Waggoner-Gates Milling Co. v. Ziegler-Zaiss Commission Co.

31 S.W. 28, 128 Mo. 473, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 21, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 31 S.W. 28 (Waggoner-Gates Milling Co. v. Ziegler-Zaiss Commission Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waggoner-Gates Milling Co. v. Ziegler-Zaiss Commission Co., 31 S.W. 28, 128 Mo. 473, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 46 (Mo. 1895).

Opinion

Burgess, J. —

On the seventeenth day of. April, 1890, the Ziegler-Zaiss Commission Company, an insolvent corporation, intending to prefer some of its cred[479]*479itors to others, and then to make a general assignment for the benefit of their creditors not preferred, executed two chattel mortgages, the first to the American National Bank and certain other parties, and the second to B. E. Coombs Commission Company and Henry Albers, and then a voluntary assignment for the benefit of all its creditors, the assignment being made subject to said mortgages. The mortgages and deed of assignment were all executed on the same day, delivered to an attorney of the Ziegler-Zaiss Commission Company and by him taken to and deposited in the recorder’s office of Jackson county, Missouri, where the members of the company last named resided, for record, in the order above named, the space of time between their filing, being about five minutes between the first two, and fifteen minutes between the last two.

At the time of the execution of the mortgages and assignment the Ziegler-Zaiss Commission Company was indebted to the American National Bank in the sum of $2,000 as evidenced by two notes of $1,000 each, held by said bank, and said commission company was also indebted to said bank as indorser upon certain notes held by the bank, which the bank had discounted for it. The property included in said chattel mortgage to the defendant bank was a stock of goods, wares, merchandise, etc., contained in a store building, numbers 520 and 522, .Walnut street, Kansas City, Missouri, together with a certain vinegar factory owned by said commission company and located in said city, and all accounts, books, notes and evidences of debt owned by said commission company. The first mortgage also secured the payment of notes to the amount of $.1,000 held respectively by Clara Zaiss, and A. Sehieferle for which T. B. Buckner was trustee.

As soon as the bank was notified of the execution of said mortgage, it at once took possession of the [480]*480mortgaged property, which, was before either of thé mortgages or deed of assignment had been deposited in the recorder’s office for record. When it took possession it had no knowledge of the existence of the sec-; ond mortgage or of the deed of assignment. A suffi-: cient amount of the property was sold to satisfy the debt due the bank, and that which remained, including accounts, was turned over to the second mortgagees, from which the claim of B. F. Coombs & Brother Commission Company was also paid in full.

Plaintiff and other creditors not. included in either of the mortgages proved up claims before the assignee in' the deed of assignment to the amount of about $13,000, but none of the parties secured by said mortgages presented their claims to the assignee, they having been before that time paid in full from sales and collections.

This suit was brought to set aside said mortgages, and to compel the beneficiaries therein to pay over to the assignee the amounts of money • received by them respectively from sales and collections of the mortgaged property, in order that the same may be distributed pro rata among all the creditors of the mortgagor. The court rendered a judgment and decree in accordance with the prayer of the petition.

. The finding, judgment and decree of the court are as follows:

“That on the seventeenth -day of April, Í890, the defendant, The Ziegler-Zaiss Commission Company was a corporation organized and doing business under the laws of the state of Missouri; that, the stockholders, of said corporation were Joseph Ziegler, Henry Zurn, Frederick Zaiss and Adolph Zaiss, who were also its directors and officers; that one or two evenings prior to the seventeenth day of April, 1890, said directors and officers decided that the said corporation should [481]*481execute two chattel mortgages for the purpose of securing and preferring certain creditors, and also a deed of general assignment for the benefit of all its creditors; that pursuant to said purpose it did, on April 17, 1890, execute a chattel mortgage conveying all its personal property, including notes and accounts, to the defendants, the American National Bank, A. Schieferle, Clara Zaiss and T. B. Buckner, as trustee, to secure a debt of $2,000 to the said American National Bank, and certain notes in said mortgage described, indorsed by it to said bank; a debt of two thousand (2,000) dollars to A. Schieferle; a pretended debt of $4,400 to said Clara Zaiss, and a pretended debt of $1,000 to said T. B. Buckner, as trustee. That on said day it also executed another chattel mortgage conveying the same property to the B. F. Coombs & Brother Commission Company, and Henry Albers to secure a debt of $947.23 to B. F. Coombs & Brother Commission Company, and a pretended debt of $605.50 to secure Henry Albers. That on said day it also executed a general assignment whereby it conveyed all its property to Phillip Doppler, as assignee, for the benefit of all its creditors.
“That said mortgages and said deed of assignment were all executed in the forenoon of the same day, at the same time, and were all recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds of Jackson county, at Kansas City, by the attorney of the Ziegler-Zaiss Commission Company, in the afternoon of the said day, they all having been taken to the said office at. the same time, and the first described mortgage having been recorded at one' o’clock and ten minutes, p. m. ; the second described mortgage having been recorded at one o’clock and fifteen minutes p. m., and said deed of assignment at one o’clock and thirty minutes, p. m. That on the seventeenth day of April, 1890, said defendant, the Ziegler[482]*482Zaiss Commission Company was wholly insolvent, it being indebted to various parties in various amounts aggregating a sum much larger than all its assets, and on said day said corporation ceased to do business and has not since said date done any business.
“That the debt to the said bank, the debt to the said A. Schieferle, the debt to the said B. P. Coombs & Brother Commission Company, and $2,500 of the debt to the said Clara Zaiss, described in said mortgages were all bona fide debts of the Ziegler-Zaiss Commission Company, but that the other alleged debts described in said mortgage were not owing by the said Ziegler-Zaiss Commission Company; that one or more of said directors were securities or indorsers on all of said bona fide debts, except said debt to the saidB. P. Coombs & Brother Commission Company.
“That said chattel mortgages were executed by the said Ziegler-Zaiss Commission Company for the purpose of cheating and defrauding all of the creditors of the said Ziegler-Zaiss Commission Company, except those mentioned in said chattel mortgages, but that the mortgagees in said mortgages were not parties to said fraud and had no knowledge of the assignment, or of the intent to make such assignment, when they took possession under the mortgage, and such possession was taken before said assignment was recorded.
“That at the date of the said mortgages and said deed of assignment said Ziegler-Záiss Commission Company, was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of seven thousand, nine hundred and sixty dollars and ninety-eight cents ($7,960.98), and to various other parties not mentioned in said mortgages in sums aggregating about six thousand ($6,000) dollars.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.W. 28, 128 Mo. 473, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waggoner-gates-milling-co-v-ziegler-zaiss-commission-co-mo-1895.