99 F. 390 | N.D. Tex. | 1900
At the request of A. Harrington, bankrupt, F. B. Dillard, referee, certifies to the court the question as to whether or not the brick storehouse located on the north end of lot Ho. 8 in block Ho. 1, O. T. P., of Sherman, Tex., is exempt to the bankrupt, as his business homestead, under the exemption laws of the state of Texas. The bankrupt, in his schedule of exempt property, claims lot 8 in block 1, and all the buildings thereon, as being exempt to him as his family residence and business homestead. Ho question was made by the trustee in bankruptcy as to the exempt character of all of the buildings on said lot, save and except as to the brick storehouse. He claimed that this brick storehouse was not exempt, and passed to the trustee as a part of the estate of the bankrupt, to be reduced to money and distributed among his creditors. The referee heard the evidence upon this issue, and resolved the question in favor of the trustee; holding that the brick storehouse was not exempt to the bankrupt as his place of business, and that the title passed to the trustee as of the date of the adjudication in bankruptcy. The evidence taken upon the trial of that issue is before me, and I quote from it. A. Harrington, the bankrupt, in the course of his examination, testified as follows:
' In response to the question, “In regard to carrying on your business in future, suppose you are unable to secure material and goods to carry on your business as you carried it on prior to your petition in bankruptcy, what-would you do with the building then?” the bankrupt answered:
“Well, sir, I would simply use it for this purpose: I have .the contract with the" county to make pauper coffins, and, as I am a cabinetmaker by trade, I would have a cabinet shop in the rear of the building. Of course, I have to make a living, and will have to do what I can with the cabinet and undertaker’s, business. I started in life as a cabinetmaker, and added the undertaker’s business to it. If I could not carry on the undertaker’s business as I did, I would do as much in that Une as I could. It would require the biggest portion of the building for storage and work. It would take about all the building to carry on the business. In carrying on, the business I have just described, it would be necessary to make a display of my goods, and some space would be necessary. "It would be necessary to use the greater portion of the building, and I would do it. I don’t see how I could make a living for myself and family unless I could get up a cabinet business and carry on a branch of the undertaker’s business. * * * I had very small means when I started in the undertaker’s business. The first means I had was very hard work, and got little for making a coffin. I had about ten dollars. I could carry' on the undertaker’s business without any means in my own possession. It would take a very small means to cárry it on. I think I made a coffin the other day for about four dollars,- — about the cheapest thing I could put up. I went and got lumber and made it, and I think -it cost me about four dollars to do it. I could carry on some business with five or six dollars, s- * * xhe shop back of the brick building was moved there a year ago, or something like it. The woodwork has not always been done in the shop. After the coffins were made and put together they were brought in the end. of -the brick house, and there stained and got ready for use. I think I stated .that, the outside was all done in the shop, but that would not include the whole thing. There was this to do, and which I always did do, after making the coffins: After making the coffin in the shop, as soon as it was done and thoroughly finished it would be stained and varnished, and set back until I wanted, to use it. I have one setting there now [meaning in the rear end of the brick house]. There is not room enough in the shop to do all the work. I have not been doing any cabinet work lately, except picture-framing etc. If I ever return to business, there would not be room enough in the shop. I would not try it.”
'Charles Crenshaw, Esq., attorney at law, testified, in part, as follows:
“Mr. Harrington’s petition in bankruptcy was prepared by me about two or three weeks and a half before it was filed. It was held by me, with instructions from Mr. Harrington to see if a compromise- could not be effected with his creditors. * * * The petition was then mailed by me on Saturday, at 31 o’clock. After I mailed the petition to the United States clerk at Paris, I went to Mr. Harrington’s place of business, and told him to hold open until liis usual hofir of six, and not to open or Monday morning; that the clerk would' receive the petition either on Sunday or Monday, and after it was filed he must not sell any goods, and to keep his store closed until the petition came back to Judge Dillard. On Tuesday of the following week I saw Judge Dillard,*393 and learned that ihe petition had not been returned; and on the next day (Wednesday) I met .Judge Dillard, and he told me that he liad the petition. Judge Dills was ai>pointed receiver on tlie next day, is my recollection, and Harrington was instructed to turn over the lcey to Mr. Dills, the house remain* ing closed that week.” ,
For many years before and at the time of the preparation of Mr, Harrington’s petition in bankruptcy, he had been an undertaker and embalmer. Starting with a capital of §10 and his own skill and energy, he had,built up, through years of industry, quite a large undertaking business in the. city of Sherman. -Before his bankruptcy his place of business consisted of a brick storehouse and a, small wooden shop in the roar. He had Ms stock of coffins in the brick storehouse, and used the shop in making cheaper grades of coffins, which, after being fashioned, were placed in the bride storehouse, and there stained and varnished, and held for use and disposition. He had, according to Ms testimony, furnished coffins for over (>,000 persons since becoming an undertaker. The door of his business house was closed by direction of his attorney at the time his petition in bankruptcy was mailed to the clerk of the court, at Paris! for filing. From that moment he held the stock of goods in Ms store, together with his other assets, outside of his exemptions, as a fund to be distributed among his creditors.
The trustee, in his contention that títere was an abandonment of the business homestead which defeated the right to its exemption, relies largely upon the decision of the supreme court of Texas in the case of Tackaberry v. Bank, 85 Tex. 488, 22 S. W. 151, 299. In that; case Mrs. Taekaberry made a general assignment for the benefit of her creditors. Her stock of goods and the storehouse in which she was conducting a general merchandise business passed to the assignee, who sold the storehouse to the City National Bank of Ft. Worth. Mrs. Taekaberry brought suit in trespass to try title against the bank, seeking to recover the storehouse and lot on which it stood, on the ground that it was her business .homestead, The supreme court, under the facts of that case, held that there had been an abandonment of the business homestead, and that she could not recover it. The record in that case, so far as it is contained in the statement of the case and the opinion of the court, does not disclose any evidence of intention on the part of Mrs. Taekaberry either to continue or to resume her business in the place she was conducting it at the time she made her general .assignment for the benefit of creditors. Chief Justice Stayton, in the course of his opinion in that case, says:
‘•Cessation ol‘ business, ilie pursuit of wliieli gives ilie exemption, lias practically tlie same relation to the right to have the exemption continue as has the removal of the family from the home; and in these cases the intention with which the removal of the family or cessation of business is made determines the further right to exemption. It has been held in several cases that the making- by an insolvent of a general assignment for the benefit of his erodilorw does not of itself defeat his right to have exemption of his place of business continue: but it never lias been held that tlie exemption would continue if at the time the assignment was made there was no intention to continue on the premises tlie former business, or to pursue some other of character such as to give exemption.”
“It is not like a ease in which a mechanic, having a shop and tools with which he carries on his business, makes an assignment in general terms conveying all his property except such as is exempt from forced sale. In that case everything owned and necessary for the business is excepted, while in this and like cases all the personal property necessary to the existence of the business, it must be conceded, passed, and was, intended to pass, by the assignment. The business was practically destroyed by tlie conveyance of the things necessary to its existence, and the same inferences as to discontinuance of business ought to be drawn in the two cases, solely from the fact that an assignment Was made. If it were shown that the business, however, was carried on until the very moment the deed became operative, we do not see that, upon principle, the result would he different; for all persons making such conveyances do so with the knowledge that the act, in its consummation, destroys the business, and must be held to have contemplated that result. Thus is furnished one of the facts on which abandonment must depend.”
The undertaker’s business, as defined and explained by Mr. Harrington, and as carried on by him, involved more than the mere purchase, display, and sale of coffins in his place of business at Sherman. In his shop he had the tools and instruments necessary for the making of coffins, and boxes within which to place coffins before they were lowered into the graves. He also had embalming instruments which he used in treating and preserving bodies of the dead before interment. The filing of his petition in bankruptcy, while it deprived him of the stock in trade that filled his place of business, did not and could not entirely destroy Ms business, and he did not contemplate such a result. Since Ms adjudication in bankruptcy, and since the door of his business house has been closed upon Mm, he has carried on the business and occupation of an undertaker. He has made several coffins for the pauper dead of Gray-son county. He has left to him his tools and his own skill, and raw material for coffins is fortunately within his reach. . It is therefore demonstrated that his business was not destroyed by the conveyance of Ms stock of coffins in the storehouse, because the things necessary to the existence of Ms business still belong to and subsist in Mm, and cannot be taken away by the filing of a voluntary petition in bankruptcy. It is not for the court to say that the little shop in the rear of' the brick storehouse affords reasonably sufficient accommodations for Mr. Harrington to prosecute the calling of an undertaker and embalmer in, now; for he has prosecuted that calling for many years in the brick storehouse, and the calling is still Ms, and he is still prosecuting it, and the law provides that the business homestead shall be exempt and saved to a man and Ms family in the time of their need. It may be that, while Mr. Harrington occupies and uses the brick building as an undertaker and embalmer, it will never again contain the assortment of coffins it once contained, because he is old and Ms energies are waning; but, so long