— Thе Lawtons (defendants), who conducted a billiard and pool ball business in Joplin, Mo., sold it to F. W. Evans and G. L. McCullough (interpleaders), the respondents herein. The plaintiff (appellant) was a creditor of the Lawtons, who were indebted to it at the time of the sale. There was no attempt by either defendant or the interpleadеrs to comply with the provisions of the “Bulk Sales Law” of Missouri enacted in 1913 (Sess. Laws 1913, p. 163.) Within ninety days after the sale the plaintiff brought this suit against the Lawtons for the debt and sued out a writ of attachment which was levied on the billiard and pool tables and fixtures and equipment — that is, on the tables, cues, racks, balls, chairs, and usual equipment of а billiard hall, which levy included a small stock of cigars and the show case in which the cigars were displayed. It was shown that the license to run the billiard hall and the licensе to sell the cigars were independent and separate. The court heard the evidence and found for the interplead-ers except as to the cigars and show case. No complaint of this ruling as to the cigars and show case is made by the respondents.
Counsel on both sides have commendably narrowed thе question actually for decision by this court to the one proposition, to-wit: Does the sale of a billiard and pool hall business, including the tables, cues, racks, bаlls, chairs and usual equipment, fixtures and paraphernalia going with a billiard and pool hall, fall with
The title of the act reads: “An act to regulate the sale, trade or other disposition of the major part in value or the whole of a stock of merchandise, cr merchandise, fixtures and equipment, or equipment pertaining to the vendor’s business, otherwise than in the ordinary course of trade and the regular prosecution, of the vendor’s business, . . .
Section 1 of the act reads, in part, as follows: “The sale, trade or other disposition of the major part in value or the whole of a stock of merchandise, or merchandise, fixtures and equipment, or equipment pertaining to the vendor’s business, otherwise than in the ordinary course of trade and in the regular prosecution of the vendor’s business, whether in one or more parcels or to one or more persons, provided the transfer is all part of substantially one transaction or proceeding or occurs substantially at one time, shall bе fraudulent and void as against all creditors of the vendor, unless the vendee . . etc.
We hold that this law is applicable only to sales made by those carrying on a mercantile business — that is, merchants who buy goods, wares and merchandise as a business for the purpose of re-selling, and that the act is broad enough to covеr the goods and all fixtures and equipment pertaining to the vendor’s business which were incident to and used in connection with the sale of the goods. As we held in the casе of Joplin Supply Co. v. Smith,
The bulk sales law of Missouri is similiar to and intended to cover the same scope and purposes as the acts of other States relating to this subject, and while perhaps no two of the acts are drawn in exactly the same language and no two of them include all the same property yet all are designed to regulate the sale of the merchandise of a merchant in bulk, and the act of Missouri has included in the regulation such property as the vendor or merchant or trader owns and uses in connection with and incident to the sale of his goods, wares and merchandise. We cite the following cases as sustaining the construction we have placed on the act under consideration, and, as before stated, while it may be said that the acts under which these cases were dеcided were not as broad, perhaps, or do not include all that the Missouri act includes, yet the general purpose of the acts is the same and the eases are applicable. [Neas v. Borches (Tenn.),
Our attention has been called to the case of W. B. Parham & Co. v. Potts-Thompson Liquor Co. (Ga.),
Under the Michigan act, which covers the sale, transfer or assignment in bulk of а stock of merchandise, or merchandise and fixtures pertaining to the conducting of such business, it was held that the sale or transfer of horses, wagons, harness, coal bags, etc., used in the coal business, where there was no coal or merchandise sold, did not fall within the-bulk sales law. [Bowen v. Quigley,
In the April, 1918, number of the St. Louis Law Review (Vol. III, No. 1, p. 39), the question under
The Supreme Court of Montana in the case of Ferrat v. Adamson,
