43 N.J. Eq. 488 | New York Court of Chancery | 1887
Arnett, a son of the complainant, was engaged in the mercantile business, and sold his interest therein to one Griggs. At the time of the sale his mother held a chattel mortgage upon the goods, .and so did Arnett and Martindale. After the sale Griggs executed chattel mortgages for like amounts to the complainant and to Arnett and Martindale; but they were, not immediately recorded, nor were the transactions with respect to them actually consummated at the time, because, as the proof shows, there was a promise upon the part of Griggs to pay the cash for the amount due upon the said mortgages. This, however, was not .accomplished. Such sale was made on the 1st of January. On the 1st day of February the mortgages were acknowledged and ■delivered. The mortgage of the complainant was recorded on the .2d of February, but that of Arnett and Martindale not until March 16th. Soon after this, Griggs made an assignment to ■the defendant Mr. Trimmer of all his estate, for the benefit of his creditors. As such assignee, he immediately proceeded to make sale of a portion of the goods, and sold to the amount of •$232.10 worth, at an actual expense to him of $23.50. At this juncture the bill in this case was filed in order to prevent Mr. 'Trimmer, as such assignee, from further proceeding with the sale •of the said goods or intermeddling therewith; the complainant ■claiming that her interest in the said goods was equal to, if not more, than the value thereof, and that as such mortgagee she had .a right, under the circumstances presented in the bill, to make ■disposition of them. Such a case was made by the bill and proofs as to satisfy the court that Mr. Trimmer, as such assignee, •ought to be restrained, and an injunction was accordingly issued. Since then it was deemed expedient to appoint a receiver to take •charge of and dispose of the goods, and as such he has disposed ■of them, the result of which, so far as appears, is an ample justification of his appointment in behalf of the mortgagees; sufficient assets not having been realized to satisfy the amount due ■upon the lawful encumbrances.
An answer was filed, disputing the validity of the mortgages ■as to the general creditors. The answer insisted that there was
At the hearing, the principal question seemed to be whether, or not a horse, a wagon, sleigh and harness came within the purview of the chattel mortgages as part and parcel of the goods and chattels used in carrying on the said business. And thetestimouy upon this point is most clear that they are included in the chattel mortgages, and I cannot avoid so advising.
Mr. Trimmer, the assignee, insists that as such he is entitled to be protected. He insists that if this court, under the circumstances, had the right to interfere by injunction and by the appointment of a receiver whom it authorized to dispose of the-estate, he should be protected against all costs and expenses-whatsoever in the management of the estate and in the proceedings instituted in this court. He insists upon this as a general and universal proposition of law, and maintains that whatever may be the liabilities of a debtor, and whatever may be the extent or character of the liens upon the debtor’s estate, he has-an absolute and unqualified right, under the statute, to make an assignment for the equal benefit of his creditors, and that, as-such assignee, he can resist all the rights and claims of such lien-holders, and proceed to the disposition of the assets assigned to-him, in total disregard of their rights, providing he proceeds-according to the directions of the statute which authorizes such assignment. I have no doubt that a statute so beneficial in its-nature, so demanded by the business interests of the community,.
But to say, in an unqualified sense, that lien creditors must, under every condition, hold their hands and abide the time and methods of an assignee, even though he commit no flagrant acts, is a proposition which seems to me the legal mind cannot readily assent to. For example, it can scarcely be said that a mortgagee of real estate would, in such a ease, be obliged to await the settlement of the affairs of an assignee, even though the assignee should be adjudged to have power to sell the land; and the same principle would apply in the case of the mortgaging of goods and chattels. If the assignor had created an effectual lien upon the goods, equal, or more than equal, to their entire value, he could not, in any way, destroy or impair the interest which he himself had thus created, by making an assignment for the benefit of his other creditors. In such a case, all that it is conceived the •assignee could do would be to sell the interest which the mortgagor might have in what is called the equity of redemption in the goods. But if his intermeddling with such goods for the purpose of making a sale of the equity of redemption should be such as tended to the destruction or impairment of the interests of the mortgagee, I think no court would hold that the mortgagee would be obliged to hold his hand and allow the assignee to goon with the waste, which, as to him and his interests, he might be committing. Conceding, therefore, great latitude of right to an assignee, under the statute, I think, at least in the instances named, it has a limit.
With these considerations in mind, taking the case before me, what appears? An assignment, it is true, for the benefit of creditors, and other creditors than the mortgagees, but with the clear proof that the chattels included in the mortgages are insufficient to satisfy them. In such a case, it seems to me beyond question that the complainant had a right to foreclose her mort
It is plain that the complainant’s mortgage is second in order of priority. The receiver should first pay the costs of the complainant, then the said mortgage of Arnett and Martindale, and then the mortgage of complainant, and if then anything remain, Mr. Trimmer is entitled to it as such assignee.