On the thirteenth day of March, 1884, E. N. Stone & Cо., by E. N. Stone, a member of the firm, executed to J. M. Robinson Sc Co., an instrument conveying to them a stock of goods and authorizing them to sell the property
Appellees brought this suit against the appellant to recover the value of the property so taken, and annexed a copy of the conveyance to their petition and made it a part thereof. Appellant demurred to the petition on the ground that the cоnveyance was void upon its face and conveyed no right to appellees to the property as against the creditors of Stone & Co. The demurrer was ovеrruled and the ruling of the court excepted to and is now assigned as error.
The question of the validity of the instrument under which appellees claim,' is also raised by an assignment complaining of the judgment of the court, and is the only serious question in the case. It is contended on behalf of appellees, that the instrument is a mortgage and not an assignmеnt; but we think it can not be so held. A mortgage being merely intended as a security for debt, gives, under our system at least, merely a lien upon the property, with or without a power of sаle, leaves an equity of redemption in the mortgagor, and the surplus, if any, after the payment of the debt, within the reach of his creditors by-due process of law. An assignment, 01 he other hand, conveys to the assignee the entire estate of the assignor i.i the property to be disposed of y the trustee in such manner as the assignor may. have lawfully direсted. The mortgagor may vacate the mortgage at any time by a payment of the debt; but by an assignment the property passes beyond the control of' the assignor in any еvent. It is true that should a surplus remain after paying the debt, a trust would result in favor of the assignor and the assignee would hold it for his benefit. But this is a result not contemplated by these convеyances. Tested by this distinction the conveyance under consideration is not a mortgage.
If it had provided that upon the payment of the debt of appellees, it should be void, or had provided that after a sale of a sufficiency of the property to pay that debt, the balance should be returned to the debtors, the construction claimed by appellees would be correct. But the conveyance contains no condition of
But treаting the instrument as an assignment, the question recurs : Is it void upon its face? It is clearly not in compliance with the act of March 24, 1879, in reference to assignments for the benefit of creditors, and the act of April 7, 1883, amendatory thereof. It does not convey all the property of the assignors nor is it accompanied by the» inventory provided for in the second section of the original act. These, however, do not render it void. (See secs. 1 and 20.) And it has been held by this court "that the attempt to give preferences, thоugh of no effect under the act, does not invalidate the assignment itself. (Fant v. Elsbury, ante, page 1.) The amendatory law, however, requires that ‘the assignee shall be a resident of the State (Laws 1883, page 46), and the assignees in this case are shown by the face of the conveyance to be residents of the State of Kentucky. Whether or not this would аvoid an assignment to which the statute applies is a question we are not called upon to decide. The act by its terms relates only to assignments by an insolvent debtor, or mаde in contemplation of insolvency. (See sec. 1; Blum v. Welborne,
It is held that a solvent debtor may make an assignment for the benefit of his creditors (Ogden v. Peters,
It is generally held that one partner can not, without the authority or consent of his co-partner, make a general assignment. . An exception is recognized when one partner has the entire management of the business, or the other is absent, so as to be beyond the reach of prompt communication. In this case it appears that the partner who did not sign was absent from thе State at the time of the transaction. The power of one partner, however, to mortgage the firm property ór to sell it for the payment of the partnership dеbts, must be conceded. He can also transfer it directly to a partnership creditor in discharge of the obligation. Ho reason is seen, therefore, why one, his partnеr being absent and the payment of a partnership debt being pressed, may not assign a part of the firm assets to pay the particular debt, and provide at the same timе for the distribution among the other creditors of any surplus of the assigned property, which may remain after the payment of the preferred obligation. So far as the reсord discloses, the absent partner has acquiesced in the assignment under consideration.
In regard to the fourth assignment of error, we will say, that
There is no assignment of error which submits the propositiоn that the evidence puts a different aspect upon the instrument in controversy from that shown upon its face. We are not called upon, therefore, to consider it in the light of the parol testimony which was adduced upon the trial.
We find no error in the judgment and it is affirmed.
Affirmed.
