Trieber v. Andrews

31 Ark. 163
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 31 Ark. 163 (Trieber v. Andrews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trieber v. Andrews, 31 Ark. 163 (Ark. 1876).

Opinion

English, Ch. J.:

On the 7th June, 1875, David Trieber sued E. R. Knight before a justice of the peace of Phillips County, and caused an attachment to be issued, which was levied by the constable on a boat load of staves lying at Helena. On the 18th of June, judgment was rendered against Knight, and an order made for the sale of the property attached. J. G. Andrews interpleaded for and bonded the property. There was a trial upon the interplea before the justice, and judgment that the property belonged to Knight, and was subject to the attachment, and Andrews appealed, to the Circuit Court.

In the Circuit Court the cause was tried before the court, finding and judgment for Andrews, motion for new trial overruled, bill of exceptions, and appeal by Trieber to this court.

On the trial appellee, Andrews, introduced in evidence the following instrument:

“ In consideration of the sum of $3,000 advanced to me by J. G. Andrews as charges on the following lots of staves, viz: About fifty thousand staves on the Little Kock Eailroad, and thirty-five thousand on the Languille Eiver, made by Carr and Shanler & McKenzie; about thirty thousand on Mattox Bay; about ten thousand on the Mississippi Eiver at Old Town; and seventy-five thousand on the A. C. E. E., including all staves on or near the above mentioned bay, rivers and railroads owned or controlled by me, I have this day conveyed and sold to the said J. G. Andrews all the above mentioned staves, being the same as described in an agreement made between N. D. Smith and myself on the 16th day of April, 1875.
[Signed] . E. E. Knight,
“ By A. D. Smith, Agent.”

The testimony of H. E. Andrews, brother of appellee, conduced to prove that this bill of sale was executed by Smith, the agent of Knight, about the 13th of May, 1875, when Knight was in New Orleans, and ratified by him on his return, about a week or ten days after the bill of sale was made.

It appears from the testimony of this witness and others, that after the execution of this bill of sale, appellee procured the superintendent of the Arkansas Central Eailroayl to bring to Helena, from along the line of the road, about 102,000 of the staves, and loaded them into two barges, lying at Helena, which he purchased of Hornor, agent of a gas company, about the 20th of May, 1875. It was one of these barges, containing about 50,000 of the staves, that appellant caused to be attached as the property of Knight, on the 7th of June, 1875. After appellee bonded the staves attached, he had the two barges taken to New Orleans, and sold the staves there.

One of the grounds of the motion for a new trial is, that the court found contrary to the evidence.

It is sufficient to say of this, without setting out the testimony of all the witnesses in detail, that there was some evidence to sustain the finding of the court; and it was the province of the court, sitting as a jury, to determine upon the weight of the evidence, and its conclusion is not the subject of review here, as repeatedly held by this court.

The appellant asked the court to make seven declarations of law, which were refused; and, at the instance of the appellee, the court made two declarations of law.

The declarations moved for appellant were drafted, in form as if to be given by the court to a jury. The first is: “ If you 'believe from the evidence [that KnightJ had the right to redeem the staves by paying Andrews the $3,000 advanced to him, then this instrument is not a bill of sale, but a mortgage, and not having complied with tbe laws of this state by having it acknowledged and recorded, it is void, and you will find for plaintiff.”

.The second declaration moved for appellee, relates also to the bih of sale read in evidence and copied above, and follows:

“ Second — Where a bill of sale is absolute on its face, it is incumbent on the party resisting, and claiming that it is a mortgage, to prove that it was intended as a mortgage by clear and •decisive testimony.”

Passing over the question, whether a bill of sale, appearing on its face to be absolute, can be shown by parol evidence, in a court ■of law, to be a mortgage (Hilliard on Mortgages, Ch. 3), the ■court, no doubt, refused the first declaration of law asked for appellant, because it was not proven that the instrument in question vras intended by the parties to be a mortgage.

The declaration made by the court at the instance of the appellee, on the same subject, is in accordance with the decision-of this court in Williams v. Cheatham, 19 Ark., 278.

Second declaration of law moved for appellant: “ If you find that Knight, being largely indebted, transferred or sold the staves to Andrews for a price much less than the value of the staves, it is a strong badge of fraud; and if the defendant fails to prove that he bought them bona fide, then you will find for the plaintiff.”

Just how milch Knight was indebted at the time he made the bill of sale to Andrews, or what property he owned other than the staves, does not appear from the evidence introduced on the trial. It appears that he owed appellant $220 on an accepted draft, which was the foundation of the attachment suit; that ho owed J. B. Ross $300, and that he was indebted to Pillow Bros., but in what sum is not shown. No witness swore that he was insolvent, or in failing circumstances, -when he sold the staves to appellee.

Nor did any witness prove what was the value of the stav«-s at the places where they were when the bill of sale was made.

H E. Andrew's, the only witness who testified as to the value of the staves, states that appellee got only the 102,000 that wm-v brought to Helena, and put into the two barges, and taken U.New Orleans and sold there; and that he sold them at an average of about $110 per thousand.

According to the testimony of this witness, the whole of the staves were sold for about $11,220.

The same witness states that, besides the $3,000 which Andrews agreed to pay on the staves at the time he took the bill of sais, he was to pay all charges, such as freight, etc., and that he advanced $9,000 in' all, besides the towing, which he usually got at $32 per 1,000 — meaning, as we infer, the towing of the barges from Plelena to New Orleans. At this rate the towing amounted on the 102,000 staves to $3,264, which, added to the $9,000, makes $12,264. The witness states that appellant paid out upon the staves between. $12,000 and $13,000, and that most of the money was paid through him. So, according to the testimony of this witness, appellee lost money on the staves.

Had appellant proven that Knight was insolvent, or in failing circumstances, when he made the bill of sale; that the staves were sold much below their value, where, or as situated at the time of the sale, these facts might have indicated a design on his part to defraud his creditors in making the sale; but appellant, to make out his case, should have gone further, and shown the participation of appellee in the fraudulent purpose of Knight. Hempstead v. Johnson, 18 Ark., 124; Christian v. Greenwood, 23 Ark., 264.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ark. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trieber-v-andrews-ark-1876.