delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Hub Carpet Company was adjudicated- bankrupt by the federal court for southern New York in involuntary proceedings commenced September 26, 1921. Benedict, who was appointed receiver and later trustee, collected the book accounts of the company. Ratner filed in that court a petition in equity praying that the amounts, so collected be paid over to him. He claimed them under a writing given May 23, 1921 — four months .and three days before the commencement of the bankruptcy proceedings. By it the company purported to assign to him, as collateral for certain loans, all accounts present and future. Those collected by the receiver were, so far as
The District Judge decided both petitions in Ratner’s favor. He ruled that the assignment executed in May was not fraudulent in law; that it created an equity in the.future acquired accounts; that because of this equity, Ratner was entitled to retain, as against the bankrupt’s estate, the proceeds of the accounts which had been collected by the company in September and turned over to him; that by delivery of the list of the accounts.putstanding on September 23, this equity in them had ripened into a perfect title to the remaining accounts; and that the title so perfected was good as against the supervening bankruptcy. Accordingly, the District Court ordered that, to the extent of the balance remaining unpaid on his loans, there be paid Ratner all collections made from accounts enumerated in any of the lists delivered to Ratner; and that the cross-petition of Benedict be denied. There was no finding of fraud in fact. On appeal, the Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the order.
The Hub Carpet Company was, on May 23, a mercantile concern doing business in New York City and proposing to continue to do so. The assignment was made there to secure an existing loan of $15,000, and further advances not exceeding $15,000 which were in fact made July 1, 1921. It included all accounts receivable then outstanding and all which should thereafter accrue in the ordinary course of business. A list of the existing accounts was delivered at the time. Similar lists were to be delivered to Ratner on or about the 23d day of each succeeding month containing the accounts outstanding at such future dates. Those enumerated in each of the lists delivered prior to September, aggregated between $100,000 and $120,000. The receivables were to be collected.by the company. Ratner was given the right, at any time, to
Under the law of New York a transfer of property as security which reserves to the transferor the right to dispose of the same, or to apply the proceeds thereof,, for his own uses is, as to creditors, fraudulent in law and void.
If this rule applies, to the assignment of book accounts, the arrangement of May 23 was clearly void; and the equity in the future acquired accounts, which it would otherwise have created,
The nature of the rule is made clear by its limitations. Where the mortgagor of chattels agrees to apply the proceeds of their sale to the payment of the mortgage debt or to the purchase of other chattels which shall become subject to the lien, the mortgage is good as against creditors, if recorded.
The results which flow from reserving dominion inconsistent with the effective disposition of title must be the same whatever the nature of the property transferred. The doctrine which imputes fraud where full dominion is reserved must apply to assignments of accounts although the doctrine of ostensible ownership does not. There must also be-the same distinction as to degrees of dominion. . Thus, although. an agreement that the assignor of accounts shall collect them and pay the proceeds to the assignee will not invalidate the assignment which it accompanies,
In the case at bar, the arrangement for the unfettered use by the company of the proceeds of the accounts pre
Stackhouse v. Holden,
Reversed.
Notes
Williams v. Ingersoll,
Griswold v. Sheldon,
Edgell v. Hart,
Russell v. Wynne,
Southard v. Benner,
Zartman v. First National Bank,
Zartman v. First National Bank,
Russell v. Winne, 37 N. Y. 591; Southard v. Benner,
Potts v. Hart,
Russell v. Winne, 37 N. Y. 591, 593; In re Leslie-Judge Co.,
Potts v. Hart,
Field v. Mayor, etc. of New York,
Smith v. Acker,
Williams v. Ingersoll,
Niles v. Mathusa,
Conkling v. Shelley,
See note 18, infra.
Young v. Upson,
Compare Mechanics’ Bank v. Ernst,
Schaupp v. Miller,
Mandeville v. Avery,
It was cited in Young v. Upson,
