Sweetzer v. Higby

29 N.W. 506, 63 Mich. 13, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 627
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 29 N.W. 506 (Sweetzer v. Higby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sweetzer v. Higby, 29 N.W. 506, 63 Mich. 13, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 627 (Mich. 1886).

Opinion

Morse, J.

The complainants are copartners, doing business in the city of New York under the name and ■style of Sweetzer, Pembrook & Co.

They filed a bill of complaint in this cause, May 3, 1883, in behalf of themselves and other creditors of the firm of -Camp, Morrill & Camp, to set aside a chattel mortgage •executed by the defendants Theodore J. Camp and Marshall J. Morrill, and the firm 'of Camp, Morrill & Camp, to the defendant Charles W. Higby, as a fraudulent preference under How. Stat. chap. 303, regulating voluntary assignments for the benefit of creditors, and praying for an equal distribution of the assets of the insolvents among all their 'creditors, and for general relief.

The undisputed facts shown by the proofs are as follows:

Eor some years previous to the filing of this bill the firm of Camp, Morrill & Camp were engaged in the business of selling dry goods and carpets at the city of Jackson. The firm was originally composed of Theodore J. Camp, [16]*16Marshall J. Morrill, and Henry W. Camp. Henry W. Camp died in 1876, but thereafter there was no chango in the firm name. After his death his interest in the firm was agreed upon at $7,000, which his wife, the defendant Ella Camp,' loaned to the firm, they paying her interest upon the same after January 1, 1877.

March 17, 1888, the defendants Theodore J. Camp and Marshall J. Morrill made three promissory notes, in the name of the firm of Camp, Morrill & Camp, to defendant Charles-W. Higby, payable to his order one day after date, to secure the following claims against said firm: $16,772.39 to¥m. D. Thompson; $1,231 to Sidney S. Heywood; $1,563.28 to-Mrs.- H. K. Haight; and $7,000 to Ella Camp. The amounts-owing to Heywood and Mrs. Haight were put in one note. These notes Higby indorsed, and waived demand and notice of non-payment upon the back of each.

¥m. D. Thompson had been the banker of the firm, and his claim against them was represented by various promissory notes, none of which were due at the time of' making the notes to Higby. They represented money loaned at various times to the firm to pay collections and other demands against them. The amount and genuineness of' the debt to Thompson is conceded.

Heywood is a brother-in-law of Theodore J. Camp, and his debt is not disputed. Mrs. H. K. Haight is an aunt of Theodore J. Camp, and he has been her agent in money matters at Jackson. Ella Camp is a sister of Higby, who-testifies that he entered into the transaction for the purpose-of securing her claim against the firm. Mrs. Haight and Mrs. Camp were not present, and had no knowledge of the-transaction, at the time the notes and mortgage were executed.

On the same day the notes to Higby were made, a chattel' mortgage, covering all the goods and property of the firm of Camp, Morrill & Camp in their store, and all property,. [17]*17goods, and merchandise which might thereafter be added to the stock, was executed and signed by Theodore J. Camp and Marshall J. Morrill, the firm name also being added, and delivered to Higby, for the sum of $26,566.67, as collateral security for the payment of 'said notes.

On March 20, 1883, Camp and Morrill executed a general assignment of all their property for the benefit of their creditors, under the statute, to Sidney S. Heywood, who accepted the trust, gave the requisite bond, took possession of the property, and entered upon his duties as assignee.

March 17, 1883, the firm also executed and delivered a mortgage of $3,000 to Mary J. Morrill, wife of Marshall J. Morrill, to secure her for an indebtedness of the firm to her, which mortgage was intended to be and has been treated as contemporaneous with the one to Higby. This mortgage is not involved here, but is the subject of another suit.

The evidence satisfactorily shows that all the debts secured by the Highy mortgage and notes were Iona fide, and that none of the parties thus secured were aware of the intent of Camp and Morrill to make an assignment.

It is claimed that the interest of Henry W. Camp, the husband of the defendant Ella Camp, had never been drawn out of the firm of Camp, Morrill & Camp, and at the time the mortgage was given was a part of the assets of tbe firm and liable to the partnership debts.

We do not think so. It appears positively from the evidence of Theodore J. Camp and others, with nothing to dispute it, that an arrangement was made by which she was to be paid $7,000 for such interest, and that thereafter she neither shared in the profits and losses nor in the business of the firm, but received interest upon said sum, and it was treated as a loan to the firm.

Nor do we find, as claimed by counsel for complainants,. that the debts to Mrs. Haight and Heywood were the [18]*18personal obligations of Theodore J. Camp. On the contrary it plainly appears that they were firm debts.

It is insisted by the counsel for defendants that under the decisions of this Court in Root v. Potter, 59 Mich. 498, and later cases,1 the complainants have no right to maintain a bill of this kind; that, under the assignment law, the assignee, and not the creditors, should be the party complaining of frauds against the assignment.

As in Root v. Potter, the bill in this case is not filed to remove the assignee or disturb the assignment, and no receiver is asked for to execute the trust because of any failure or fraud of the assignee.

The assignee, however, in this case, is one of the parties to be benefited by the adjudication that the mortgage in question is a valid one. It is insisted by the counsel for complainants that this fact so distinguishes the present case from Root v. Potter that the complainants were justified in filing their bill, as it could not legitimately be expected that the assignee would diligently or faithfully oppose his own interest in an investigation into the good faith or legality of the transaction out of which came this mortgage.

It is also most strenuously argued that the decision in the case of Root v. Potter is not sound, and rests upon a' misapprehension of the statute governing assignments.

We are referred to the sixth section (How. Stat. § 8744) of the assignment act, which reads as follows:

“In case there shall be any fraud in the matter of said assignment, or in the execution of said trust, or if the assignee shall fail to comply with any of the provisions of this act, or fail or neglect to promptly and faithfully execute said trust, any person interested therein may file his bill in the circuit court in chancery of the proper county for the enforcement of said trust.”

[19]*19And it is claimed that the words “any fraud in the matter of said assignment” are broad enough, and were intended, to include a preference by way of mortgage, as in this case, though executed before the assignment, if such execution was in contemplation of a future assignment.

We see no reason to change the ruling in Root v. Potter, since confirmed in the case of Angell v. Pickard, 61 Mich. 564. See, also, Scott v. Chambers, 62 Mich. 532.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 N.W. 506, 63 Mich. 13, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweetzer-v-higby-mich-1886.