s right, as matter of law, to take possession of the goods at any time was unquestionable, because his right under the mortgage .could not be controlled by a contemporary parol agreement.

The difference between the two cases is, that in the one it was agreed that the mortgagor might go on and sell the goods on his own account without any qualification, while in the other, — the case before us, — he was authorized to sell them so long as the mortgagee should not object.

It is obvious that, as a device for protecting the property of a debtor from attachment, this method would be equally effective as the other, and the same mischiefs might reasonably be apprehended.

In this way the crops and other personal property of a debtor could be continually protected from attachment, and yet he be allowed the unlimited power of disposal; and this would be wholly inconsistent with the apparent object of the mortgage.

• The avowed object is to secure a debt; but an agreement that the mortgagor may sell the goods for his own benefit shows that the real object was, not to secure the debt, but to protect the property.

Such a reservation is a trust in favor of the mortgagor, and as inconsistent with the apparent object of the mortgage as it would be in respect to an absolute sale, and for aught we can see it matters not that the authority to sell is subject to be recalled by the mortgagee.

,For the time being the authority is unlimited, and that is clearly inconsistent with the avowed object of the mortgage. The mortgagor is 'authorized to sell what goods he can, and for his -own bénefit, until his authority is recalled.

This must be regarded as a trust for the mortgagor’s benefit, differing only in extqnt from the case of an unlimited power of sale, and it 'differs very widely from the mere retention of the possession. Ranlett v. Blodgett goes upon the ground that such mortgage, 'if held to be valid, would serve effectually to cover the property of debtors, the -mortgagor being authorized to act as the absolute owner notwithstanding the mortgage; and the court say that the mortgagor, by the agreement, was the owner for all purposes except the rights of creditors, but those [199]*199rights cannot be excluded by such an agreement, and they might attach.

The same remarks, for aught we can see, apply in their full force to the case before us.

In Coolidge v. Melvin, 42 N. H. 510, it was held that any secret trust whatever, by which the property is held in any way for the benefit of the vendor, is inconsistent with an absolute sale, and makes it, as matter of law, fraudulent and void as to creditors.

Such a trust as there is in this case is equally inconsistent with a mortgage. It is true that the plaintiff did not intend to permit the mortgagor to dispose of the goods to such an extent as to render his security inadequate, but still the mortgage was made to cover an amount of goods supposed to be greater than the mortgage debts, and the mortgagor was authorized to sell them for his own benefit: and it may well be assumed that the purpose was to protect them from attachment.

It is urged by the plaintiff that the agreement that Child might sell the goods was not made when the mortgage was executed, but subsequently. It will be perceived, however, that when the mortgage was executed, both parties understood that the mortgagor was to be permitted to carry on the business as usual at that store; and he did so carry on the business and sell the goods, with the plaintiff’s knowledge and without any objection by him.

The case in fact stands much like the case of Coburn v. Pickering, 3 N. H. 415. That was an absolute sale of goods — household furniture— in a tavern; and after the sale, and before the goods were removed, it was agreed that the furniture should be left and used in the tavern by the vendor; and in order to prevent their being taken by the vendor’s creditors, the buyer leased them to a hired man of the seller for six months. There was no evidence that this arrangement made any part of the contract of sale, but the vendor testified that the agreement that the goods should be left there was altogether subsequent to the sale.

The court, regarding the lease as a lease in fact to the seller, directed a verdict against the plaintiff to whom the goods were so leased, on the ground that although the leaving the goods with the seller might not have been originally contemplated, yet, as the arrangement was entered into before the goods were removed, the whole must be considered as one transaction and one contract, and that leaving the goods in possession of the seller was conclusive evidence of a secret trust.

■ On motion for a new trial, the ruling of the court was sustained, and there was judgment on the verdict. The court, per Richaedson, C. J., holds that the doctrine urged by the plaintiff’s counsel, that the original contract is to form the criterion by which the honesty of the sale is to be determined, stands in opposition to the rules which have been long established in such cases, and is wholly unsupported by authority.

In the case of an absolute sale of goods, the retention of possession

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Related

United States v. Boston & Berlin Transportation Co.
237 F. Supp. 1004 (D. New Hampshire, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 N.H. 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/putnam-v-osgood-nh-1871.