48 Neb. 812 | Neb. | 1896
In 1891 and the early part of 1892 a partnership known as C. (1. Sprague & Co. was engaged in buying corn. A portion of its business was conducted at Holdrege. It became, indebted to F. B. Kingsley & Co., bankers doing-business at Minden, in a large sum of money, and on the 17th. of February, 1892, executed to F. R. Kingsley, a member of the firm of bankers, a bill of sale of all corn in store owned by Sprague ■& Co., in the city of Holdrege, describing the corn as consisting of about 1,300 bushels, and then situated in a certain building particularly described. The bill of sale was executed at Minden and an agent of Kingsley & Co. went immediately to Holdrege, where. Sprague & Co.’s agent made, on the night of the 17th, a constructive, if not an actual, delivery of the corn. The agent of Sprague & Co., whose name is Scranton,
We think the verdict was not sustained by the evidence, a question raised by proper assignments of error. The evidence is uncontradicted that there was an actual transfer from Sprague & Co. to Kingsley. The petition alleges an absolute sale, and the evidence tends to support this averment. It may have been intended as a mortgage, but no question is raised on the ground of a variance, and whether the transaction was a sale or mortgage it was, in either event, binding as between the parties. Considered as a sale, whether or not there had been an actual delivery to Kingsley, there was a sufficient memorandum to satisfy the statute of frauds.. The plaintiff therefore made out a prima facie case and was entitled to a verdict unless the defendants showed a better title, or established a right to impeach the conveyance. The claim of the intervenors was founded upon the fact that each of them had sold corn to Sprague & Co., a portion of which had not been paid for. Their contention is that their contracts with Sprague & Co. were for payment on delivery of the com, and that Sprague & Co. not having paid on delivery, the title did not pass. It is
It is contended that as a part of the contract whereby the transfer was made by Sprague & Co. to Kingsley, Kingsley promised Sprague & Co. to pay for the corn which had been delivered and which Sprague & Co. had not paid for, and there is evidence tending to support that contention; but it is wholly irrelevant to the issues in this case. If Kingsley & Co., or Kingsley, had made
Another contention is that the transfer from Sprague to Kingsley was fraudulent. There is no evidence that it was made with any intention on the part of Sprague & Co. to hinder, delay, or defraud their creditors, and indeed the defendants do not contend that any such intention existed. Even if the transaction were fraudulent in that manner, they have not established any lien as creditors which would enable them to take advantage of the fact. The argument is, however, that there was an agreement whereby Kingsley & Co. were not only to pay Sprague & Co.’s debts as a portion of the consideration, but they were not to take possession of the corn and they were to permit Sprague & Co. to continue the business. It is contended that their subsequent acts showed that they did not at the time intend to perform these agreements. The legal inference from these facts, if they existed, is that Sprague & Co. have a right of action against Kingsley & Co. for their breach of the contract, or perhaps, if they should so elect, a right to rescind; but the defendants are on this state of facts again confronted with the difficulty that they have no lien which permits them to set up the rights of Sprague & Co. as against the plaintiff. The election to rescind would belong to Sprague & Co., and not to unsecured simple contract creditors, in the absence of proper legal proceedings to assert their rights as creditors. In other words, whether there was fraud such as to avoid the transaction
There are other assignments of error based on the facts that the intervenors asserted a common claim and proved several claims, if any; that the verdict was in favor of all the defendants for the total of the sums due each; that the judgment was not in the alternative, as the law requires, and was entered on behalf of only three of the defendants instead of according to the verdict on behalf of all. We deem it unnecessary, however, in view of the conclusion reached as to the sufficiency of the evidence, to consider these assignments.
Beversed and remanded.