6 Colo. App. 438 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
The Strater-Thorp Drug Company carried on a wholesale drug and supply business and had several stores in different localities. One was located at Durango, and this suit is about a portion of the stock contained in that store. The court is considerably embarrassed in making a statement of facts, because it may appear to be a departure from the usual rule to accept the verdict of a jury as conclusive on all disputed questions. No such purpose is entertained nor so far as we can see shall we depart from it. The trouble proceeds from the circumstance that the jury were instructed on several hypotheses, and the general verdict which was rendered did not of necessity specifically settle some questions either one way or the other. The only matters about which there could be any sort of question relate to the time of the delivery of the mortgage, and to the circumstances of the transaction which the defendants claim to have been fraudulent. It is wholty unnecessary to state the contents of the record bearing on the question of the fraudulent character of the mortgage under which the plaintiffs claim. There is not a particle of testimony which would justify the jury in finding any fraud in the acts of the parties, and there is nothing from which the inference can be legitimately or legally drawn. There is no intention to conclude the question on the subsequent trial, if the parties conceive they are able to produce testimony tending to support this issue. It appears the Drug Company were largely indebted to the Colorado State Bank of Durango. The indebtedness was evidenced by several promissory notes. The Drug Company was the maker of some and the guarantor of others. When the bank became doubtful of the solvency of the company and
The appellants had no interest whatever in the notes otherwise than as representatives of the bank in which they were stockholders, and they held the naked legal title for the purpose of obtaining security and enforcing the payment of the loans. How long the negotiations had been carried on is uncertain. In a measure they culminated on Saturday, the 8th of July, 1893, when it was stipulated that the Drug Company should give chattel mortgages on the stock of goods in the three stores at Durango, Rico, and Silverton. In execution of the agreement the chattel mortgages were prepared and signed on Saturday evening, some time between seven ■and half past ten o’clock. While the parties had substantially agreed on the terms of the instruments, they were to be . submitted to a lawyer whose approval or acceptance seems to .have been necessary to the conclusion of the arrangement. The mortgages were signed in the bank, taken out by the mortgagors and delivered to a notary, who took the acknowl- . edgment and carried them to his office to affix his seal. On . the following day the mortgages were turned over to the attorney, Mr. Carpenter, who passed on their legal sufficiency . and approved them in form and terms. The record is not spe- . cific as to the exact time of the delivery of all the mortgáges.- . We are not concerned, however, with any but the one which • was on the stock in the Durango store. Concerning the delivery of this security there is neither doubt nor question. It was delivered to Kirkpatrick on Monday within a very few minutes of the time it was filed for record, which was one o’clock and fifteen minutes of the day. Of this matter there is no question and about it there can be no dispute. Nobody testified it was delivered before that time, nobody gave evi- . dence about its delivery except Kirkpatrick, who testified he ■ got it within a few minutes of the time it was filed for record. The mortgagees took possession of the store and the stock when this mortgage was first given to them. The whole dif
The chief difficulty found in the case springs from the circumstance that the court instructed the jury respecting divers matters which were not involved in the litigation. The court gave some twenty-five or thirty instructions and some of them must have misled the jury. Quite a number were inapplicable to the facts as proven, and there was nothing in the evidence which justified any statement of the law embraced in them. The volume and number precludes a specific review of what the court gave and what it refused, and we content ourselves with a general statement of the difficulties. The jury were told that the case was controlled by the statlte of frauds and perjuries and the general legislation on that ubject. In fact this had nothing whatever to do with it. There was no question of sale and delivery of possession,
The defendants made a vigorous effort to bring the case within the scope of the decisions in this state which hold a mortgage on a stock of goods, reserving the power of disposition to the mortgagor, to be invalid. There is no question concerning this law. An invalid mortgage of this description cannot be made good, even by the seizure of the goods prior to the levy of a writ at the instance of a creditor. In other words, it is the law of this jurisdiction that such a mortgage is invalid and cannot be aided by the acquisition of possession prior to the creditor’s attempt to levy his process on the goods. The present case is not brought within the limits of that doctrine. The jury were told the mortgage was valid in law, and if that were true, the time when possession was taken under the proof was an entirely unimportant consideration. We quite agree with the court. . The only trouble is the jury rendered a verdict for the defendants; and it might
There is nothing in the present record which necessitates the application of this well recognized doctrine. The validity of the mortgage was not at all affected by the delivery of some of the goods to McPhee & McGinnity in part satisfaction of their claim. There are two answers to the objection, either one of which entirely disposes of any difficulty in the matter. Since the mortgage was not delivered until Monday noon, the mortgagor had a perfect right in the meantime to dispose of any property in the store, either in payment of debts or by way of securing any outstanding obligations. The present suit does not raise any such question. Chapman and Kirkpatrick are not attempting to recover from McPhee & McGinnity the goods which were delivered to them by the Drug Company in part satisfaction of their debt, neither are they contending the mortgage to' have been an executed seeurity-at the time the goods were turned over. The defendants tendered an issue based on the alleged fraudulent character of the transaction, and alleged an attempt on the part of the Drug- Company, participated in by Chapman and Kirkpatrick, to hinder, delay and defraud their creditors.
The court erred in its instructions to the jury, and because of the errors which it committed in this direction, the case must be reversed and remanded.
Reversed.