Walker v. Ross

36 N.E. 986, 150 Ill. 50
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 36 N.E. 986 (Walker v. Ross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Ross, 36 N.E. 986, 150 Ill. 50 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Per Curiam

After a careful consideration of this case and the arguments of the respective parties, we are satisfied that the judgment of the Appellate Court is correct. In its opinion filed in the ease, that court has fully considered every question involved, and, as we concur with the Appellate Court, the opinion will be adopted and filed as the opinion of this'court. That opinion is as follows:

Pleasants, J.:

“This was a petition to the county court, bj appellees, creditors of appellant Eoss, to have two chattel mortgages, given by said appellant to certain other creditors therein respectively named, upon his stock of goods in store at Warsaw, declared to be a general assignment under the statute, and appellant Helms required to give bond, as assignee, to administer the property in accordance with the orders of the court. Appellants answered severally, replications were filed and evidence heard, whereupon appellant Boss moved the court to dismiss the case as to him, which was denied, and an order entered substantially according to the prayer of the petition, and a motion by each of the appellants for a rehearing overruled. They then took this appeal.

“For quite a number of years prior and until the 13th of August, 1892, appellant Boss was a dry goods merchant at Warsaw. Having become embarrassed, and being pressed for payment and threatened with suits, on that day he went to Chicago to consult some business friends and creditors upon the situation stated, and upon their advice executed a chattel mortgage upon his entire stock to certain creditors therein named, to secure an aggregate indebtedness due them of |8145.13, setting forth the amount due to each, respectively, and delivered it to Bobert B. Baldwin, an attorney of the John Y. Farwell Company, one of the mortgagees. On the same day he made and signed a second mortgage upon the same stock to certain other creditors therein named, including the appellees, to secure an aggregate indebtedness to them of $3495.79, setting forth the amount due to each, respectively, but did not deliver it until the 15th. These instruments were in the usual form of chattel mortgages, with the usual defeasance clauses, and gave to the mortgagees power to sell at public or private sale, and for cash or.on credit, as they should think best, and in addition thereto contained the following; ‘The said mortgagor hereby authorizes the sheriff of the said county of Hancock to execute the power of sale in this mortgage granted to the mortgagees or their assigns or legal representatives, and all other powers to them, or either of them, granted or given by this mortgage.’ And the second was therein expressly declared to be subject to the first. The following evening (August 14) appellant Boss left Chicago on his return to Warsaw, accompanied by Mr. Baldwin, who had the first mortgage, and was acting for and under the direction of the John Y. Farwell Company, and had telegraphed to have appellant Helms, then sheriff of Hancock county, meet him there on his arrival. They arrived shortly before noon of the 15th, and went to the store. After Boss had gone to his dinner, Baldwin obtained the keys from the clerks and took possession. He then turned them over to the sheriff, with the mortgage, directing him to take care of the stock and to sell as provided in the mortgage, referring him to Mr. Grover as the attorney of the company, if he should need any advice. When Boss, on his return, found the sheriff in possession, he acknowledged the second mortgage, and delivered it to the magistrate for the mortgages to be recorded, and then assigned his notes and book accounts, which were of small value, to still other creditors, — Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Geitz, — to pay bona fide debts then due and owing from him to them. Thus he disposed of all the property he had that was not exempt by law from execution.

“On the 16th an expert from the house of the Farwell company, assisted by Boss and his clerks, took an invoice of the goods mortgaged, making it amount to over $13,000, which exceeded the sum of his indebtedness. Under the direction of the first mortgagees, the sheriff, on the 18tb, duly advertised the stock for sale at public auction on the 29th, and in pursuance thereof sold it for $7166.49, which he now holds, subject to the decision of this case.

“Both of the mortgages were dated August 15, 1892. The first was recorded on the 23d and the second on the 16th of said month. It further appears that the Farwell company acted solely for the first mortgagees; that Baldwin acted solely for the Farwell company; that neither had any interest in or connection with the second mortgage or the assignment of the notes and book accounts; that the sheriff acted for and under direction of the first mortgagees; that when Boss left Chicago he did not know what Baldwin intended to do, but was informed by liim before they arrived at Warsaw; that he supposed his stock would pay his indebtedness in full, and did not intend to make an assignment for the benefit of his creditors, under the statute, but did intend that in case of its deficiency the first mortgagees should be preferred.

“There is no serious dispute as to what appellant Eoss in fact did or intended to do. His answer admits nearly all of the averments in the petition. The question is, whether these acts and intentions amounted, in legal effect, to an assignment for the benefit of his creditors, within the meaning of chapter 10 of the Eevised Statutes of 1891. The county court held that they did; that that court therefore had jurisdiction of the matter, and that the preferences attempted to be given were void, (sec. 13,) and accordingly ordered that appellant Helms give bond, as assignee, and proceed in the distribution of the moneys in his hands, the proceeds of said sale, under the further direction of the court. Whether this holding was proper, depends upon the true construction of the statute. In quite a number of cases the Supreme Court has given it a construction applicable to the conceded facts shown by this record. Without presuming to vindicate that construction, or quoting in extenso from the opinions in these cases, we shall refer to them only far enough to warrant, in our opinion, the conclusion that it is in conflict with that of the county court given in this case.

“First, as to what constitutes an assignment within the meaning of the act. In Weber v. Mick, 131 Ill. 533, the coxirt approved and adopted the definition in Burrill on Assignments, sections 2 and 3 : ‘A transfer, without compulsion of law, by a debtor, of some or all of his property to an assignee or assignees, in trust, to apply the same, or the proceeds thereof, to the payment of some or all of his debts, and to return the surplus, if any, to the debtor. It implies a trust, and contemplates the intervention of a trustee; and assignments to creditors directly, and not upon trust, are not such.’ In Schroeder v. Walsh, 120 Ill. 403, it was said: ‘Notwithstanding that statute, a debtor may pay one creditor in full, either in money or by the sale of his property. That act applies only to conveyances of property to an assignee or trustee in trust, to convert the same into money for the benefit of the creditors of the assignor.’ In Farwell v. Nilsson, 133 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.E. 986, 150 Ill. 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-ross-ill-1894.