Smith-M'Cord Dry Goods Co. v. Jno. B. Farwell Co.

50 P. 149, 6 Okla. 318
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 30, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 50 P. 149 (Smith-M'Cord Dry Goods Co. v. Jno. B. Farwell Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith-M'Cord Dry Goods Co. v. Jno. B. Farwell Co., 50 P. 149, 6 Okla. 318 (Okla. 1897).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Tarsney, J.:

This action involves a controversy between twenty-five mercantile corporations and co-partnerships over the distribution of the proceeds of a stock of goods, each and all of said corporations and co-partnerships being mortgagees named in a series of nine chattel mortgages on said stock of goods.

On November 14, 1894, John Jacobs, one of the plaintiffs in' error, was engaged in the business of a retail merchant, dealing in dry goods, boots and shoes, clothing, and general merchandise at the city of Guthrie. On that day he was indebted to the other parties herein in a sum in the aggregate exceeding $20,009, of which said sum there was then due and owing to the defendant in error, John B. Farwell & Co., the sum of $1,500, and to the cross-petitioners, H. T. Simon-Gregory Dry Goods Co., $1,184; M. Rosentreter & Co., $3,883.30; I. Russack & Sons, $450; the Rosentreter Jewelry Co., $195; Kemper, Hundley & McDonald Dry Goods Co., $2,324.55; and *320 Stern, Lauer & Shohl Co., $1,533; that on said day he made and executed a conveyance in the ordinary form of a chattel mortgage on all said stock of goods, furniture and fixtures, to the said plaintiff in error, and to each of said cross-petitoners, they each being named therein as mortgagees, and to secure to each of them the said indebtedness due to each of said mortgagees respectively. All of said indebtedness was by the terms of said mortgage extended and made payable on the 15th day of February, 1895. The mortgage, in express terms, conveyed said property as security for the payment of such indebtedness, and that, if said indebtedness and the interest thereon was paid, as specified, the transfer of the property should be void; provided for the immediate delivery of the possession of the property mortgaged to J ohn D. DeBois, as agent for said mortgagees, with power to said agent to sell said merchandise for cash in the usual course of trade; said agent to keep an accurate account of all such sales and the proceeds thereof to be applied, less actual and necessary expenses, to the payment of said indebtedness; provided that upon default in the payment of said indebtedness when due, or in case of attachments being levied or judgments rendered, said agent might declare the whole of said indebtedness due without notice and. forthwith, sell said property in manner provided by the laws of the Territory of Oklahoma, for the sale of mortgaged property without suit; and that after satisfying the costs and expenses and the indebtedness and interest therein secured out of the proceeds of ■'"he sale of said property, said agent should return the surplus, if any, to the party of the first part.

*321 This conveyance was duly filed for record and recorded the same day; and immediately said John D. DeBois, as agent for the mortgagees, took possession of the store, stock and fixtures and commenced selling and disposing of the same in the regular course of such business. Thereafter said Jacobs executed eight other chattel mortgages to secure the indebtedness due from him to-the several plaintiffs in error herein, all of said mortgages being executed and recorded after said mortgage-to Farwell & Co. and others had been executed, recorded and their agent had taken possession of the store and goods. No question of priority of mortgages is-raised in this case, but the plaintiffs in error filed their-cross-petition, praying that the said mortgage to said Farwell, et al., might be declared a conveyance or assignment in trust for all the creditors of said Jacobs, and that the proceeds of the sale of said stock of goods and property might be distributed pro rata to all the creditors of said Jacobs.

The court below found in favor of the validity of said first mortgage and that the mortgagees therein named were entitled to the proceeds of the sale of said property to be distributed pro rata among them in payment of the indebtedness due them respectively, and secured by said mortgage.

Jacobs, at the time of the making of this first mortgage, was insolvent and in failing circumstances; he knew that he could not continue in business, as attachments were being threatened and about to be levied, and all these creditors were threatening to levy attachments, if their respective claims were not secured by chattel mortgage. The stock of goods inventoried $7,594.64, *322 DeBois, the agent, received the sum of $776.14 for the goods sold by him while in his custody, and a receiver appointed by the court sold the balance for $5,100. The indebtedness secured by said first mortgage amounted to $11,644.20. Each and all of the eight subsequent mortgages were made subject to the mortgage given to Farwell & Co., et al.

The principal contention of counsel for plaintiffs in error in this case is based upon the authority and reasoning in Straw v. Jenks, (Sup. Court of Dakota Ter., 41st N. W.) that:

“When an insolvent debtor makes a general distribution of all his property and effects whether to all or only a part of his creditors, thereby abandoning his business or putting himself in such situation that it is impossible for him to continue it, he has made a voluntary assignment in effectunder theassignment law, and this,whether the instrument by which the operation is effected be denominated an assignment or a mortgage. So long as the instrument or instruments employed by the debtor, whatever called, works an absolute transfer, substantially, of all the propertjr and effects of an insolvent to another or others, with a design on his part that it shall do so, and that his connection with the business shall cease, it is an assignment under the statute.”

Since the brief of counsel was filed in this cause, this question was directly before this court and passed upon; and in Smith v. Baker, 49th Pac. 61. we declined to follow Cíe rule in Straw v. Jenks or the doctrine therein announced, and expressly held that where an insolvent debtor makes conveyance of the whole of his property by bill of sale or chattel • mortgage, to one or more of his creditors in good faith, in absolute executed payment of a bona fide, debt, or for the security of a bona fide indebted *323 ness, although in exclusion of other creditors, the transaction is not brought within the range of the statute relating to voluntary assignments; that the statute regulating and permitting voluntary assignments by insolvent debtors for the benefit of creditors, was not intended to and does not effect or qualify the right of such debtors to make preferences among their creditors under sec. 4 of cli. 27, of our Statutes of 1893; that under the laws of this Territory an insolvent debtor has two ways in which he may dispose of his estate: first, under sec. 4, ch. 27, by conveying the same by chattel mortgage, bill of sale or other proper conveyance in payment of or to secure his debts due to one or any number of .Ms creditors, and in these conveyances he may make preferences; and, second, if he desires to distribute his estate equally to all his creditors he may do so under the voluntary assignment law.

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Bluebook (online)
50 P. 149, 6 Okla. 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-mcord-dry-goods-co-v-jno-b-farwell-co-okla-1897.