10 Mont. 381 | Mont. | 1891
Appeal from judgment and order overruling motion for new trial.
This action was brought to recover possession of certain per
It appears from the evidence that the mortgagor remained in possession of all of the mortgaged property for the period of about one month from the execution and delivery of the mortgage, during which time he carried on the business of buying and selling liquors and cigars, the same as he had before the execution of the mortgage. About a month after the mortgage was given the mortgagor came to the mortgagees, saying he would turn the property over to them and they “may get out of it the best they could.” Thereupon the mortgagees took possession of the property, and put their watchman in possession thereof, to watch and take care of the same for them. The property remained at this time in a building owned by defendant, Emily Schlesinger, where the mortgagor had been carrying on business. When plaintiffs took possession of said property on the 29th of August, said defendant, Emily Schlesinger, by her agent, B. J. Schlesinger, granted, in writing, permission to
On the 17th of September, 1888, as appears by the evidence, while plaintiffs’ watchman was temporarily absent from said building, the defendant, B. J. Schlesinger, as agent for his wife, Emily Schlesinger, took possession of said goods, and put other locks on the doors of said building, and excluded plaintiffs from the possession thereof.
The defense interposed by the defendant’s answer was a denial of the allegations of plaintiffs’ complaint and new matter, which may be stated in effect as follows: (1) That plaintiffs’ mortgage upon said chattels “ was made by Julius Levy for the sole purpose of hindering, delaying, and defrauding the creditors of Al. Owens and Julius Levy,” and that defendant, Emily Schlesinger, was their creditor to the extent of four hundred and fifty dollars at the time said mortgage was executed. (2) That defendant, Al. Owens, was a copartner, equal with said Levy, in the ownership of said goods and chattels, and that said mortgage was made to plaintiffs without the consent of said Al. Owens, and for a purpose foreign to said copartnership and without consideration. (3) That after the execution and delivery of said mortgage plaintiffs “permitted said Owens and Levy, as partners, to openly and notoriously sell and dispose of said mortgaged goods and chattels in the usual course of the saloon business, in the same manner as before the execution of said mortgage. (4) That said goods and chattels were sold and delivered to defendant, B. J. Schlesinger, as agent of Emily Schlesinger, by the firm of Levy and Owens through Al. Owens, one of said firm, on the 17th of September, 1888,” as shown by a bill of sale attached to defendant’s answer as a part thereof.
The instrument attached to defendant’s answer recites that “Julius Levy and A. T. Owens, copartners under the firm name and style of Julius Levy (A. T. Owens being a silent partner), the lessees, for and in consideration of the sum of five hundred dollars to us in hand paid, and for the further sum of four hundred and fifty dollars rent due Emily Schlesinger, lessor,” the said goods are sold and assigned to said lessor. Said instrument further provides: “That said lessor, Emily Schlesinger, her agent or attorney, shall be entitled to take
This instrument is executed by said A. T. Owens with all the solemnities required for the execution of a chattel mortgage, according to the laws of the Territory of Montana at the time the same was executed, and was filed for record September 18, 1888. It also appears from the evidence that said instrument was considered by the party of the second part as a mortgage, for her agent says in his testimony that he took possession of said property September 17, 1888, “by virtue of a mortgage for rent due,” and he refers to the instrument elsewhere as a mortgage. Al. Owens, who executed said instrument, in his testimony also speaks of it as a mortgage, given “ for the purpose of securing money for rent.” The feature of said instrument which indisputably stamps it with the character of a chattel mortgage is its own condition, that the property transferred shall be sold by the party of the second part, and the proceeds applied by her to the payment of her stated claim, and that the residue should be paid to the-firm of Levy and Owens. The instrument will be treated as a chattel mortgage.
There is no question before us relating to the rights, interests, or claims of defendant, Al. Owens, in respect to the property in controversy.
The first question to be solved is whether plaintiffs’ mortgage was, by its own terms and conditions, fraudulent and void as to creditors, under the doctrine held in Leopold v. Silverman, 7 Mont. 266, as contended by respondent’s counsel. It will be seen by comparison that the instruments in question are radically different. The mortgages under consideration in Leopold v. Silverman contained a provision, “that the said parties (mortgagors) may continue to sell the said stock of merchandise in the usual course of trade,” and notwithstanding that
Closely connected with this branch of the ease is the defense, wherein defendants allege that after the execution of the mortgage of plaintiffs, they permitted said Levy and Owens to openly and notoriously sell and dispose of said mortgaged goods and chattels in the usual course of trade. We have already noticed the obscurity and uncertainty of plaintiffs’
"Was the plaintiffs’ mortgage shown to be void by the allegation and proof of facts sufficient to support the conclusion that the transaction was consummated by plaintiffs and said Levy, with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud the creditors of the mortgagor? The allegations of the answer upon this point would hardly bear criticism; however, counsel have not directly raised a question as to the sufficiency of such allegations, and we shall therefore only notice them in connection with the specification that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict. The allegation is that plaintiffs’ mortgage was made “by one Julius Levy, for the sole purpose of hindering, delaying, and defrauding the creditors of Al. Owens and Julius Levy.” There is no allegation of privity or conspiracy on the part of plaintiffs in the alleged scheme to defraud the creditors
The answer contains an allegation to the effect that plaintiffs’ mortgage was made “without consideration”; but there is no evidence to support that allegation. The evidence on that point is all against it, and the special findings of the jury are contrary to that averment. The jury found that there was no intention on the part of plaintiffs to commit fraud in obtaining said mortgage, and that they took the same to protect themselves. Another aspect of the case deserves notice. Among the grounds on which appellants ask for a new trial, they specify excessive damages, and that the verdict is against law, as well as insufficiency of evidence to justify the verdict. The instrument on which defendant, Emily Schlesinger, bases' her claims to the possession of said property is demonstrated from its own terms to be a chattel mortgage for security of her claim against Owens and Levy. If plaintiffs’ mortgage was held to be void as against her claim, or subsequent to her mortgage, it does not necessarily follow that plaintiffs’ mortgage is not good as between plaintiffs and the mortgagor (Comp. Stats. 5th div. §§ 229,1538), and on the finding by the jury that there was no intent on the part of plaintiffs to defraud any one in taking said mortgage, and the same not being such an instrument, as by its own terms fraud could be imputed to it, does it not follow that as between plaintiffs and Emily Schlesinger, if her claim on said property was precedent to plaintiffs (a fact which we in no way decide hei'e), she was then only entitled to recover from plaintiffs the amount of her claim secured by her mortgage, in the absence of the redelivery of said property? What was the amount of her claim? The mortgage executed to Emily Schlesinger recites that it was made in consideration of eight hundred and fifty dollars, money and rent due the party of the second part; yet in the body of that instrument she is authorized to retain out of the proceeds of the property four hundred and fifty dollars “for cash paid aud rent due” besides expenses of sale, fees, etc. The evidence introduced in reference to her claim shows still a different amount as due. B. J. Schlesinger, husband and agent, who attended to the interests of Emily
The record before us in this case has been prepared in a manner so grossly in violation of the rules of this court, it ought to have been promptly stricken from the files, without consideration, beyond an observation of its defects. The documentary evidence is not found in its proper place in the record, but these documents, together with depositions on both sides, are bundled together in a sort of appendix near the close of the statement of the case. The depositions are not reduced from questions and answers to the compactness of narrative, and in one case the questions are found in one document and the answers in another. These exhibits are found with no little inconvenience, in a voluminous record, without proper index, and written on paper which violates the rules of court. It is the duty of appellants’ counsel to see that the record is properly made. This record has only been tolerated by reason of our unwillingness to impose the expense of preparing the record anew upon liti
The judgment and the order overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial are hereby reversed and the cause remanded for trial de novo.