after stating the ease. Tbe contention that the McMullan Lumber Company was not a corporation is settled by the decision of tbis Court in
Benbow v. Cook,
What the by-laws of a corporation may determine and contain are set forth in sec. 1146, Revisal.
The question most stressed in the brief and oral argument before us is the invalidity of the deed of trust to secure the notes of White and Perry, growing out of their relationship to the corporation; that the larger part of the amount secured was a pre-existing debt; that there were other creditors at that time; that the corporation conveyed in the deed of trust substantially all of its property, and the assignor failed to file the schedule required by see. 967, Revisal, and the trustee failed to file the inventory required by sec. 968, Revisal. The plaintiff’s evidence showed that the corporation was not insolvent at the time the deed of trust was executed; that at that date the property of the corporation was worth approximately $12,000; that all its other debts existent at that date, except a small debt of $40, had been paid; and nearly half the amount of the notes secured was not a pre-existing debt, but a present consideration of equal value; that the stockholders and directors authorized both the note and the security to be given. These facts clearly distinguish this case from
Edwards v. Supply Co.,
It is also insisted by plaintiff that the deed of trust is invalid because, conveying substantially all the property of the corporation and securing only two of its creditors, no schedule of the preferred debts was filed under oath by the corporation, and no inventory filed by the trustee, as required by secs. 967 and 968, Eevisal. These statutes have been considered by this Court in the eases of
Bank v. Gilmer,
Affirmed.
