Sedam v. Cincinnati & Whitewater Canal Co.

2 Disney (Ohio) 309
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedJune 15, 1858
DocketNo. 4,194
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Disney (Ohio) 309 (Sedam v. Cincinnati & Whitewater Canal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sedam v. Cincinnati & Whitewater Canal Co., 2 Disney (Ohio) 309 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1858).

Opinion

Storer, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

We are led directly to the question, who was the real owner of the deposit at the date referred to; and upon its decision in either aspect, as claimed by the parties, the case must depend.

We have been referred to the evidence of the mode in which the canal company had, for several years before the contract with Dare, transacted its business; and asked to regard it as the exposition of their subsequent dealings; The testimony shows the multiplied embarrassments of the company, and the utter inability of her officers, with all the earnings of the canal, to keep the work in repair. Indeed, had it not been for a loan made to the company by the city of Cincinnati, and the sums occasionally advanced by individuals to aid in keeping up the work, it is very evident it must have been abandoned. There were numerous debts, long past due, unprovided for; and creditors were pressing them for collection. The company of course had lost all credit, and could not procure materials for repairing the work, nor laborers to execute it, except by prompt payment in cash; while the stone or the timber provided for the repairs were not only exposed to execution, but had, in more than one instance, been levied on. Hence it seems to have been deemed necessary to keep the revenue of the canal on deposit in the name of the directors and other officers.

Whatever might have been the legal position of the par[313]*313ties in such a state of things, we do not perceive how it can affect the question before us. It was no part of the arrangement between the company and Dare that he should continue any prior trust by a change merely of the trustees.

"We must, therefore, inquire what were the terms of the contract of March, 1852. Were its object and purpose fair and just to the general creditors of the company ? Had the company the right, by their charter, to make such a contract ?

The contract is a direct transfer by way of mortgage of all the funds belonging to the company at its date, as well as of the current revenue of the canal, until a sufficient sum should be realized to discharge the expense of reconstructing the aqueduct. It was substantially an equitable assignment of the monies then on deposit in the hands of its agents, as well as the income of the work from tolls or any other source of revenue. On well established principles, Dare would have been protected in his lien; assuming now that his contract was made in good faith.

The subject of equitable assignment is discussed very clearly in the 2nd volume of Spence’s Eq. Jur., eh. 9; the form of the transfer is altogether immaterial, the purpose being once ascertained; and the equity of the assignee being established, the chancellor works out the right, regardless of any technical or merely formal difficulties.

It is said, however, that it was a mere arrangement between Hare and the company to conceal the ownership of its funds, and can not, therefore, be received with any favor by the court.

We find no proof to our apprehension that will authorize such an assumption, except the opinions of some of the witnesses. These are not very clearly expressed, but are intended evidently to create the impression that such was the object, as they understood it from the conduct of the parties; while on the other hand, an equal, nay, a greater number of witnesses, having equal opportunities to know all the facts and in every way of all equal credit, deny the imputation.

[314]*314But it can not be concealed that it was the intention of the company to secure its funds so that they might be specifically applied to the improvement of the canal; and it is equally true that the object also was, by the contract with Bare, to prevent the seizure of the funds by the several creditors, among whom the plaintiff’ was specially named. If we grant all this, does it present such a case as is claimed by the counsel who have so ably and thoroughly argued the proposition ?

It must be admitted that it was the duty of the directors of the canal company to appropriate its whole revenue to the repairs, and other necessary expenditures of the work. They could not legally make any dividend, or withdraw any portion of their income, to discharge their other liabilities, until they had provided for the payment of those outlays, which were essential to the existence of the canal itself as a public highway; and it would seem that all sums appropriated for such a purpose, might well be regarded as incident to the work itself, and, though not actually incorporated with it, yet for all practical purposes, it was the representative of the improvement to be made. Indeed, a court of equity would, doubtless, compel the directors thus to perform their duty by a substantial execution of the trust they assumed when they accepted their office.

Hence, when the company contracted with Bare, to do what they were clearly bound to do themselves, it was but the transfer to him of the obligation imposed upon them, and as he was necessarily to be responsible for the work which he contracted to do, the means for his indemnity ought justly to follow his contract.

By such a process, although a creditor might be defeated, it can not be said he has been fraudulently defeated. He has, to be sure, lost what he may suppose is one of the legal chances to secure his debt; for he has found in the race of diligence, that his debtors have appropriated to another purpose what he believed he could legally charge with the payment of his own debt; but he is placed in no worse situa[315]*315tion than the creditor is who finds his debtor has preferred another at his expense. Such a predicament is not a novel one; many a creditor has been compelled to occupy it, and that, too, under circumstances of apparent, if not real, hardship; yet it is not to be doubted, but the law sustains the preference when there is no fraud to affect its validity.

In Bancroft & Cafee v. Blizzard, 13 Ohio, 40, it was held, “ if a debtor appropriates his property consistent with the principles of equity and justice, the validity of the transaction should not be impaired, although his intentions are fraudulent; the act is right though the motive may be wrong.”

The same principle is very fully affirmed in the late case of Hoffman v. Mackall, 5 Ohio St. 129.

These decisions are in conformity with the judgment of Lord Abinger, in Riches v. Evans, 9 C. & P. 640, who held, “ the law does not prevent a man from conveying his goods away to avoid a judgment; and the intent to avoid an execution does not make the deed of sale void.” And the same ruling was afterward made by Lord Denman, in Wood v. Dixie, 7 Adolph. & Elllis, N. S. 896.

"We suppose the law is settled, as between debtor and creditor, and the question arises whether there was any difference in the relative condition of the parties before us. It is true, Dare was not the creditor of the company, at the time the appropriation of the fund was made, but the obligation of the company to make the necessary repairs to keep up the canal, was, we think, equally within the spirit and intent of the principle. The public convenience demanded that a public highway should be subservient to the purposes for which it was established; and the privilege conferred by law upon the corporation, could be vindicated only by keeping the work in repair.

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2 Disney (Ohio) 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sedam-v-cincinnati-whitewater-canal-co-ohsuperctcinci-1858.