59 Neb. 17 | Neb. | 1899
On Saturday evening, February 16, 1895, Meek, Skinner & Co., a partnership engaged in the hardware business in Pawnee City, executed a chattel mortgage on its stock of merchandise, and a bill of sale for its notes and book accounts, in favor of sixty-five of the firm creditors. By the terms of the instruments all creditors who should accept the security were to share pro rata in the proceeds of the property mortgaged. Both instruments were filed for record at 9:20 P. M. of the day on which they were made. At this time only two of the sixty-five creditors had knowledge of the transaction. These promptly accepted the security and one of them was put in possession of the mortgaged property. On the following day another of the creditors was informed of the action taken by the partnership, and he immediately signified his acceptance of the mortgage. The First National Bank of Pawnee City was one of the sixty-five creditors, but it declined to accept the security, and on Monday morning commenced an action against Meek, Skinner & Co., and caused an attachment to be levied upon all the property described in the chattel mortgage and bill of sale. The grounds upon which it is sought to justify the attachment are (1) that the mortgage and bill of sale were intended to hinder, delay and defraud creditors, and (2) that they constituted an assignment which was ineffective for want of conformity with the statute in relation to voluntary assignments. The defendants moved to discharge the attachment. The court denied the motion, rendered judgment in favor of the bank, and ordered a sale of the attached property. The main question presented by the petition in error is the correctness of the ruling sustaining the attachment. The evidence on the
One other question remains to be considered. It is argued that because defendants had mortgaged the property to secure debts exceeding its value, and had parted with the possession, they had no such interest as would entitle them to demand a dissolution of the attachment. This precise point was fully considered in McCord v. Bowen, 51 Nebr., 247, and the conclusion reached, after an extended review of the authorities, that an attachment defendant may contest the attachment, notwithstanding the fact that the debt secured exceeds the value of the mortgaged property. We adhere to the rule laid down in that decision. The order overruling the motion to dissolve the attachment and the order directing a sale of the attached property are reversed. There is no error in the
Judgment accordingly.