Smith v. McLean

22 F. Cas. 591
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedJuly 1, 1801
StatusPublished

This text of 22 F. Cas. 591 (Smith v. McLean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. McLean, 22 F. Cas. 591 (S.D. Miss. 1801).

Opinion

HILL, District Judge.

This is a petition in the nature of a hill in equity, filed by the complainant [J. J. Smith], as assignee in bankruptcy of said George P. McLean, against said McLean and Charles B. Clark, to set aside a sale of a stock of goods and other property alleged to have been made by McLean to Clark, in January, 1873, and to subject the value thereof to the payment of the debts of McLean under the bankrupt law [of 1867 (14 Stat. 517)], the goods and merchandise so sold having been disposed of by Clark or consumed by fire.

The pleadings and proofs upon which the questions for decision arise are voluminous, but need not be stated in detail, as the following facts, appearing therefrom, are all that need be stated:

After the close of the war, McLean, being an old merchant without means, and Clark a planter with a surplus cash capital, entered into a copartnership for the purpose of carrying on a commercial establishment at Rocky Springs, in this state, in which McLean was to give the business his personal attention, and Clark was to advance five thousand dollars as capital stock, and to share profits and divide losses equally. Under this agreement the business was commenced, and conducted in the firm name and style of George P. McLean & Co., until July, 1871, when an agreement for dissolution of copartnership was entered into between them, and McLean gave to Clark his note for thirteen thousand five hundred and ninety-nine dollars and eighty-nine cents, three thousand dollars being for the estimated-profits due to Clark, and the remainder for the cash and cotton advanced to the firm, inclusive of the five thousand dollars, originally advanced as capital stock. In other words, it was a purchase by McLean of Clark of his interest in the business for the amount stated, the notes to secure which were made due and payable one day after date, and dated on the 14th day of August, 1871. That, to secure payment of this amount and to save Clark harmless against the payment of the indebtedness of said firm to their other creditors, then amounting to about ten thousand dollars, McLean executed a mortgage to Clark conveying to him all the stock of merchandise then on hand, or to be thereafter received, also all the notes and accounts then due to him or to-said firm, and all those to be thereafter acquired, also seven mules and one wagon. At the time of the dissolution of the partnership it was agreed between McLean and Clark that the business should be continued under the firm name and style of George P. McLean & Co. Notice of the dissolution was-given in the local newspaper of the county, and posted at public places in the neighborhood, but there is not sufficient proof of notice to those formerly dealing with them, or in the cities where subsequent purchases were made. McLean remained in the possession of the property thus conveyed, and conducted the business as though no change had been made by the dissolution of the firm or conveyance of the property, until the 17th of January, 1873, when, by a private arrangement between McLean and Clark, the entire stock of goods, etc., estimated at twelve thousand one hundred and fifty-five dollars and fifty-six cents, was sold and transferred to Clark, who took possession of them as his own under said agreement, and continued to make sales of the same until some time thereafter, when the store-house with its contents was consumed by fire. At the time this transfer was made McLean reserved the debts due either the old firm or himself under the old firm name. The goods, etc., sold by McLean to Clark consisted principally of a stock of merchandise purchased by McLean, in the firm name, of merchants in New Orleans and St. Louis, in the fall of 1872. At the time of this sale McLean was unable to pay his mercantile debts as they fell due in the usual course of business; indeed, had no money to pay either Clark, or his mercantile creditors, although the notes and accounts held by him amounted to some sixteen thousand dollars, as they are proved to have been of but little value, being upon persons destitute of means, and consisted of the accruing of bad debts from the commencement of the business. That McLean was then hopelessly insolvent, both legally and commercially, there can be no doubt.

Under this state of facts two questions are presented: First. Was the mortgage made upon the 14th of August, 1871, a valid conveyance as against the creditors of McLean? Second. If not, was the sale and transfer made on the 17th of January, 1873, a valid sale as against the creditors of McLean under the provisions of the bankrupt law?

It is insisted for complainant, representing the creditors, that both the mortgage and sale were void as against McLean’s creditors, and by Clark that both were valid; that the mortgage was valid and embraced the entire property sold and transferred, and that the sale was in fact but a foreclosure of the mortgage, made by private arrangement, instead of by judicial proceedings. The first question to be considered is, was the mortgage void upon its face by means of its conditions? If not, was [593]*593it void in fact, by reason of the fraudulent intent of the parties? in other words, was it void in law or in fact? The stipulations and conditions contained in the mortgage are contradictory; it professes to be made to secure the prompt payment of the notes upon their maturity, which occurred upon the next day, or allowing days of grace, upon the fourth day thereafter. There is no power of sale given in the mortgage, but it is a conveyance, to become void upon prompt payment of the notes; and indemnity against liability upon the partnership debts, or failure of payment upon the maturity of the notes, authorized a foreclosure of the mortgage; or if paid, a failure to indemnify him against liability upon the partnership debts, authorized the same thing. Yet the conveyance embraced subsequent merchandise to be brought into the business, and subsequent credits to be acquired, evidently contemplating a continuance of the business for an indefinite period of time; as further evidence of this intention, it was agreed that McLean should carry on the business, in the same firm name, but for his own benefit; Clark permitted the business to be so carried on for about eighteen months, and until McLean’s inability to continue his business, when he made the purchase. The intention of the parties as shown upon the face of the mortgage evidently was that McLean was to buy and sell and to collect the debts due and to have the entire control of the property and credits embraced in the mortgage, then in hands or afterwards to be acquired, until Clark should see proper to demand payment of his demands, the income and benefits in the meantime to be received by McLean. There is no stipulation in the mortgage that the collections or profits shall be applied to the payment of either the creditors of the old firm, or of that due to Clark, and nothing prohibiting McLean from, in the meantime, making any disposition of the funds received either from sales or collections as he might desire. Whilst it is true that, aside from the provisions of the bankrupt act. a debtor may prefer one creditor to another, yet a conveyance for that purpose by which a benefit is reserved by the vendor to himself is void as against creditors. This has been the well settled rult from Twyne’s Case down to the present time Any condition in the conveyance inconsistent with the appropriation of the thing conveyed to the payment of the debt intended to be secured.

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Bluebook (online)
22 F. Cas. 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-mclean-mssd-1801.