Rothschild v. Hasbrouck

72 F. 813, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2593
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 10, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 72 F. 813 (Rothschild v. Hasbrouck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rothschild v. Hasbrouck, 72 F. 813, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2593 (circtsdia 1896).

Opinion

WOOL-BOX, District Judge.

The bill alleges that plaintiffs, who compose the firm of E. Rothschild & Bros., are citizens of the state of Illinois, and were at the dates hereinafter named creditors of defendant J. J. Hasbrouck in the sum of $3,487.70, for which they have recovered in this court, and now own, a valid and subsisting judgment against said Hasbrouck; that upon October 9, 1893, defendant J. J. Hasbrouck (at that date a citizen of the state of Iowa, and engaged in business as a clothing merchant at Oorydon, Iowa) executed and delivered a deed of assignment for the benefit of Ms creditors to defendant M. O. Barnes, who is a citizen of said state of Iowa, which deed purported to convey to said assignee Ms entire property, except such as was exempt from execution under the laws of said state; that, prior to the said execution and delivery of said assignment deed, said Hasbrouck executed and delivered three several chattel mortgages to certain of Ms creditors, which mortgages were given upon Ms said stock of clothing, etc., then at Ms place of business at Oorydon; that the execution of said assignment and of said chattel mortgages were parts [814]*814of the same transaction; that at the time of said chattel mortgages said Hasbrouck was insolvent, and had in mind and intended to execute said deed of assignment, and said chattel mortgages were so executed by said Hasbrouck, and were accepted by the several mortgagees thereof, with the intent thereby to give to said mortgagees preferences over the other creditors of said insolvent; that said mortgagees, at the time they accepted said mortgages, were aware of the insolvent condition of said Hasbrouck, and of his intention to execute a general assignment for the benefit of his creditors; that said transaction thereby became and was, as to said chattel mortgages and said assignment, fraudulent in law, and said instruments invalid and void under the laws of the state of Iowa. And decree is prayed declaring the same void. Said mortgagees are made parties to the bill, but are not brought in by subpoena, nor have they appeared herein. Pleas in abatement were filed by Assignee Barnes, and, upon hearing, were overruled (65 Fed. 283), whereupon said Barnes filed his answer, admitting the citizenship as claimed; admitting the execution of said chattel mortgages and said deed of assignment by Hasbrouck, but especially denying all allegations as to the said executions being parts of the same transaction; denying that at the time of the execution of said mortgages said Hasbrouck intended to execute said deed of assignment, or that unlawful preferences .were by him intended, or were in fact given; and alleging the validity of said assignment deed, and that, as said assignee, he was lawfully proceeding, in the proper court of Wayne county, Iowa, and under the orders and direction of said court, to carry out the provisions of said assignment.

The evidence, as is usual in such cases, is conflicting on the decisive points herein involved. It would serve no useful purpose to detail the evidence. The insolvent condition of Hasbrouck .at the date of the execution of said mortgages is fully established. He testifies that he then believed that he could proceed with his business if he could procure certain money as he then hoped. But it is beyond question, under the evidence, that he then recognized the fact that the giving of these mortgages on his stock in trade would probably so destroy his business credit as to' prevent further purchases by him, and would also probably bring down upon him active efforts from his other creditors to secure or collect the debts owing to them. So that the evidence justifies the assertion that he knew the giving of these mortgages would so affect his business as that he must either raise the money to discharge them, or practically suspend business, and that he had no substantial expectation that he could raise the money. That the debts secured by these mortgages were actually outstanding, and bona fide, is not attacked by plaintiffs. One of these debts was being actively pressed, and Hasbrouck had been served with notice of the institution of suit thereon, and for a term of court to commence in a few days thereafter. The evidence is uncontradicted that the parties having the collection of these debts were pressing Has-brouck for their payment or security. The exact dates upon which [815]*815these mortgages and the assignment were executed are not shown with certainty. The mortgages were dated October 6, and the assignment October 9, 1893. Bui; the evidence might sustain the conclusion that in fact the assignment was signed on October 7th, the day following the execution’ of the mortgages, and was delivered to the assignee upon October 9th. Possession of the stock of goods was taken by the assignee on the latter date. If the statements of Hasbrouck — made two or three days after the assignee had taken possession, to representatives of other creditors — were to control, a finding that the mortgages were given in contemplation of the assignment, and for the purpose of giving unlawful preferences to these mortgagees, would be justified. But Has-brouck denies such was his intention, and stoutly denies that he had in mind at the time the mortgages were given, or contemplated, the giving of (he assignment. The persons in charge of the collection of these debts, to secure which the mortgages were given, each testify that at the time these mortgages were given nothing-had been said by them to Hasbrouck, and he had said nothing to them, with reference to the making of an assignment by him. The testimony of these persons having these debts in charge is unshaken that these mortgages were not taken or accepted by them with reference to any expected or intended assignment by Has-brouck, but that they were taken by them in the active attempt to secure the debts whose collection they recognized might at any time be jeopardized by proceedings by other creditors for the collection of other debts which Hasbrouck then had outstanding. The Iowa statute in force in October, 1893, relating to the matters herein involved, is section 2115 of Code of 1873:

No general assignment of property by an insolvent, or in contemplation of insolvency, for the benefit of creditors shall be valid, unless it be made for the benefit of all his creditors in proportion to the amount of their respective claims.

In Lumber Co. v. Ott, 142 U. S. 627, 12 Sup. Ct. 318, it is said:

The rights of the parties are determined by the local statute, and the construe! ion placed thereon by the supreme court of the state is decisive. The question of the construction and effect of a statute of a state regulating assignments for the benefit of creditors is a question upon which the decisions of the highest court of the state, establishing a rule of property, are of con-irolling authority in the courts of the United States.

The Iowa statute above copied received extended consideration by the supreme court of the United States in the case just cited. The general propositions underlying this statute, as expounded by the supreme court of Iowa, up to the date of that decision, are clearly and comprehensively stated by Justice Brewer, and applied to the case then under consideration. These propositions are thus stated in the opinion delivered by Justice Brewer (I omit the citations of Iowa cases which are given as supporting these propositions) :

Xfirst, this section does not prevent partial assignments witli preferences, or sales or mortgages of auy or all of the party’s property in payment of, or security of, indebtedness.

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Related

South Branch Lumber Co. v. Ott
142 U.S. 622 (Supreme Court, 1892)
Rock Island Plow Co. v. Breese & Breese
49 N.W. 1026 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1891)
Clement v. Johnson
52 N.W. 502 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1892)
Rothschild v. Hasbrouck
65 F. 283 (U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
72 F. 813, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rothschild-v-hasbrouck-circtsdia-1896.