64 Wis. 557 | Wis. | 1885
Erom some time in the year 1881 until January, 1885, when the attachment herein was issued, the defendant was a retail dealer in general merchandise at Melvina, in Monroe county. In March, 1882, he borrowed $200 of one Steele, and one Hunt became surety for the payment thereof. The debt to Steele not having been paid, the defendant, in June, 1884, executed a chattel mortgage to Hunt on his
The conclusive inference from these facts is that there was an implied agreement or understanding between the parties, when the mortgage was executed, that the mortgagor might deal with the property as he did. Were such not the understanding, it is incredible that the mortgagee would have stood quietly by, and witnessed the misappropriation of the property and the consequent destruction of his security, without remonstrance or objection. Such
That the inevitable tendency and effect of a mortgage, fair and valid on its face, but void because of some extrinsic or secret infirmity, must be to hinder and delay the creditors of the mortgagor in the collection of their debts, is perfectly obvious, and the parties thereto cannot be heard to say that they did not intend that such effect should result from their actions. Butts v. Peacock, 23 Wis. 359. In Place v. Langworthy, 13 Wis. 629, the present chief justice said that such an agreement in a mortgage is directly calculated to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of the mortgagor, and is therefore necessarily injurious to them, and strictly within the statute of frauds. This is so, because the mortgage apparently places the property beyond the reach of such creditors, and drives them to a contest with the fraudulent mortgagee if they seek to enforce payment of their demands out of the property thus fraudulently disposed of or incumbered. When property is mortgaged to one creditor to secure his demand, good faith to other creditors of the mortgagor requires that if the same is sold, the proceeds shall be applied to the payment of the mortgage debt.
Our conclusion is, therefore, that by the execution of the mortgage to Hunt, the defendant conveyed or disposed of. his property therein described with intent to defraud his creditors.
Oounsel for defendant relied upon the case of Fisk v. Harshaw, 45 Wis. 665, claiming that in all material particulars it is like this case. But the claim is not well founded in fact. In that case a majority of the court were of the
By the Court.— The order of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause will be remanded with directions to that court to sustain the attachment.