Ringo v. Wing

49 Ark. 457
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 49 Ark. 457 (Ringo v. Wing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ringo v. Wing, 49 Ark. 457 (Ark. 1887).

Opinion

Cockrill, C. J.

This suit was instituted by D. R. Wing & Co. to foreclose a mortgage upon’a lot of machinery, executed by P. Flowers, who was doing business under the style of the “Furniture Works,” .to secure a debt due by him to Wing & Co., which was contracted with reference to his furniture manufacturing business. The mortgage was executed in the autumn of 1883, and was filed for record in December, 1884. The acknowledgment does not declare that the mortgage was executed for the “ purposes ” therein set forth. After its execution, John M. Walker purchased a half interest in the business of the Furniture Works and formed a co-partnership with blowers. They continued the business, as before, under the same style. In June, 1884, Walker sold his interest in the concern to Chapman, Yonley & Ringo, and they, in co-partnership with Flowers, continued the business without change in the firm name. The mortgaged machinery which Wing & Co. are seeking to pursue, was successively the property of each of the firms doing business as the Furniture Works. Wing & Co. made all of the parties above named defendants to their complaint. They alleged that each of the purchases of the machinery had been made subject to the mortgage, and that Walker, as a part of the consideration of the purchase by him of the assets of the Furniture Works, had assumed to pay off and discharge the mortgage, together with an unsecured book account contracted before that time by Flowers on behalf of the concern. They prayed for a decree in personam against Flowers and Walker for the full amount of their claims, and ask that the machinery be subjected to the payment of the mortgaged debt.

Walker answered, denying that he had bought subject to the mortgage, or assumed any liability with-reference to it, but admitted that he had agreed with Flowers that he would assume and pay off a portion of the indebtedness of the Furniture Works existing at the time he bought.

The other defendants filed a joint answer and cross-complaint, denying the validity of the mortgage, because it had not been acknowledged and filed for record when they purchased ; and sought to dissolve the partnership and close up its affairs. The Chancellor appointed a receiver to take charge of and sell the effects of the firm; paid off the firm debts; retained in court the fund arising from a sale of the mortgaged, property ; adjudged that the firm was indebted to Ringo, one of the partners, for money advanced to it in the sum of $2000, and to Chapman, another partner, in the sum of $600; declared the mortgage a lien upon a one-half undivided interest of the property described in it, superior to the partners’ right of reimbursement out of the firm assets; and directed one-half of the proceeds of the sale of the property to be paid to Wing & Co. as a credit on their mortgage debt, and the other half to Ringo to repay him in part for advances made to the firm, over and above the sum due his co-partner, Chapman; and rendered a personal judgment against Flowers for the mortgage debt and one-half of the open account, and against Walker for the other moiety of the latter debt.

Ringo appealed from so much of the decree as gave Wing & Co.’s mortgage a preference over his claim against assets of the concern ; Wing & Co. appealed, because they did not get a decree in personam against Walker and Flowers together for the whole amount of the indebtedness contracted by Flowers for the Furniture Works before Walker became a partner; and Walker appealed because of a decree against him for any amount. Other parties were drawn into the litigation and other interests were adjudicated by the court, but the facts stated present the questions raised by the appeals.

L mortcagV' l Failure to reSmhi'p10 part" I. Ringo’s appeal relates solely to that part of the decree which makes Wing & Co.’s mortgage debt paramount to his claim to the assets described in the mortgage.

That the mortgage executed by Flowers to Wing & Co. is binding as between the parties to it; and that Ringo is entitled in equity to reimbursement out of the partnership assets for advances made by him to the firm in preference to the unsecured individual creditors of his co-partner, Flowers, are propositions that need only to be stated to be conceded. The question is, is Ringo’s equity superior to the unrecorded mortgage executed by the partner before the partnership was formed ?

Under our system of registration, a mortgage is not a lien against a title, right or interest acquired by a stranger before the mortgage has been acknowledged or proved as required by the statute, and filed in the office of the recorder. The first case in our Reports construing the statute is Main v. Alexander, 9th Ark., where the lien of an attachment was declared to be superior to an unregistered mortgage; and a purchaser of mortgaged property, even with actual notice of the mortgage, has been frequently adjudged to take free of the mortgage lien.

The Chancellor in this case held that the sale of the property by Flowers to Walker, and by Walker to Ringo and the others, was merely the sale of an undivided half interest, and that the other moiety still remained in Flowers, and was therefore subject to the lien.

But neither of the sales can be regarded simply as the transfer of an undivided moiety of the property owned by the persons operating the Furniture Works. When the co-partnership between Flowers and Walker was formed, with the property in controversy as a part of the capital stock, Flowers must be regarding as selling the whole property to the concern, in consideration of the price paid and promises made him by Walker. Flowers did not thereafter own an undivided one-half of the property of the firm. His interest was only the right to share in the sui'plus remaining after the debts were paid and the partnership affairs adjusted between him and Walker. To the extent that his rights as a partner reached, Walker stood to the mortgage in the attitude of a purchaser, and to that extent the mortgage lien was of no force. It could only be enforced against the share that might be set aside to Flowers after the partnership affairs should be settled. When the partnership of Flowers & Walker was dissolved, and the new partnership of Flowers, Chapman, Yonley & Ringo was formed, the same rights and relations existed as in the first sale and partnership. The mortgage was not paramount therefore to the interest acquired by the successive partners who entered the firms.

After these transactions the mortgage was recorded, and if the defective acknowledgment was cured by the healing act of April 1, 1885, the instrument had no greater effect than a mortgage executed and acknowledged by Flowers, and filed for record as of that date. But he was then a member of the firm of Flowers, Chapman, Yonley & Ringo, and the debt he attempted to secure was not a liability of that co-partnership. All that the mortgagees can claim, under the circumstances, is that the mortgage binds whatever interest the mortgagor may have in the property assigned by the mortgage after a settlement of the partnership affairs. Nichol v. Stewart, 36 Ark., 612; 1 Jones on Mort., secs. 119, 120; Norwalk Nat. Bank v. Sawyer, 38 Ohio St., 339; Tarbell v. West, 86 N. Y., 280.

In this case it turns out that the mortgaging partner had no interest in the assets upon a settlement of the firm business, and there is therefore nothing for the mortgage to bind.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Ark. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ringo-v-wing-ark-1887.