15 A.2d 589 | Vt. | 1940
This is a proceeding in equity to set aside two conveyances as being preferential and in fraud of the creditors of Arthur C. Fitzpatrick, instituted by the trustee of his bankrupt estate. One of these, a sale of certain personal property to the defendant Ford M. Thomas, made three days before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, is conceded to have been fraudulent and we need pay no further attention to it. As to the defendant Fitts, these material facts have been found by the *262 Chancellor: — On April 27, 1937, Fitzpatrick executed and delivered a chattel mortgage to the defendant William F. Fitts, covering certain live stock and farming equipment, situated on Fitzpatrick's farm in the town of New Haven. Fitzpatrick resided in Middlebury and Fitts in New Haven. The mortgage was recorded in the town clerk's office in New Haven. On November 1, 1937, Fitzpatrick leased the farm, livestock and equipment to John Bromley for the term of five years from the 15th of the same month, and Bromley went into, and has since remained in, possession. On January 14th, 1938, knowing that Fitzpatrick was insolvent and was about to file a voluntary petition in bankruptcy, Fitts agreed with Bromley that so much of the leased personal property as was covered by the chattel mortgage and was in Bromley's possession should be held during the term of the lease by Bromley for the benefit of Fitts, and at the termination of the lease should be delivered to Fitts. Fitzpatrick was adjudicated a bankrupt on January 15, 1938.
After making the foregoing findings the Chancellor decreed that the chattel mortgage was void and of no effect as against the claims of the trustee in bankruptcy and enjoined Fitts from exercising any control over property covered thereby. Fitts has appealed to this Court.
There is no finding and no claim that the mortgage was given in fraud of Fitzpatrick's creditors, or that he parted with possession with intent to hinder, delay or defraud them and there is no presumption that this was so. Dunnett v. Shields andConant,
The only question is whether the agreement between Fitts and Bromley that the latter should hold the property for the benefit of Fitts and deliver it to him at the expiration of the lease constituted a change of possession sufficient to validate the mortgage as against the trustee in bankruptcy of Fitzpatrick.
The rule concerning change of possession is the same in the case of a chattel mortgage as in that of a sale, and what is deemed sufficient to make a sale good as against attaching creditors of the vendor also satisfies a statute such as P.L. 2660, requiring delivery to and retention by the mortgagee of property covered by an unrecorded mortgage. Duffy v. Charak,
Thus it is in the present case. Bromley, as lessee, was entitled to the exclusive possession during the continuance of the lease. His right was superior to that of the defendant Fitts under the latter's unrecorded mortgage. The notification by Fitts, and the agreement to hold the property for him and to deliver it to him at the expiration of the term were sufficient and more than sufficient to forestall the claims of the creditors of Fitzpatrick.
It is true that in the decisions that have been cited above the property was already in the hands of the tenant or bailee when the transfer was made, while here the mortgage antedated the lease. But this distinction is unimportant. Fitts had lost his right to immediate possession because Bromley's right had intervened. But he had not lost his right to the reversionary interest in the mortgaged property, and this was assured to him by the transaction with Bromley. No actual possession by him was legally possible, but there was such a change as the situation admitted and this was enough to validate the mortgage as against the trustee in bankruptcy of the mortgagor.
The decree, so far as it affects the sale to the defendantThomas, is affirmed; and so far as it affects the mortgage to thedefendant Fitts, it is reversed, and it is ordered, adjudged anddecreed that the injunction against him be and the same is herebydissolved, and the bill of complaint be dismissed as against himwith costs. *266