S. J. Marx Company's Trustee v. Marx

3 S.W.2d 644, 223 Ky. 339, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 332
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 31, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 644 (S. J. Marx Company's Trustee v. Marx) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. J. Marx Company's Trustee v. Marx, 3 S.W.2d 644, 223 Ky. 339, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 332 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Commissioner Sandidge

Reversing.

Prior to January 5,1922, S. J. Marx Company, a corporation, had engaged in the wholesale grocery business in Lexington, Ky. On that date it filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy. Appellant, W. B. Martin, thereafter was elected trustee in bankruptcy and qualified as such. In that capacity he instituted this action in the Payette circuit court to recover as assets of the bankrupt corporation $1,000 paid by it to appellee Guaranty Bank & Trust Company, on December 30,1921; $1,750 paid by it to the' saíne bank on December 31, 1921; and $2,150 paid January 4,1922, upon the theory that the payments were preferential and fraudulent. The bank defended upon the theory that the payments to it were made on debts secured by lien on personal property which had been pledged to it and which the bankrupt sold for it, the proceeds being used to make the questioned payments ; hence, that they were not fraudulent or preferential. The trial below on this feature of the case resulted in a judgment for the bank, and the trustee in bankruptcy has appealed.

. These facts appear: In July, 1921, a carload of sugar in bags arrived in Lexington, Ky., consigned to the S. J. Marx Company. The bill of lading with draft attached was forwarded to one of the Lexington banks. S. J. Marx Company .borrowed from appellee Guaranty Bank & Trust Company the money with which to procure the bill of lading. It then stored, the sugar with the Union "Warehouse Company, a public warehouse, and the *341 ■warehouse receipt was assigned and delivered by- it to the bank as security for the payment of the money so borrowed. In other words, the sugar was pledged to the bank to secure the payment of the note, and unquestionably the bank obtained a lien on it.

It is the universal rule with reference to pledges of personal property as security for debt that possession, either actual or symbolic, of the thing pledged must be delivered by the pledgor to the pledgee, in order to create the lien. Little v. Berry (Ky.) 113 S. W. 902; Petitt & Co. v. First National Bank, 4 Bush (67 Ky.) 334; Ferguson v. Northern Bank of Kentucky, 14 Bush (77 Ky.) 555, 29 Am. Rep. 418. It is the pledgee’s possession of the article pledged that serves to give the world notice of his lien and claim. The rule is also equally as uniformly adhered to that the pledgee must retain possession of the pledged article in order to preserve his lien, and that a voluntary and unconditional surrender of the pledge to the pledgor extinguishes the lien. The principle is thus written in 21 R. C. L. 655:

“As already seen, it is uniformly held that in the case of a pledge only a special title passes to the pledgee, which depends on actual possession, while the general right of property remains in the pledgor; and, in order to hold and preserve his lien, there must be not only a physical delivery, where the chattel can thus be transferred, but continued possession also retained. And in the absence of fraud or a special bailment, a pledge will be deemed to be waived or lost by the voluntary and unconditional surrender of the pledged property by the pledgee to the pledgor.”

See, also, to the same effect, Jones on Pledges, p. 28, sec. 40, and Story on Bailments, p. 267, sec. 299.

There are a number of circumstances under which possession of the pledge may be surrendered by the pledgee to the pledgor without losing the lien which are spoken of as exceptions to these general rules. In a number of cases, whére, by fraudulent means, possession of the pledge has been obtained by the pledgor from the pledgee, it has been written that the lien was not lost. Also numbers of opinions have been written in cases where the pledgee delivers the pledge to the pledgor for a specific purpose and under such circumstances that the pledgor becomes the agent or special bailee of the *342 pledgee in possessing the pledge, holding that the pledgee does not thereby lose his lien. These cases are perhaps not, strictly speaking, exceptions to the general rule which forbids voluntary and unconditional surrender of the pledged property by the pledgee under penalty of losing his lien. Among this last class of cases it has often been written that the pledgee may, without losing his lien, deliver the property over to the pledgor for the express purpose of selling it for the benefit of the pledgee. In these cases the pledgor is the agent or special bailee of the pledgee, and his possession in that capacity is the possession of the pledgee.

Under these principles and the numerous cases declaring them, appellee seeks to uphold the judgment appealed from. Particularly are the cases Dickey v. Pocomoke City National Bank, 89 Md. 280, 43 A. 33; Leahy v. Simpson, 60 Mo. App. 83; Clark v. Iselin, 21 Wall. 360, 22 L. Ed. 568; Samson v. Rouse, 72 Vt. 422, 48 A. 666; Castle v. Hickman, 41 P. 1036; * Hays v. Riddle, 3 N. Y. Super. Ct. 248; Way v. Davidson, 12 Gray (Mass.) 465, 74 Am. Dec. 604 — relied upon by appellee. Fault cannot be found with the principles relied upon, and the cases cited fully sustain them. The difficulty presented by the appeal is in the application of these principles of law to the facts of this case.

As to the $2,150 paid January 4, 1922, the court encounters no difficulty. Unquestionably the judgment of the chancellor as to this item is correct. It appears from the evidence that on that date there remained in the warehouse only 385 bags of the carload of sugar which had been pledged to the bank, and it was withdrawn from the warehouse on the order of the bank and sold by S. J. Marx Company for the benefit of the pledgee, and in conformity with the agreement to that effect when permitted to be withdrawn, the proceeds of this particular sugar were taken immediately after the sale to the bank and paid to it in part satisfaction of the debt which the sugar had been pledged to secure. The correctness of the chancellor’s judgment as to this item is not seriously questioned by brief for appellant, and undoubtedly was correct under the principles above adverted to.

As to the $1,750 paid December 31st, and the $1,000 paid December 30th, this court is constrained to the view that the judgment of the chancellor is erroneous. The *343 sugar was pledged to appellee bank in July, 1920. Tbe record does not indicate the date when any of it was withdrawn except the 385 bags above referred to. S. J. Marx, who was the president and general manager and chief stockholder of the bankrupt corporation, testified that it was withdrawn from time to time after it was pledged in July. In each instance when withdrawals were made, the bank gave a written order which simply directed the warehouse to deliver the number of bags of sugar specified to S. J. Marx Company. As to this S. J. Marx testified :

“Q. You had 385 left in there on December 30th? A. 380 or 385, some place in there.
“Q. When was the other drawn out? A. There had been withdrawals all along. There had been withdrawals from July on.
“Q. On this particular warehouse receipt, can you recall when the balance of the 600 bags was withdrawn? A.

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3 S.W.2d 644, 223 Ky. 339, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-j-marx-companys-trustee-v-marx-kyctapphigh-1928.