Van Camp Hardware Iron Co. v. Ellis, Trustee

198 N.E. 75, 209 Ind. 582, 1935 Ind. LEXIS 277
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1935
DocketNo. 26,184.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 198 N.E. 75 (Van Camp Hardware Iron Co. v. Ellis, Trustee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Camp Hardware Iron Co. v. Ellis, Trustee, 198 N.E. 75, 209 Ind. 582, 1935 Ind. LEXIS 277 (Ind. 1935).

Opinion

Treanor, C. J.

This is an appeal perfected within ten days after the rendition of an interlocutory order by the Owen Circuit Court adjudging the appellant to be a receiver and holding appellant accountable as receiver, for goods, wares and merchandise received from appellees Fred C. Bayh and Bernard F. Bayh. The order was made upon the theory that appellant came into possession of such goods, wares and merchandise by virtue of a sale and transfer made contrary to the provisions of the Indiana Bulk Sales Act. 1

The errors assigned upon appeal and relied upon under Points and Authorities of appellant’s brief present the following propositions:

1. That the court erred in overruling appellant’s demurrer to the amended complaint for want of facts.

2. The decision of the court is contrary to law.

3. The decision of the court is not sustained by sufficient evidence.

The action was brought in the trial court by Frank Wright upon a promissory note executed in 1925 by Fred C. Bayh and Bernard F. Bayh as principals and John A. Bayh, Birch E. Bayh and Andrew Ziegler as sureties. It was alleged that at the time of the execution of the note Fred C. Bayh and Bernard F. Bayh, as co-partners, were the owners of a stock of hardware goods, merchandise and fixtures, operated under the name and style “Bayh Hardware Store”; that on the 14th day of October, 1931, the co-partners made a sale, transfer and assignment, in bulk, of the whole of said stock to the Van Camp Hardware & Iron Company, appellant herein, otherwise than in the ordinary course of trade and in the regular prosecution of said business, by a written instrument conditionally executed and de *584 livered on October 18th, and on October 14th unconditionally executed and delivered to appellant; that thereupon the appellant made demand upon said co-partners for the surrender and delivery of possession of said stock of goods and fixtures, which possession was then and there surrendered and delivered to appellant.

The allegations of the complaint which have been set out above, considered with other allegations of facts therein contained, forces the conclusion that the chattel mortgage was merely a part of a transaction. the legal consequence of which was to transfer to the nominal mortgagee all of the mortgagors’ interest in the property covered by the mortgage. And the fact that a chattel mortgage was given cannot deprive the transaction of its true character as a “sale, transfer or assignment.” It follows that the trial court did not err in overruling the demurrer of the defendant to plaintiff’s amended complaint.

The other errors assigned require a determination as to whether the evidence was sufficient to sustain a finding that there was a “sale, transfer or assign ment” of the property referred to in the complaint. Under the rules controlling the determination of a question of the sufficiency of evidence, documentary in part and oral in part, it must appear to this court that there was no evidence tending to sustain the decision of the trial court, before reversal of a judgment for insufficiency of the evidence would be authorized.

The record supports the following statement of the evidence favorable to appellee:

In September, 1924, appellees Fred C. Bayh and his son, Bernard F. Bayh, borrowed $5,000 of the Spencer National Bank and gave their note with the sure ties above named. The note in suit, executed February 3, 1935, and another, were renewals of the *585 $5,000 note. On February 6,1925, the makers executed a chattel mortgage on their hardware store to their sureties to indemnify them against loss by virtue of their suretyship. The Spencer National Bank and Wright, assignee of the note in suit, which was admittedly unpaid, asserted a subrogation claim under the indemnifying mortgage. On October 11,12 and 13,1931, when the Bayhs, father and son, were pressed for payment they could not pay and were willing to permit their sureties to take possession of their store under that mortgage. At that time they were indebted to appellant for $2,765.02 which was unsecured. The wholesale value of their stock of merchandise and fixtures was $9,000 and the accounts receivable were worth approximately $2,500. On October 12, 1931, the attorney for Wright notified appellant’s credit manager, Klippel, of the note in suit. On the next day Klippel and appellant’s attorney, King, discussed the situation with Wright and his attorney but no agreement was reached. Klippel said appellant did not want possession of the store surrendered to the sureties because they might be hostile to Van Camp. Klippel and King then went to the hardware store, talked to the Bayhs and took their note for $2,765.02, covering the entire indebtedness due appellant, payable upon demand. They also procured a chattel mortgage covering the entire stock, fixtures and accounts receivable, which mortgage was only to become effective and be recorded in the event appellant should be unable to “get the bank to be reasonable.” Klippel told Bayh that if he would “stand by Van Camp we will guarantee that . . . the store will keep running and you will be assured of a job.” The mortgage covered all goods purchased to replenish stock, all furniture, fixtures and equipment then in possession and thereafter acquired. All accounts receivable then due and thereafter to become due on account of sale of the *586 mortgaged property were therein assigned as additional security. The mortgage recited the note given by the mortgagors, upon payment of which the mortgage would be void. It further recited that the mortgagors should retain possession of the mortgaged property and continue to sell the stock of goods at retail, applying toward payment of the mortgage debt the proceeds of all sales, less necessary expenses including payments for goods purchased and a reasonable sum allowed the mortgagor for his services. The mortgagors agreed to maintain the quantity and quality of the stock, to furnish mortgagee with monthly detailed inventories and reports of receipts and expenses and to apply net balances on the debt secured. It was stipulated that in case of default in payment, of violation of any condition of the mortgage, of levy upon the property, or the mortgagee should feel itself insecure, the mortgagee could take immediate possession of the property and foreclose the mortgage or sell the property at public sale without process of law, as the mortgagee should elect, and until such sale the mortgagee should have the right at its option to operate the store at retail.

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Related

Bayh v. Ellis, Tr.
200 N.E. 455 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 N.E. 75, 209 Ind. 582, 1935 Ind. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-camp-hardware-iron-co-v-ellis-trustee-ind-1935.