Ross v. Wilson, Peter & Co.

70 Ky. 29, 7 Bush 29, 1869 Ky. LEXIS 252
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 2, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 70 Ky. 29 (Ross v. Wilson, Peter & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross v. Wilson, Peter & Co., 70 Ky. 29, 7 Bush 29, 1869 Ky. LEXIS 252 (Ky. Ct. App. 1869).

Opinion

JUDGE HARDIN

deliyeked the opinion op the count.

On the first day of June, 1867, George W. Seibert purchased of William Ross the contents of a drug-store, at the intersection of Tenth and Green Streets, in the city of Louisville, at the price of three thousand dollars, payable in installments of one hundred dollars each, at consecutive intervals of one month from and after the expiration of sixty days from the date of the contract; and as security for the debt he executed to Ross a deed of mortgage of the property then in the store, and purporting also to embrace such as he might thereafter purchase, under the following description: “All the stock of drugs, paints, medicines, notions, and fancy articles of merchandise, store fixtures and store furniture that are now in and may hereafter be purchased by or for said first party, in the usual course of business, and placed■ in a two-story brick drug-store on the north-east corner of Green and Tenth Streets of the city of Louisville.”

Afterward Seibert, having become the owner of another drug-store in said city, and becoming further indebted to Ross in the sum of $2,249, executed his several notes therefor, and a mortgage to secure them similar to the first in its provisions as to the contents of the last-acquired store and property to be thereafter purchased and placed therein.

June 7, 1869, Ross sued Seibert for a foreclosure of said mortgages, and in March following he recovered a judgment, under which all the property in the two stores was sold and purchased by him.

Seibert having, between the dates of the first and second mortgages, become indebted to Wilson, Peter & Co. in several sums, amounting to about $1,331.38, they instituted this suit in equity against Seibert and Ross on the 22d of January, 1869, alleging that the mortgages were the results of a fraudulent combination between Seibert and Ross to enable the former to avoid paying for goods he might thereafter purchase [33]*33by placing them in the stores, and thus rendering them apparently subject to the mortgage. And on the statements of the petition, and an affidavit setting forth both that Seibert had sold, conveyed, and disposed of his property with the fraudulent intention to cheat, hinder, and delay his creditors, and that he was then about to so sell and dispose of- his property, they sued out an order of attachment, which was levied on the contents of both drug-stores, as security for their debts, on the 23d of January, 1869.

The right of the plaintiffs to recover a personal judgment against Seibert was not controverted; but so much of the petition as attacked the mortgages, or sought to subject the attached property, and the grounds of the attachment, were controverted by both Seibert and Ross.

The chancellor of the court below, in an elaborate opinion accompanying his judgment, held not only that the mortgages were inoperative as to a part of the attached property which was acquired after they were made, but that the entire conveyances were fraudulent and invalid, and were made for the purpose of hindering the creditors of Seibert in the collection of their debts; and, besides rendering a personal judgment against Seibert, the court sustained thfe attachments, and ordered a sale of the property to satisfy the plaintiffs’ debts; and from that judgment Ross and Seibert prosecute this appeal.

The first question presented — and that which seems to have elicited the most thorough investigation and careful consideration of the chancellor — is whether the mortgages to Ross embraced the subsequently acquired property of the mortgagor of the charactér mentioned in the mortgages; and whether the mortgages were a lien on such property, when acquired, as against the creditors of the mortgagor. This question, as affecting the validity of an ordinary mortgage, has not, we believe, been directly presented heretofore for the decision of this court; the cases which have been supposed to involve it' [34]*34(Forman, &c. v. Proctor, &c., 9 B. Mon. 124; and Phillips, &c. v. Winslow, &c., 18 B. Mon. 431) being restricted in their application respectively to property acquired by accession, as the incident or produce of that which belonged to the mortgagor and passed by the mortgage, and to mortgages made in the exercise of powers specially conferred by charter.

Tested by what seems to be the decided weight of authority, in this country and in England, the question may be easily determined when not complicated by either of the exceptional classes of cases we have mentioned, nor confounded with the doctrine of the confusion of property. The general rule is that at law a grant or mortgage of property to be acquired in futuro is void; and if it can be upheld in equity, we apprehend it is only valid as a contract to assign when the property shall be acquired, and not as an assignment of a present interest; and if enforceable in equity at all, it can only be enforced as a right under the contract, and not as a trust attached to the property. And whatever equitable rights Ross may have acquired as against Seibert by the attempt to mortgage property afterward to be acquired, it is obvious that, restricted as are the rights of mortgagors under our statutes of conveyance and registration, Ross derived by the mortgages no available right to the subsequently acquired property as against the creditors of Seibert. These views are sustained and sufficiently illustrated by the following authorities: 2 Hilliard on Mortgages, chap. 43; 1 Parsons on Contracts, p. 570; Story’s Equity Jur., sec. 1040c; Otis v. Sill, 8 Barbour, 102; Jones v. Richardson, 11 Met. (Mass.) 481.

But while we concur in the views of the chancellor to the extent of holding the mortgages inoperative and void as to the after-acquired property, we do not admit the conclusions either that they were fraudulent per se and void in toto, or that from any proof in the cause the attachment should have been sustained. There is no sufficient evidence that the claims of Ross were unjust, [35]*35or that he accepted the mortgages for any other purpose than to secure his debts. If they were fraudulent in any sense, they were not actually but constructively and legally so only; and the doctrine is well settled that in a court of equity a deed not fraudulent in fact, but obtained as a security under inequitable circumstances, or which is constructively fraudulent, may nevertheless be upheld to some extent, although vacated so far as illegal or without consideration. (Short v. Tinsley, &c., 1 Met. Ky. 397; Boyd, &c. v. Dunlap, &c., 1 Johns. Chy. Rep. 478.) Although the attempt to make the mortgages embrace subsequently acquired property, though ineffectual, may have been prejudicial to the rights of creditors as presenting an apparent obstacle to the enforcement of their legal remedies, no sufficient-reason is perceived for permitting that fact alone to invalidate the entire mortgages. Nor is there in this transaction alone such evidence of positive or meditated fraud as should, in our opinion, have sustained either of the grounds of the attachment according to the requirements of section 221 of the Civil Code of Practice.

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Bluebook (online)
70 Ky. 29, 7 Bush 29, 1869 Ky. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-wilson-peter-co-kyctapp-1869.