November 15, 1894, the Heyn Photo-Supply Company, a corporation organized under the laws of this state, and being hopelessly insolvent, executed and delivered chattel mortgages as folhyws: Regina Bendit, $1,500; Omaha National Bank, $500; American National Bank, $400; Oowin & McHugh, $700; A. M. Collins Manufacturing Company, $1,294.32; Herf & Frisch Chemical Company, $424.80; Bausch-Lamb. Optical Company, $438.90; Western Collodion Company, $436.11; E. & IT. T. Anthony, $871.78; American Aristotype Company, $839.87; J. H. Smith & Co., $258.30. The mortgages were given priority in the order given above, On the same day the Heyn
It is suggested,in the brief of appellees that appellants are not in a position to assail the decree of the trial court, because they consented to the order of distribution entered in this court. We do not think so. The parties stipulated that such order should be without prejudice to the rights of any of the litigants, and the order thus entered, in express terms, so provides. After the rendition of the decree in the cause this court ruled that, in the absence of fraud, an insolvent corporation might prefer one or more of its creditors to the exclusion of others. (Shaw v. Robinson, 5.0 Neb. 403; Wallachs v. Robinson, 50 Neb. 469.) The mortgages given by the Heyn Photo-Supply Company were to secure bona fide debts; therefore the trial court erred in canceling the same. The several mortgagees were entitled to the proceeds arising from the sale of the mortgaged chattels in the order of the priority of the liens. As Sabina Heyn was a director, secretary, and treasurer of the Heyn Photo-Supply Com.pany, the corporation had no right to create a preference, as it did, by assigning to her the book accounts. Such assignment was illegal and void, and the district court did not err in so adjudicating. (Ingwersen v. Edgecombe, 42 Neb. 740; Tillson v. Downing, 45 Neb. 549; Campbell Printing Press & Mfg. Co. v. Harder, 50 Neb. 289.)
The next argument is that no receiver should have been appointed in the case. Counsel for plaintiffs and appellees insist that this question is not properly before the court for review, for the reason the order appointing a receiver was made more than six months before the appeal was perfected by the filing of the transcript with the clerk of this court. This last contention will be noticed first. Section 275 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides, inter alia, “all orders appointing receivers, giv»
Decree accordingly.