Adams v. Allen-West Commission Co.

64 Ark. 603 | Ark. | 1898

Bunn, C. J.

J. H. B. Adams and C. R. Adams, merchants and partners, doing business in the town of Malvern, under the firm name and style of “Adams & Bro.,” on the 24th of January, 1894, made a general assignment for the benefit of their creditors, reserving exemptions, and making preference of their creditors, those to be first paid being named in list No. 1,' and the others in list No. 2, the appellee being named in the latter list.

On the same day, the appellee instituted this' suit, and procured an order of attachment, on the ground that defendants, Adams & Bro., had “sold and conveyed their property with the fraudulent intent to cheat, hinder and delay their creditors.” The property included in the assignment was attached, and E. H. Vance, Jr., named as assignee in the deed of assignment, in the meantime had qualified as such, and thereupon filed his interplea, claiming the property under the deed of assignment.

The issues made by the complaint and answers, and the affidavits and the countervailing affidavits in attachment, and also by the interplea and answer thereto, were all, by consent, submitted to the court sitting as a jury, and to be heard and determined at one and the same time. All the evidence in the case having been adduced, the defendants and the interpleader asked the court to make the following declarations of law to-wit:

“ (1) The deed of assignment in this case does not require the assignee to sell the accounts, notes and other choses in action conveyed thereby. (2) The deed of assignment introduced in evidence in this case is not invalid by reason of the directions therein contained with reference to the disposition of the property conveyed thereby to the assignee, Vance. (3) The said deed of assignment is valid on its face. (4) If the the court finds that there was no fraud on the part of defendants in making said assignment, and that they did not withhold any of their property from the. same, then the findings must be for the defendants, and the attachments dissolved. (5) If C. R. Adams held in his hands seven hundred dollars or over, as the guardian of John and Charles Archer, and, while the same was so in his hands, the defendants, J. H. B. and C. R. Adams, with a full knowledge of how said money was held by said C. R. Adams, and that it was the property of said John and Charles Archer, agreed among themselves to appropriate said money to their use in their co-partnership business, and did so use the same, then they became liable as partners for said money, and were authorized, under the law, to prefer the said John and Charles Archer in their deed of assignment for that sum.

The court refused to make each and every one of the foregoing as its declaration of law; but found and adjudged as follows [omitting unnecessary parts], to-wit: “That on the 24th day of January, 1894, the defendants, J. H. B. and C. R. Adams, conveyed all their- property to the said E. H. Vance, Jr., as assignee; that they did not withhold any of their property from said assignment; that prior to making said assignment, while they were in an embarrassed condition, and during the time they were discussing such situation among themselves and with their attorneys, but before they had determined to make the assignment, they sold some of their property to one W. S. Seay, for the purpose of paying a bona fide debt which they owed him, and that there was no fraud in the transaction of the sale of said property to said Seay; that there were about twenty cords of wood belonging to said defendants near Traskwood in Saline county at the time of making said assignment, but the same was near the line of Hot Spring and Saline counties, and defendants, at the time of making the assignment, believed said wood was in Hot Spring county; that the said J. H. B. and C. R. Adams appropriated to the. use of said firm in their co-partnership business something over seven hundred dollars, which the said C. E. Adams held in his hands as guardian of John and Charles Archer; that, at the time said money was so appropriated by said firm, both the said J. H. B. and C. E. Adams had full knowledge of the fact that said money was the property of said John and Charles Archer, and that the same was in the hands of said C. E. Adams, as their guardian; that the said defendants were entirely free from any fraudulent purpose or intent in making said assignment, or any disposition of their property prior thereto. And, as conclusions of law, the court finds that the said assignment is void for the reason alone that it, on its face, directs the assignee to sell all the property conveyed to him thereby, including the notes, accounts and choses in action, and that the said assignors prefer therein the said John and Charles Archer for their said debt.”

The court then rendered judgment dismissing the interplea, and sustaining the attachment, and ordered the property sold accordingly. To which ruling and judgment of the court, in dismissing said interplea, and sustaining the attachments, exceptions were taken and noted, and a motion for new trial filed, which being overruled, and exceptions duly taken, the inter-pleader and defendants appealed.

The finding of facts, having some evidence to sustain them, and, furthermore, not being the subject of exceptions, will, of course, not be disturbed.

The only questions for our consideration are those which grow out of the declaration of the court below that the assignment is void on its face for directing a disposition of all the property included in the assignment; and as regards the preference of the debt of C. E. Adams as guardian of John and Charles Archer.

As to the contention and judgment of the court that the language of the assignment as to the disposal of the property rendered the deed void:

In Churchill v. Hill, 59 Ark. 54, the deed of assignment provided that the assignee “shall be required to sell all the property assigned to him at public auction within one hundred and twenty days after executing a bond, which he is required to execute by law.” This language was construed to mean that the choses in action, as well as the tangible property, were to be sold at public auction within one hundred and twenty days, and this court held that the law of assignments for the benefit of creditors does not contemplate a sale at public auction of the choses in action, but that the requirement in that respect only extends to the other classes of property the subject of sale usually; and thus, in that case, the deed of assignment was held to be void because of the direction to sell, as stated, all the property, which term included the choses in action also. It requires but a casual glance to see the difference between the language of that assignment and that of the assignment now hnder consideration. In the latter, after authorizing the assignee to take possession and so forth, the words are, “and thereafter dispose of the same [all the property] in the manner provided by said law.”

It is true that our assignment law does not specifically and explicitly provide the manner of disposing of choses in action and evidences of debt generally, and for that reason it was contended in Churchill v. Hill, supra, that, as the assignment statute contains but one provision on the subject, and that in terms ■included all the property assigned, therefore the law required choses in action to be disposed of as the other property. It is sufficient to say that this court, in its decision, made the distinction referred to, and our only inquiry now is, whether or not the language in the assignment under consideration directs a sale of the choses in action, as well as that of the other property. We think it clear that it does not, and that therefore the court below was in error in holding the deed of assignment void on that account.

As to the preference of the debt oiving to John and Charles Archer, the wards of C. B. Adams, one of the assignors:

The findings of the court were, as expressed in the bill of exceptions, as follows, to-wit: “ That the said J. H. and C. R. Adams appropriated to the use of said firm in their co-partnership business something over seven hundred dollars, which the said C. R. Adams held in his hands as guardian of John and Charles Archer; that, at the time said money was so appropriated by said firm, both the said J.H. and'C. R. Adams bad full knowledge of tbe fact that said money was tbe property of said John and Charles Archer, and that the same was in the hands of said C. R. Adams as their guardian.” This language has given rise to some controversy among us to determine certainly whether or not the findings of the court were to the effect that the use of this trust fund and its appropriation to the business of the partnership by the partners, with full notice of its character, constituted it a partnership debt, or that it was at last only so much money contributed by C. R. Adams, as one of the firm, to the capital of the firm, and that it therefore was only an individual debt owing to C. R. Adams primarily. A majority of us, however, construe the language of the findings of the court to mean that the debt was a partnership debt, and therefore the lawful subject of the preference given to it in the deed of assignment. The court, therefore, erred in holding that this preference rendered the deed of assignment invalid.

For the error named, the judgment is reversed, and tha cause remanded for a new hearing.