Webb City Lumber Co. v. Victor Mining Co.

78 Mo. App. 676, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 109
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 20, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 78 Mo. App. 676 (Webb City Lumber Co. v. Victor Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webb City Lumber Co. v. Victor Mining Co., 78 Mo. App. 676, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 109 (Mo. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

SMITH, P. J.

Statement. Plaintiffs brought an action of attachment against the defendant; and, under the writ issued therein, certain mining machinery and other personal property of the defendant were levied upon. One Kane filed an interplea on the action claiming to be the owner and entitled to the possession of the attached property under the provisions of a certain mortgage executed to him by the defendant prior to the levy of the attachment. The plaintiffs, by their answer, denied the allegations of the interplea and charged that the mortgage was made with the intent to hinder and delay creditors, and that the debt described in the mortgage was fictitious, and that the mortgage was fraudulent and void.

There was a trial by the court without a jury. At the request of the interpleader the court made a special finding of facts, which is to the effect following:

“That on the twenty-second day of September, 1896, and prior thereto the Victor Mining Company was a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Missouri and on that date, it was indebted to the Bank of Carterville, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Missouri, in the sum of $2,164.35, for which amount the said bank held a note of said Victor Mining Company, signed by said company, and E. E. Dwight, J. B. Flanders and A. M. Drake, all as principals, which said note was not then due. That Flanders, Dwight and Drake were solvent; that the Victor Mining Company was heavily indebted to various persons other than the Bank of Carterville, [679]*679and was insolvent and was being pressed by some of its creditors and tbat fact was known by interpleader on September 22, 1896; that on said date and prior thereto the interpleader, ~W. B. Kane, was cashier of Said Bank of Carterville; that on said twenty-second day of September, 1896, without consulting the Bank of Carterville or any of its officers or the interpleader, ~W. B. Kane, or. without being asked or requested to give any additional security for the indebtedness which it owed to the said Bank of Carterville, said Yictor Mining Co. executed a chattel mortgage on all its property to W. B. Kane, interpleader, to secure a note for the sum of $5,161.35, which note was particularly described in the mortgage; that this mortgage was executed for the purpose of obtaining three thousand dollars to be thereafter advanced by the interpleader, W. B. Kane, and that at the time said note was delivered to Kane in the Indian Territory, it was agreed between said Yictor Mining Co. and the interpleader that the mining company would send in its bills to the interpleader and that he would draw his own check on the Bank of Carterville; that said note and mortgage were delivered to the interpleader at Waggner, I. T.; that said mortgage was on the twenty-fourth day of September, 1896, duly filed for record in the office of the recorder of deeds of Jasper county, Missouri, and was duly recorded and afterwards on the twenty-fifth day of September, 1896, the plaintiff, with other creditors, attached the property in said mortgage described; that the said mortgage •contained a provision that the mortgagor might retain possession of the property until the debt became due, with the proviso that in case of the sale, disposal or removal of the property or any part thereof, or the attempt to sell, dispose of or remove said property or any part thereof, the whole debt should at once become due and the mortgagee should at once have the right to the possession of said property; that up to the time of the levying-of the attachment the inter-pleader had advanced no part of the sum agreed to be advanced and after the attachments he refused to advance any [680]*680sum, and it was then agreed by and between the interpleader and the defendant that no further sum should be advanced and that the sum he had agreed to advance should be credited as a payment on the note secured in the mortgage, which was done; that the said note of $2,164.35 was not canceled or delivered to said Victor Mining Oo. but was retained by said bank and treated by said bank as a part of its assets; that afterwards, on April 17, 1897, the said Bank of Oarterville went into liquidation and transferred all its assets to the First National Bank of Oarterville; that said note with the other assets was transferred to the said First National Bank of Oarterville; that on the first day of May, 1897, said note of $2,164.35 was taken up by the Victor Mining Oo. and a new note for the same amount was executed by the Victor Mining Oo., and Dwight, Flanders and Drake, to the First National Bank of Oarterville, which bank still holds said note; that the property attached has been sold under the order of this court and the proceeds thereof stand in the place of the property.
“The court further finds that the purpose of the Victor Mining Company in executing said mortgage and said $5,164.35 note was to raise said sum of $3,000 to be used in sinking its shaft and taking up a stope in its mine, and not to secure the payment of any indebtedness,which it then owed to the Bank of Oarterville, and that the interpleader, Kane,, knew of such purpose; that no part of the said $3,000 agreed to be . advanced was to be paid until the interpleader returned from the Indian Territory and then, if everything was satisfactory to said Kane, the money was to be paid by him on orders from the Victor Mining Oo., and that no part of said $3,000 was ever deposited in said bank or set apart subject to-the order of the Victor Mining Company; that before Kane returned from the Indian Territory the property was attached by the plaintiff and other creditors and the contract in relation to said $3,000 between the interpleader and the Victor [681]*681Mining Company was never completed ox carried out; and that said note of $5,164.35, secured by said mortgage is to the extent of the sum of $2,164.35 fictitious and to that extent the said mortgage was without consideration, but that the Victor Mining Co., in the execution of the $5,164.35 note, made the amount thereof exactly equal to the two sums of $3,000 to be thereafter advanced to it by interpleader, and the sum of $2,164.35 which it owed to the Bank of Carter-ville; that at the time of the delivery of said mortgage to interpleader he agreed with the representative of the Victor Mining Co. that said Bank of Carterville would deliver up to the makers thereof the said note of $2,164.35, but the court finds that said bank refused to carry out said agreement and never did deliver up said note, but retained same and treated it as a part of the assets of said bank.”

Appellate practice: special finding. An examination of the record has convinced us that there is evidence contained in the record which tends to support the findings so made and therefore the same are incontrovertible here. Freeman v. Moffit, 119 Mo. 280; Nelson v. Railway, 66 Mo. App. 647; Griffith v. Construction Co., 46 Mo. App. 539.

Fraudulent conveyances: fictitious debt. The court concluded, that upon the facts found by it, that the interpleader could not recover and gave judgment accordingly. It is difficult to see how a different conclusion could have been reached on the facts, as found. The law is now quite well settled in this state - » _ _ .. . _ . . that a raise statement of the consideration of a mortgage or the creation of a fictitious indebtedness is a badge of fraud.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Mo. App. 676, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-city-lumber-co-v-victor-mining-co-moctapp-1899.