3 Colo. App. 151 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the'Court.
By the sale of some chattels Joshua Stone became, in the winter of 1889, a creditor of Mrs. E. M. Freeman, who lived in Holyoke, Colorado. This debt afterwards became the property of the plaintiff in error, James Donovan, who brought this suit to recover it, and sued out a writ of attachment to
That the sale was void under our statute of frauds as against creditors or Iona fide purchasers for value is not open to question. The statute has been repeatedly construed, and it is universally held that to make a sale valid as against creditors or purchasers the transfer of possession must be complete, and the purchaser’s control of the property must be open and notorious, and such as to advise the world of the change in the title. It has been said: “ the vendee must take the actual possession, and the possession must be open, notorious and unequivocal, such as to apprise the community, or those who are accustomed to deal with the party, that the goods have changed hands, and that the title has passed out of the seller and into the purchaser. This must be determined by
Weighed and considered in the light of the principle declared in these cases, the evidence did not justify a finding in favor of the intervenor. There was no attempt to alter the apparefat relation of the parties, or to change the possession and control of the property. If the question of good faith were permitted to enter into the determination of the question, very grave doubts would arise whether the transaction was a legitimate transfer of property, or was an attempt to hinder creditors in the collection of their just claims against the original proprietor. Whatever may have been the motive, the transaction cannot stand as against the attaching creditor.
It was somewhat seriously contended in argument that the court erred in treating the paper filed by the intervenor as an affidavit under the statute entitling him to be heard in the assertion of his claim of title. . There is a good deal of doubt whether the affidavit was in the prescribed form. The affiant failed to point out, or specify, or describe, the property to which he claimed title, and there was nothing in it which could be considered to be even a substantial compliance with this statutory requisite. It is unnecessary to determine whether it might be held sufficient after judgment to uphold the recovery, since on the main question presented the finding is against the intervenor and he can never n cover under his evidence.
For the error committed by the court in. adjudging the title to be in the intervenor as against the attaching creditor, this judgment must be reversed.
Reversed.