9 Or. 266 | Or. | 1881
By the Court,
The first question to be considered arises upon the decision of the court below overruling appellants’ demurrer to the complaint. In addition to the facts contained in the foregoing statement, the complaint alleged an agreement and understanding between Haas and the appellants, at the time the chattel mortgage was executed, substantially as found by the referee. But appellants insist that in the case made by the complaint itself, the respondents had a plain, speedy and adequate remedy at law, and were therefore not entitled to bring a suit in equity. We think it unnecessary to determine
They acquired a specific lien on the property by the levy under their attachment, and could have maintained a suit in equity to have the fraudulent mortgage declared void as to their judgment, even though there had been no foreclosure or sale under it. And they would not have been under any necessity of first exhausting their legal remedy by an execution sale of the attached property, before proceeding in equity to impeach and remove the fraudulent incumbrance.
Equity will always lend its aid to remove fraudulent obstructions out of the way of legal process, and when it acquires jurisdiction for this purpose, will retain it until final and complete satisfaction has been obtained. And it is in equity only, that fraudulent liens on titles, which obstruct legal process, and render any proceeding under it hazardous and uncertain, can be removed, and the full benefit of the debtor’s effects realized in satisfaction of valid demands against him.
The fact of there having been a decree of foreclosure and sale under the fraudulent mortgage, will not alter the relations of the parties as to each other. Circuitous methods may, under some circumstances, prove effectual to conceal fraud from detection, but cannot protect it after discovery.
The appellants having obtained the proceeds of the attached property, with notice of the rights of the respondents, by selling it out from under the attachment, through the instrumentality of a mortgage lien and decree of foreclosure, fraudulent, and therefore invalid as to the respondents, as
It was suggested at the hearing that the respondents had an adequate remedy against the sheriff. But without conceding the correctness of this proposition — and it is distinctly opposed to our judgment — we think it immaterial in the determination of this case. We are fully satisfied that upon the facts stated in their complaint, they were entitled to bring this suit against the appellants, whether they did or did not have a remedy against the sheriff who held the attachment and made the sale.
We will next examine the objections urged by appellants to the decision of the lower court upon the demurrer of the respondents to the separate defenses set up in the answer. Under the law, as it stood, before the amendment of October 25, 1878, no order of sale of attached property was required. Tne Statute itself directed the application of such property upon the execution when it should be issued.
The amendment above referred to, however, provides that if property has been attached in the action, and has not been sold as perishable, or otherwise discharged from the attachment as provided by law, the court shall, when it renders judgment, order and adjudge that the property be sold to satisfy the plaintiffs’ demands, and that if execution issues thereon, the sheriff shall apply the property attached by him, or the proceeds thereof, upon such execution.
We recognize the fact that this amendment has effected a change here as to the property under attachment, when judgment in the action is rendered. The order of sale must be made as to such property when judgment is given, or it will be discharged from the attachment, and liberated from the attachment lien. The authorities cited by appellants’ counsel fully sustain this principle. (Wassen v. Cone, 86 Ill., 46;
But no order of sale is required where the attached property has been sold as perishable, or discharged from the attachment as provided by law, prior to the rendition of judgment; and it seems to us that under such conditions, such an order would be unnecessary and unmeaning. If the property has been sold or discharged from the attachment previous to the rendition of the judgment, there is nothing for the order of sale to operate on, and if there happen to be any proceeds in the sheriffs hands when the execution issues, the statute directs their application without any order of the court for that purpose. In the case at bar, the attached property had all been sold and effectually discharged from the attachment, as provided by law, through the agency of the appellants, before respondents recovered their judgment against Haas, and we do not think the equitable rights of the latter against the former were in any manner affected by the form of the judgment against Haas. As to the defense based upon the proceedings had on the affidavit filed by respondents with the clerk, little need be said. It was not in any sense a judicial proceeding, in which the rights of the parties to this suit could have been determined as against each other, and, in fact, the court did not undertake to determine any such rights. And it seems very clear that those proceedings can not by any possibility affect the determination in this suit. In our judgment neither of these defenses was sufficient, and the demurrer was properly sustained.
This brings us to the questions of fact. The mortgage does not, on its face, express any agreement with Haas that would render it fraudulent and invalid as to the respondents. But it has long been settled beyond the possibility of successful contradiction, that courts are not confined to a bare inspection of written instruments, when it is sought to impeach their execution on account of fraud. And in the class to which the case under consideration belongs, proof of a contempo
"We regard it as settled doctrine here, that an agreement of that character between the mortgagor and mortgagee, at the time the mortgage is given, renders the mortgage fraudulent and void as to other creditors of the mortgagor. (Orton v. Orton, 7 Or., 478; Jacobs v. McCalley, 9 Or., 52.)
As to the existence of such an agreement between the appellants and Haas, we think there is not much room to doubt that Haas was allowed to continue in possession of the mortgaged property, and keep his place of business open as usual, from the date of the execution of the chattel mortgage on June 2, 1879, until it was attached by respondents on July 7, 1879, with the full knowledge and consent of the appellants, is not denied. That the mortgage covered all his stock in trade, and that he continued to sell it off at retail during said period, with the knowledge and consent of the appellants, is not disputed. That he sold on credit as well as for cash, during this period, fully appears from the testimony. That he replenished his stock from time to time during this period, with the proceeds of such sales, and even patronized the appellants while so doing, is clearly proven.
Haas testifies that Mayer, one of the appellants, told him not to sell at wholesale, but at retail only, at the time the mortgage was executed. Mayer himself was a witness, and did not dispute this. On the contrary, he seems to concede that Haas was to sell at retail, but claims he was only to sell for cash, and not to sell at wholesale. His testimony also fairly justifies the inference that Haas was to use such portion of the proceeds of sales made after the execution of the mortgage as might be necessary to meet his own personal expenses incurred in conducting the business, and keep his stock replenished. And this was just what he evidently did with the
Here, then, we find Haas, after the execution of the mortgage to appellants, carrying on his business in the same manner as before; selling off the mortgaged stock in trade, and paying his own expenses, and keeping up his stock by fresh purchases out of the proceeds of such sales, rendering no account to the holders of the mortgage, and in reality under no more restraint than if it had not been in existence. And yet its obvious effect was to ward off his other creditors, and hinder and delay the collection of their demands against him, and the appellants must be presumed to have so intended. We have no hesitation in declaring that such an arrangement was a fraud upon the other creditors, and cannot be upheld.
We shall not discuss the testimony so far as it relates to the separate value of the stock of wines, liquors and cigars, as we are satisfied of the correctness of the findings of the court below on this point.
The decree of the lower court is erroneous in respect to the rate of interest allowed. Legal interest, not exceeding ten per cent, per annum, was all that could properly have been allowed.
The decree must be modified in accordance with these views.