59 Wis. 403 | Wis. | 1884
The regularity oh the proceedings on the attachment was not impeached upon the trial, nor in this court; and it is not claimed by the appellant that there was any error committed by the learned circuit judge in directing a judgment for the defendant if it shall be held by this court that the assignment to Haben was void for any reason,— except that they claim that if the assignment was void only because a proper inventory was not filed within ten days after the delivery of the assignment, as required by sec. 1697, R. S., then the attachment proceedings were premature, and for that reason the plaintiff was entitled to a verdict.
The learned counsel for the respondent takes several exceptions in this court to the validity of .the assignment itself for matters appearing upon the face thereof. The assignment is peculiar, but we are unable to say that there is anything appearing on its face which should render it void. The facts in regard to the assignor appear to be these: She was doing business as a merchant in the city of Oshkosh under the name of “ Bigger & Co.,” but the words “ Bigger & Co.” meant Jane E. Bigger. She had no partner, but used a name indicating a partnership for purposes known to herself only. In the assignment she kept up this partnership style, and first makes an assignment of all her property held
“ Fifth. And whereas the said first part is justly indebted to sundry persons in .divers and sundry sums of money, and is unable to pay the same with punctuality in full, in order to have the first part’s assets, property, and effects, aside from said firm, property of Bigger & Co. aforesaid, applied in and towards the payment of said debts, has concluded to execute these presents.
“ Sixth. The said first, in consideration of the premises, and of the sum of one dollar to the first part paid by the said second part, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, .has granted, bargained, sold, assigned, delivered over, and conveyed, and by these presents does grant, bargain, sell, assign, deliver over, and convey unto the said second part, and the second part’s successors or assigns, all and singular, the interests, estate, property, and effects, real, personal, and mixed, of every kind, nature, and description, and wheresoever the same may be situated, of the said first part, which is held and owned by the said first part, aside and other than belonging, applicable to the firm of Bigger & Co., except such property as, by law, is exempt from execution, or otherwise, for the payment of debts; to have and to hold the same and every part and parcel thereof, with the appurtenances, to the said second part, and the second part’s successors and assigns in trust, nevertheless, to and for the following uses and purposes.
“ Seventh. The said second part shall forthwith take possession of all and singular the estate, property, interests, and effects, hereby lastly aiaove assigned, transferred, and conveyed, and set over, or intended so to be, and shall with all reasonable diligence sell and dispose of the same, and convert the same into money, and with all reasonable diligence
By these extracts from the assignment it is apparent that the assignor claimed to have assets other than those which she described as belonging to the firm of “ Bigger & Co.,” and that she intended to make an assignment of such other assets to the assignee for the benefit of her creditors as well as those she owned as “Bigger & Co.” Her idea undoubtedly was that the property she owned as a merchant doing business as “Bigger & Co.” was a class of property different from that which she had acquired and owned as Jane E. Bigger; and possibly the attorney who drew the assignment might have supposed there was an essential difference in the two kinds of property so held by her which it would be right and proper to preserve in making the assignment, although it was all in fact owned by Jane E. Bigger. Whether there was any valid reason for making the distinction which was made by the assignment it is quite unnecessary to decide, as the assignment, as made in the form made, was clearly sufficient to pass to the assignee all her assets, however owned or held by her, and it cannot be said, therefore, that it appears on the face of the assignment that any of the assets of the assignor were intended to be or were in fact reserved to her. All the property owned by Jane E. Bigger, except such as was exempt by law, clearly passed by the assignment to the assignee. We see nothing in the preferences given in the assignment which could render it void. Jane E. Bigger being the same person in fact as “Bigger & Co.,” all her debts were the individual debts of Jane E. Bigger, and whether the claims which she preferred are such as were contracted in the name of Jane E. Bigger, or “ Bigger & Co.,” cannot change that fact, nor can the fact that she designated in her assignment a part of her assets as belonging to “ Bigger & Co.,” and a part to Jane E. Bigger, change
We see no reason for holding the assignment void for anything appearing on its face. It is not contended that it was void for any other reasons appearing in the proceedings, except it is claimed there was no sufficient list of creditors or inventory of assets made and filed within ten days after the assignment, as required by sec. 1697, E. S. This section reads as follows: “Within ten days after the execution of the assignment, the assignor shall also make and file in the office of said clerk a correct inventory of his assets and a list of his creditors, stating the place of residence of each such creditor and the amount due to each, which inventory and list shall each be verified by his oath, and have affixed the certificate of the assignee that the same is correct according to his best knowledge and belief; and a failure to make and file such inventory and list shall render such assignment void, but no mistake therein shall invalidate such assignment or affect the right of any creditor.”
The construction which should be given to this section has been considered by the court in two cases: Farwell v. Gundry, 52 Wis., 268; and Steinlein v. Halstead, 52 Wis., 289. In the first case it was held that the omission to include in the inventory filed a piece of real estate owned by the assignor, which at the time of making the inventory the assignor supposed was a part of his homestead, and therefore exempt from execution, although a mistake of law was a mistake within the meaning of the section; and, the proofs showing that the assignor acted in good faith in withholding the same from the inventory, the omission did not avoid the
The inventory filed in the case at bar was filed within the ten days as required by law. It-was headed as follows: “Inventory of the goods in the matter of the voluntary assignment of Jane E. Bigger, for benefit of her creditors;” and had attached to it when it was filed the affidavit of Jane E. Bigger, as follows, viz.:
“State of Wisconsin, Winnebago County — ssJane E. Bigger being duly sworn, on her oath deposes and says that the annexed inventory is true and correct of all the assets of the firm of Bigger & Co. of which Jane E. Bigger is the sole member of the firm of Bigger & Co., to the best of her knowledge and belief. JaNE E. Biggbe.
“Subscribed and sworn to before me this 4th day of March, A. E. 1882.
“War. F. GtbueNEwald, Notary Public, Wis.”
On examining the inventory itself we find that it is such
It is urged with great force on the part of the learned counsel for the respondent that this inventory, as explained and verified by the oath of the assignor, shows that it is simply an inventory of that part of the assignor’s property which she designates in her assignment as the property belonging to her as the sole member of the firm of Bigger & Co., and which in her assignment she first assigns to her assignee, Haben, and that there is no inventory in fact of that part of her property which is covered by the second part of the assignment, and which she designates as “ assets, property, and effects aside from said property of Bigger & Co., aforesaid.” We are unable to see any way of escaping the force of this argument. It is no answer to say that Bigger & Co. is the same as Jane E. Bigger, and that when she states that the inventory contains all the assets of Bigger & Co., she states they are all the assets of Jane E. Bigger. Her assignment raises a presmnption, at least, that she has assets other than those which she designates as those of Bigger & Co. When, therefore, she affirms that the inventory contains all the assets of Bigger & Co. she clearly negatives the idea that it contains any assets' belonging to her as ■Jane E. Bigger, within the meaning of the assignment. It seems to us impossible to construe this inventory and affidavit in connection with the assignment and come to any other conclusion than that the inventory is not a correct inventory of the assets of Jane E. Bigger, the assignor. Had the affidavit stated that the inventory was a correct inventory of all the assets of Jafte E. Bigger, there would have been great foroe in the argument that it must be presumed to contain all her assets, including both classes designated in the assignment, for the reason that both classes of assets belong to JaneE. Bigger in fact; but when she declares that
It is urged by the appellant that we should presume the inventory contained a correct statement of all the assets until the contrary appears. We think that is the true rule; but in this case, as we understand the assignment and the verified inventory, it doek appear, prima facie at least, that it does not contain all the assets.
Again, it is said that we ought to sustain the proceedings on the ground that the verification is a mistake on the part of the assignor. We should be inclined to hold that if it appeared affirmatively that the inventory was in fact a correct inventory of all the assets of the assignor, the assignment would not be rendered void by a mistake in the affidavit. We do not, however, decide that point. It is a sufficient answer to that argument that there was no evidence offered on the trial tending to show that the inventory was in fact a correct inventory of all her assets.
We can come to no-other conclusion than that the title of
The cases cited by the learned counsel for the appellant from Minnesota — Kingman v. Barton, 24 Minn., 295; Swart v. Thomas, 26 Minn., 141 — have but little bearing upon the construction of our statute, as by an examination of the statutes of that state it will be seen that, although there is a provision requiring the assignee to make and file an inventory, etc., within ten days after the assignment, there is no declaration in the statutes of that state that the failure to do so shall render the assignment void. See Gen. St. Minn. 1878, ch. 41, sec. 24. A conclusion directly contrary to the decisions in Minnesota was arrived at by the court of appeals of the state of New York upon a statute in all respects like the statute of Minnesota. Juliand v. Rathbone, 39 N. Y., 369; Brennan v. Willson, 71 N. Y., 502. See ch. 348, Laws of N. Y. 1860. Under our statute there is no room for construction, as it expressly declares the failure to make and file a correct inventory shall render the assignment void.
It appearing affirmatively from the evidence introduced on the trial in this action that the assignor failed to make and file a correct inventory of her assets within ten days after the execution of the assignment, and there being no evidence that such failure happened through or by the mistake of the, assignor, the assignment became void, and the title of the assignee was divested before the commencement
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.