98 Mich. 527 | Mich. | 1894
Plaintiffs, residing and doing business in Cincinnati, Ohio, bring replevin under a chattel mortgage for goods seized in attachment. Defendants insist that the mortgage was given to hinder and delay creditors. It is admitted that there ivas less than. 1500 due to the mortgagees -from the debtor when the mortgage was given. The mortgage was for $1,500, and was executed December 26, 1889. Wilson, the mortgagor, testified that the mortgage was suggested by plaintiffs, who told him that it would tide him over; that its object was to keep his creditors off until he could make collections, and tide him over. Plaintiffs insisted that in the early part of December a bill of goods had been ordered by the debtor, amounting to over $1,100, and that the mortgage was given to secure-that amount, as well as the amount then due.
The court instructed the jury that if the mortgage was given to cover an existing indebtedness, and the bill of goods which had been ordered by the debtor, the mortgage would be valid. As an abstract proposition, this would be-true; but the difficulty with the case is that the debtor-swears positively that no bill of goods had been ordered by him, and that no invoice thereof had been sent him. Plaintiffs offered in evidence the following letter, dated January 9, 1890:
“To H. Rosenthal & Sons,
“ Cincinnati, O.
“Gentlemen: The annexed bill of goods I received by mail from your house, and will say that financial embarrassment renders it impossible for me to take the balance-of the goods I ordered of you. I therefore hereby release-you from sending balance of said goods, being in amount. $1,079.96, upon condition that that amount be indorsed on the chattel mortgage I executed to your house on the-26th day of December, 1889, leaving the balance due on*529 said mortgage the sum of $420; which said mortgage was given to secure the purchase price of the said amount of $1,079.96, and other goods heretofore received by me.
“Yours, &c.,
“Madison Y. Wilson.
“Dated Jan. 9, 1890.”
In connection with said letter, an invoice of goods, amounting to over $1,100, dated December 7, 1889, was offered. Indorsed upon the invoice was the following:
“Dear Sir: The above lot of goods are ready, and stored subject to your order. We will forward to you as. soon as our account is paid, or the whole amount is secured to us, as you promised when you were here.
“H. Kosenthal & Sons.”
The plaintiffs sought, by the introduction of the letter with invoice attached, to show that the invoice antedated the mortgage. There is no testimony in the case, except this letter, from which any inference can fairly be drawn that any such bill of goods had been ordered by the debtor, or any such invoice received. ■ Wilson testifies that, at midnight of the day upon which the letter bears date, he was called out of bed, that the letter, already prepared, was presented to him by plaintiffs’ attorney, and that he signed it, but that he had not seen the invoice attached to the letter before this time. The attachment suit was commenced December 29, 1889; but, for some reason, that suit was discontinued, and another instituted on January 29, 1890. One of. the plaintiffs was sworn as a ,witness; and no attempt was made to show by him that any bill of goods had been sold *to, or ordered by, or charged to the debtor, except such as were covered by the actual indebtedness existing-at the time the mortgage was given. The attorney who prepared . the chattel mortgage, and who appeared for plaintiffs in this suit, was plaintiffs’ principal witness. He admits that he in person prepared the letter
“It was agreed that the mortgage and note should be for $1,500. Mr. Wilson stated that he owed him this amount that they talked about, and that was agreed upon. The amount of the whisky that he was to receive was also agreed upon. It was to be sent forward.”
Again he says:
“ Mr. Rosenthal then proceeded to state that Wilson was indebted to him to an amount of $200, or $300, or $400, whatever it was, — of course, I could not tell the exact amount of the figures, — and that he was going to let him have some more liquors, and Mr. Wilson was to give him security on his entire stock for what he owed him, and what he was going to ship forward. * * * And after they had talked over about the liquors coming, and the amount due, it was agreed that $1,500 should be the amount written in the mortgage. * * * Mr. Rosenthal said he would send the liquors to make up the difference between the amount of the bill, that Wilson owed him, as they agreed upon.”
Relative to the invoice attached to this' letter, the witness says:
“The paper attached contains a recital showing how he received it. I don’t know when he gave me that paper. I cannot say. I can’t tell whether I got that paper from Mr. Rosenthal or from Mr. Wilson. It came into my hands before that paper was drawn; and whether Mr. Wilson gave me that at the time, or whether it Vas handed to me at the time the mortgage was drawn, I cannot tell, or where I got hold of it I don’t know. It is dated December 7; but, now, whether I got it at the time the 'mortgage was drawn, and left with it, or whether Wilson gave it to me, or Rosenthal, I cannot tell.”
In view of the positive testimony that no goods had been ordered by the debtor; that no bill had been received
Defendants, in their third request, sought to direct the attention of the jury to the attempted decrease of the amount of the mortgage, and it was error to refuse the request.
The defendants should have been allowed, as bearing upon the probabilities, to show in what quantities Wilson had usually ordered liquors. Plaintiffs had been supplying him for years. It was certainly competent to show that an order by a druggist, doing a moderate business, for over $1,100 worth of whiskies, was an unusual one, and out of all proportion to the business that was being carried on by the debtor.
The judgment is reversed, and a new trial ordered.