27 Mo. App. 132 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
I. The first contention of appellants is that the trial court erred in overruling the motion to advance on the docket and first try the action to set aside the mortgage for fraud. The most that can be conceded to this contention is, that section 448, Revised Statutes, which authorizes the attaching creditors to maintain an action for. the purpose of setting aside a fraudulent conveyance, 'etc., where the suit is brought prior to the issue and determination of an interplea, the interpleader claiming title under the assailed instrument of conveyance, would obviate the necessity of a trial of the interplea; as the object of the statute is thus to determine the very issues arising on the inter-plea. The first action, therefore, would be another suit pending between the same parties on the same cause of action. By section 3515, Revised Statutes, concerning practice, this objection is made the ground of special demurrer. Section 3519 declares that, “When any of the matters enumerated in section 3515 do not appear on the face of the petition, the objection may be taken by answer. If no such objection be taken, either by demurrer or answer, the defendant shall be deemed to. have waived the same, excepting only the objection to the jurisdiction of the court over the subject matter of the action, and excepting the objection that the petition
II. The mortgage is not void on its face. As it was duly acknowledged and recorded, the fact that it might be construed possibly as contemplating that the mortgageors should remain in possession of the goods, would not vitiate it. Weber v. Armstrong, 70 Mo. 217. The fact that sales were made afterwards by the mortgageors, apparently in the usual course of business, raises simply a question of fact for the determination of the jury, as to whether it was so done pursuant to a secret understanding between the parties that the mortgageors should so sell to their own use. Notwithstanding they may have sold goods, and that such was the understanding between them and the mortgagees, that would not vitiate the mortgage, if the proceeds arising from such a sale were to be applied to the use of the mortgagees under the mortgage. Hewson v. Tootle, 72 Mo. 635.
The appellants had the full benefit of the law in the instructions given by the court, and more than the law requires. In fact it is quite apparent that the court tried the case on the theory, at plaintiffs’ insistence, that the mortgage was void on its face, and that, therefore, absolute, unqualified, and uninterrupted possession of the goods must be shown in the mortgagees, from the time of the execution of the mortgage up to the time of the attachment, otherwise the verdict must be for the plaintiffs. And this issue having been found for the interpleaders by the jury, it must eliminate from this case many of the criticisms and suggestions made at this bar touching the merits. The jury having found by their verdict, that interpleaders took and held posses
III. There is no ground for questioning, as in the argument at this bar, the existence and bona fldes of the debt secured by the mortgage. In fact, it is manifest, from the record, that no contention as to this matter was made by plaintiffs on the trial. In none of the instructions asked by plaintiffs, did they demand the opinion of the jury on this important fact.
On the contrary, the uncontradicted evidence was that the contract provided for the delivery of the ties by Golden & Company, at the mouth of the Osage river. That being the designated point for final delivery, the contract was not fully performed by Golden & Company, by a delivery short of that point. The ties, until so delivered, remained at the risk of the contractors. The fact that Phillips & Company were to pay a certain per cent, on the contract price, on Golden & Company placing the ties along the river bank, and their inspection, was no more than if they had agreed to pay Golden & Company so much in advance, or cm the felling of the timber. Had the ties not been delivered at the mouth of the river, the contract would have been broken, and the measure of damages would have been the value of the ties at the mouth of the river. Dobbins v. Edmonds, 18 Mo. App. 321; Rickey v. Tenbroek, 63 Mo. 567.
IV. The only real question, therefore, left for the determination of the jury was, whether there was any secret agreement or understanding between the parties to the mortgage, that it should be given, and the goods taken and held thereunder, to the use and benefit of the mortgageors, so as to shield the property from the other creditors of the mortgageors. No matter what may have been the fraudulent purpose and intent of the
We wholly fail to discover, in this record, any evidence whatever of any overt act or word of the mortgagees, anterior to the execution of the mortgage, from which a jury would be upheld in finding a verdict predicated of such fact. This, then, narrows the issue to the acts, conduct, and declarations of the mortgagees and. of the mortgageors, made known to, and acquiesced in by, the mortgagees, after the execution of the mortgage.
The instructions, taken as a whole, although subject to some verbal criticism, we think, quite clearly and fairly presented this issue to the jury. Criticism is made on some of the instructions that they single out certain facts, disjecta membra, and tell the jury that this and that will not constitute fraud, rather than by grouping together all the facts and circumstances in evidence, which is permitted in the investigation of fraud. We do not think the criticism justly applied to the instructions in this case.
It is proper enough, under certain circumstances, to have the jury told as to the legal effect of one fact upon another. “ Instructions of that character are far more satisfactory guides to the jury than those which deal in vague generalities.” Zimmerman v. Railroad, 71 Mo. 71. For instance, as in the case of Hewson v. Tootle (supra), where the evidence showed that, after the execution of the mortgage, the mortgageors continued to sell, apparently in the usual course of trade, which was a badge of fraud; yet if this was done pursuant to an agreement between the parties to the mortgage, in good faith, that the goods should be so sold and the proceeds applied to the satisfaction of the mortgage debt, this would disprove the fraudulent intent which the jury might infer from the first fact or act, and the mortgagee Avould be entitled to have the jury so instructed.
Y. The fourth instruction, given for the inter-pleaders, is objected to, because it is predicated of the fact and assent of one David Nicholson, whereas, it is claimed by appellants there was no evidence to warrant the jury in finding that he had any authority from his principals, the plaintiffs, to bind them in the matter.
It may be conceded, to the contention of appellants, that a mere authority to David Nicholson, to collect the debt owing to Peter Nicholson & Company, did not authorize him to compromise the debt. But the question, in such cases, is not so much what was the actual instruction to, or limitation upon, the agent, as between him and his principal, as what power or authority third persons have a right to assume was given him by the principal. Story on Agency, sect. 127. And such apparent authority is to be gathered from all the facts and circumstances in evidence, and is a question of fact to be drawn therefrom by the jury. Brooks v. Johnson, 55 Mo. 505; Sigerson v. Pomeroy, 13 Mo. 620; Howe v. Machine Co., 32 Iowa, 435-6-7; Hough v. Ins. Co., 3 Wood & M. 529.
The evidence of Clayton Phillips was that he went to St. Louis for the purpose of laying before the creditors of Golden & Company their embarrassment, and submitting a proposition for compromise; that he, accord
If Phillips was thereby induced, as he testified, to enter into the arrangement of taking the mortgage and advancing the money, and the plaintiffs had assented thereto, through their agent, so long as Phillips was ready and willing to comply and pay the plaintiffs their forty per cent., what concern was it of the plaintiffs what Phillips afterwards did with the goods ? The arrangement with Phillips & Company was valid, based on a valuable consideration, and it was to Phillips &
In the first place, it may be answered that plaintiffs asked no such instruction, and directly presented no such issue at the trial; and if it had been presented, we are unable to discover in this record, as presented to this court, any evidence to justify an honest jury in so finding. At the time of the consummation of this comromise, at the Madison House, in Jefferson City, the day before the mortgage was executed, there is not one particle of evidence on which any court could permit a verdict to stand, finding that there was any combination or confederation between the Goldens and Phillips to fraudulently coerce a settlement with the creditors. On the contrary, Phillips had manifested a reluctance to adventure any more money where he already had so much at hazard. And the evidence of all parties was that the affairs of Golden & Company were in a most unpromising condition; and the result shows that they were hopelessly insolvent, entailing a loss of about ten thousand dollars on Phillips and Sedgewick. While the greatest latitude is allowed, necessarily, in the investigation of questions of secret fraud, the court should not throw down entirely the lines to the jury, and allow them to run at will, without evidence, or guide, or restraint.
Had Nicholson & Company brought this action, by attachment, on the day this compromise was effected, there would not have been a shadow of evidence for it to stand on. The only pretext of any evidence oh which
YI. It may be well enough, in this connection, to notice that the fifth instruction asked by plaintiffs did request the court to declare that if the mortgage was taken and accepted for the purpose of compelling the other creditors to accept fifty cents, or less, on the dollar, the jury should find for the plaintiffs. But this, it will be observed, is predicated of the fact that the acceptance •of the compromise was effected after the mortgage was taken ; whereas the undisputed evidence is, so far as the plaintiff is concerned, that his assent was given prior to the making of the mortgage, and when they knew that Phillips was to take the mortgage, in part to secure him for the very advances he and Sedgewick were to make, embracing the forty cents on the dollar to be paid plaintiffs, the whole transaction was open and understood. Nor can it make any difference that Phillips agreed to the arrangement, on condition that all the creditors assented thereto. This but goes to show his good faith, .and was designed for the protection of Phillips & Company, and can in no wise affect the plaintiffs’ rights, as
VII. Some of the instructions asked by plaintiffs, and refused by the court, are so palpably faulty as not to justify review. The seventh instruction was faulty in that it entirely ignored the question as to the inter-pleaders’ knowledge of, or acquiescence in, the act of Golden & Company. The tenth instruction was properly refused. The fact that the parties to the mortgage, lon'g after its execution, and long after bringing the attachment suit, agreed that the mortgagees might take the property and release the debt, when the mortgageors were confessedly insolvent, and without hope of reclamation, we are unable to perceive how it should affect, much less destroy, the interpleaders’ right of recovery, existing at the time of the levying of the writ of attachment.
The fourth instruction, asked by plaintiffs, might have been given, without any serious objection. And if we could perceive that there was a reasonable probability that the conclusion of the jury might have been different, had it been given, it might invite a reversal. But as all the substantial issues were presented in the instructions given, and the merits appear to us to be so decidedly in favor of the verdict of the jury, on the whole case, we do not feel justified in remanding for a trial de now, on this account.
Other questions have been discussed on this appeal, but they are not, in our opinion, of sufficient importance to justify the prolongation of this opinion, and they could not alter our conclusion.
the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.