Spalding v. Brown

59 P. 185, 36 Or. 160, 1899 Ore. LEXIS 74
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 59 P. 185 (Spalding v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spalding v. Brown, 59 P. 185, 36 Or. 160, 1899 Ore. LEXIS 74 (Or. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Wolverton

delivered the opinion.

The complaint in this case is in the nature of a bill of discovery, and proceeds upon the theory that the defendant Brown mortgaged to the defendant Selling a lot of bicycles, two hundred and eighty-five in number; that Selling has disposed of more than sufficient thereof to reimburse him for the money loaned ; and plaintiff’s purpose is to require Selling to account to it (a creditor of Brown) for whatever money or property remains after the satisfaction of his alleged mortgage. Paragraph 20 comprises all the allegations of fraud or intent on the part of Brown and Selling to subvert the rights of the creditors of Brown, and is as follows: “That, notwithstanding the fact that said bicycles were so pledged to said Selling by said Brown as security for money borrowed by the latter from the former, and were delivered and received as such pledge, and not otherwise, and although said Selling so at one time claimed and asserted the fact to be, and pretended and claimed that the amount of money so loaned was eight thousand dollars ($8,000), as aforesaid, which, as plaintiff believes, and therefore al[162]*162leges the fact to be, is greatly in excess of the amount actually loaned by him to said Brown as aforesaid, yet now said Selling, in fraud of the rights and interests of this plaintiff, as well as the other creditors of said Brown, falsely and fraudulently gives forth, asserts, and pretends that he purchased said bicycles from said Brown, and became, was, and is the absolute owner thereof.” The answer of the defendant Selling sets up that on or about April 3, 1896, he purchased the bicycles in question of Brown, in good faith, for the consideration of $8,000, without notice or knowledge of any attempt on the part of Browm to delay, hinder, or defraud the plaintiff or .any one.

The facts out of which the controversy arose are substantially as follows : Prior to April 3,1896, plaintiff sold to the defendant Brown a number of bicycles, whereby he became indebted to it in the sum of $6,406.82, and on April 14, 1896, began an action against him in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Multnomah County, to recover said sum, and caused a writ of attachment to be issued and served upon the defendant Selling, for the purpose of attaching any property he might have belonging to Brown. Selling answered that he had no such property in his hands. No further proceedings were had' in the action under the garnishment, but on April 25,' 1896, the plaintiff obtained judgment against Brown in the amount prayed for. Brown was further indebted to the Ariel Cycle Manufacturing Company,in the sum of about $13,500, which also arose from the purchase of bicycles, giving his acceptances in each instance for the price thereof. Being thus involved, Brown attempted, through D. S. Stearns, a broker, to negotiate a loan from Selling for $8,000, and tendered as security therefor the bicycles in question, together with some stock in a real estate association; but Selling refused to treat with Brown [163]*163upon that basis. The negotiations, however, resulted in an arrangement whereby Brown executed and delivered to Selling an instrument purporting to be an ordinary bill of sale of the bicycles, and reciting a consideration of $8,000, which bears date April 3, 1896. Immediately or within half an hour thereafter, Selling executed and delivered to Brown an instrument of writing, of which the following is a copy : “Whereas, Sherman D. Brown has this day sold and delivered to me 155 Crown bicycles, 72 Ariel bicycles, and 58 Spalding bicycles, receipt of which I hereby acknowledge; and, whereas, I have agreed to sell said bicycles to, the said Sherman D. Brown, and to him only, for a period of sixty days from the date hereof. Now, therefore, in consideration of one dollar to me in hand paid, and receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, I do hereby covenant to and with the said Sherman D. Brown that for a period of sixty days from the date hereof I will sell said bicycles only to said Sherman D. Brown, or upon his order in writing, and that I will sell to the said Sherman D. Brown at any time within sixty days from the date hereof all or any part of said bicycles for the sum of $35 each ; this agreement to be construed only as an option granted to the said Sherman D. Brown, for a valuable consideration, to purchase said bicycles, or any part thereof, at the price above named, at any time within the period above limited ; and, at the expiration of said sixty days, should such option not be exercised within such time, said option shall expire aad be thereafter inoperative and void as to so many of such bicycles as shall not have been sold by me pursuant to the terms of this agreement within the period above limited.” The bicycles were actually delivered to Selling, either on the third or the morning of the fourth of April, for which on the latter day he paid Brown the sum of $8,000, by check on the First National Bank of Portland. [164]*164On May 6,1896, Brown surrendered to Selling, by written indorsement, the instrument above set out, and in consideration thereof Selling paid him $1,000.

Thereafter, Selling proceeded to sell the bicycles at retail upon his own account, and has sold all but five of them, and realized therefrom the gross sum of $13,192.40. In accomplishing this result, however, he devoted his own time for a period of five months, and incurred considerable expense in disposing of the same. Selling, Minor, and Stearns, the only persons except Brown having personal knowledge of the transaction, all testified that the purpose of the bill of sale was to evidence an absolute sale and transfer of the property by Brown to Selling, that a loan was not in contemplation, and that Selling absolutely refused to treat with Brown therefor ; and to this view of the transaction there is no countervailing testimony. There is testimony in the record that subsequent to the time of the completion of the transaction touching the transfer of the bicycles to Selling, and before he took the surrender of the alleged option, he agreed with the Spalding and Ariel people, through their agents and attorneys, that he would transfer to them all the interest he had acquired and then held and possessed in the property, upon the condition that they would refund to him the $8,000 he had paid to Brown, with interest, expenses, and a reasonable sum for his trouble in attending to the matter. Mr. Selling admits that such a proposition was made to him, and that he had the matter under consideration, but states, in substance, that the negotiations never proceeded so far as to 'culminate in an agreement to that effect upon his part. He stated at the time that he had a bill of sale of the wheels, but did not disclose the fact that he had given Brown the option referred to. It was revealed in the course of the negotiations, however, that he let Brown have some twenty or more of [165]*165the bicycles to sell on commission, and that he was to permit him to take said bicycles, in lots of twenty, from time to time, as he might be able to dispose of the same, upon like conditions. There is also testimony tending to show that some four weeks later, and after Selling secured the surrender of the option and had begun to advertise the wheels for sale, he again agreed to the transfer of the property to the agents of plaintiff and the Ariel Company upon the conditions previously stated, but upon a cash basis; that, in pursuance thereof, plaintiff’s agent and attorney telegraphed for authority, and received instructions to “purchase Selling’s interest for joint account, and draw proportionately.

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Bluebook (online)
59 P. 185, 36 Or. 160, 1899 Ore. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spalding-v-brown-or-1899.