62 Wis. 69 | Wis. | 1885
It is claimed that the court excluded evidence which would have shown that the assignment was made with the intent to defraud creditors. The only question excluded was one put to the assignor as to how much board his daughter (one of the preferred creditors) was paying him. This clearly related to the time of the trial, which was more than a year after the assignment, and hence could have no. bearing as to the intent with which the assignment was madé, and was therefore properly excluded as immaterial. The result of this ruling was a colloquy betweón the court and counsel for the plaintiffs, in which the latter disclaimed all expectation of showing that any of the scheduled “creditors were not bona fide creditors,” and the court, among other things, stated that “the intent to defraud would only be determined from a preference of creditors who had no claim, or beyond a just claim, against the assignor.” This is urged as error. Assuming that an intent tó defraud might have been inferred from some other fact or circumstance than a mere preference of a claim wholly or in part fictitious,
There was no evidence that any portion of any of the preferred debts were fictitious. The mere fact that some of the assignor’s preferred debts had previously been secured by mortgage on his wife’s real estate did not preclude the court from holding that there was no intent to defraud in giving such preference. 49 Wis. 498. Such preferred debt was, nevertheless, the debt of the assignor, and not the debt of his wife.
It is claimed that the assignment was intentionally made before the passage of the bill (ch. 349, Laws of 1883) then pending in the legislature forbidding preferences, so as to prevent the assignor’s property from being equally distributed among his creditors under that act. The fact remains that, at the time of making the assignment, the assignor had the legal right of preferring some of his creditors to others. Having such right at the time, was he precluded from its exercise by his knowing that the legislature contemplated so changing the law as to make the act illegal? To answer in the affirmative would be giving effect to the law several weeks before its passage. On the contrary, a legal right,
It is claimed that the form of the assignment is peculiar, in that it is made to the assignee, “his heirs, executors, administrators, and assigns,” instead of running to his successors and assigns. But this, instead of being a “ peculiar ” form of transfer, is the usual form where the assignment includes real estate. Burrill on Assignments, § 133. The habendum clause in such case is substantially the same. Id. § 140. The assignment is in this respect, as it may properly be, even if not essential, a deed of conveyance of the absolute title, with a declaration of trust. Id. § 127. There have been assignments made in separate instruments, and held valid. Id. § 128; Norton v. Kearney, 10 Wis. 443. The use of the words “ heirs and assigns” was, undoubtedly, to give effect to the assignee’s conveyance, although it may have been unnecessary. Angell v. Rosenbury, 12 Mich. 266. The contingency suggested as to the death of the assignee before the execution of the trust, leaving minor or nonresident heirs, is not here involved, and hence is not here considered.
It is claimed that the assignment is void because the as-signee’s bond runs to “A. E. Richter, clerk of the circuit court of the county of Fond du Lac,” etc. This, we think, was a substantial compliance with the statute requiring it to be “executed to the clerk of the circuit court of the county, by his name of office, as obligee.” Sec. 1694, R. S. The insertion of the word “as” before the word “clerk” might
The mere fact that the assignor’s affidavit to the list of his creditors, required by sec. 1697, R. S., starts out in the first person, and then speaks of the “ list of Ms creditors,” in the language of the statute, instead of saying “my creditors,” was at most a mere clerical error, obvious upon the face of the record. The section declares that “ no mistake therein shall invalidate such assignment,” and we are indisposed to enforce a literalism not required by the statute. Steinlein v. Halstead, 52 Wis. 289. Haben v. Harshaw, 59 Wis. 403, cited by counsel, is clearly distinguishable. There the assignment mentioned two distinct classes of property, whereas the list and affidavit only referred to one, and hence it was held that, presumptively, the list was incorrect.
The mere fact that after the assignment the assignor remained in the store as an employee under the supervision of the assignee, was not conclusive evidence of fraud in the making of the assignment. Hollister v. Loud, 2 Mich. 309.
It is claimed that the assignment is void upon its face because it purports to assign all and singular the lands, goods, debts, property, effects, etc., of every description, belonging to the assignor, or in which he had any right or interest, “except what are exempt to me by the laws of the state of Wisconsin, the same being more fully and particularly enumerated and described in an inventory thereof to be filed,” etc. Manifestly, the property thus to be “ more fully and particularly enumerated and described ” in the inventory was such as was thereby transferred and conveyed to the as-signee, and not such exempt property as was therein excepted from the operation of the assignment. It is only
• From all this it would seem that here the assignor must first have set apart his exempt property, and then assigned the balance, and that only. Whether he in fact first so set apart his exempt property, and then assigned the balance, does not expressly appear. Certainly, he makes no claim to any of the property enumerated and described in the inventory. On the contrary, in his affidavit referred to he expressly disclaims any right to any part of it. True, the inventory was not filed at the very time of filing of the paper purporting to transfer the property, yet it was filed within the time required by the statute. It was obviously the design of the statute that the title of the property should pass to the assignee immediately upon the execution of the
The case here presented, therefore, is wholly unlike that class of cases where there is an absolute transfer of a quantity of goods, with a reserved right of retaking and withdrawing from the bulk of the property so transferred a certain amount in value of unselected and unascertained goods. It is barely possible that the assignor here never, in fact, selected nor set apart the $200 stock in trade which he was entitled to as exempt under the statute. Subd. 8, sec. 2982, R. S. If this were so, then his failure to so select or set apart before the completion of the assignment and the
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.