87 Mo. App. 440 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1901
C. C. Fields and brother owned and conducted a hardware store in the city of Dexter, in Stoddard county. The brother died and O. O. Fields administered on the partnership estate. As such administrator, about the nineteenth of July, 1894, he sold the entire stock of hardware to Francis & Eiddle for $1,598.89, on time, and took from them four promissory notes of $300 each, due in three, six, nine and twelve months, and one for $398.89 due in fifteen months from date. To secure these notes, Francis & Eiddle signed and acknowledged a chattel mortgage to Fields as administrator, oh all the merchandise in the store, which mortgage was duly recorded. Sometime after this, Francis sold out to Eiddle, Eid
The answer is, first, a general denial, second, justification because the chattel mortgage is void as to other creditors, third, estoppel because Fields failed to make claim to property in due season. The only defense relied on at the trial, however, was the second, viz.: that the' mortgage was void as to creditors. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff, and assessed his damages at $1,191.25.
Both chattel mortgages were fair and valid on their face. Before the sale by the constable, the respondent gave him verbal notice of his claim and forbade the sale. After the sale by the constable, respondent took possession of what goods were left in the store and sold them under his mortgage and realized by the sale $614.10. Eespondent testifies that the value of the goods on hand and sold by the constable, as near as he could keep count of them, was $900.
Appellants offered evidence tending to prove that respondent gave Eiddle permission to sell goods covered by the second mortgage and apply the proceeds to the payment of debts other than the one secured by the mortgage, and that Eiddle did pay some of such debts. Eespondent and Eiddle denied that any such arrangement was entered into between them, or that respondent ever consented to the application of the proceeds from the sale of the goods to the payment of any debt other than his own. Eor respondent, the court gave the following instructions:
“1. The court instructs the jury that this is a suit on the official bond of the defendant, John J. Cryts, by which the plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendants, as principal and sureties on said bond, the value of certain goods upon which the plaintiff claims he had a mortgage, and which, as plaintiff alleges, the defendant, Cryts sold under executions against Thomas A. Eiddle. Now, therefore, if you find from the evidence in this case, that the plaintiff had and held a bona fide*446 'debt against said Riddle, of about tbe sum mentioned in tbe mortgage bearing date of March 23, 1895, and offered in evidence in this cause, and to secure the payment of that debt said Riddle executed said chattel mortgage and that plaintiff received the same in good faith for the purpose of securing the payment of the debt in said mortgage described and for no other purpose, then and in that event the court instructs you that you should ascertain and find: first, the balance due the plaintiff on said debt; second, the value of the goods sold by defendant under said execution. But if the balance due and owing to the plaintiff should exceed the value of the goods sold by the defendant under said executions, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff for a sum equal to the value of the goods sold under said executions.
“2. The burden of proving fraud is upon the party who alleges it, and when the facts and circumstances in evidence are as consistent with honesty and fair dealing as with dishonesty, the jury should find for honesty and fair dealing.
“3. If the jury should find from the evidence, that the chattel mortgage offered in evidence was executed by Thomas A. Riddle for the purpose of hindering, delaying or defrauding his creditors, that fact alone will not prevent the plaintiff from recovering in this case. In order to defeat the recovery of the plaintiff in this case, you must believe and find from the evidence that plaintiff accepted said chattel mortgage for the purpose and with the intent of hindering, delaying or defrauding the creditors of Thomas A. Riddle. But, if there was any collateral agreement outside of the mortgage that Riddle could sell the mortgaged goods and apply the proceeds to any purpose other than paying the mortgage debt, then such agreement, if made, rendered the mortgage fraudulent and void, no matter what the purpose or intentions of the parties were.
“4. If you find the chattel mortgage of March 23, 1895,*447 to be a valid mortgage, under the instructions given you, then the plaintiff had the right to sell the property covered by said mortgage to pay the debt secured by it, and if the defendant sold any part of such property under executions against Kiddle after the execution and record of such mortgage, then he is liable on his bond to plaintiff for the value of said property, unless such value should exceed the balance due and owing to plaintiff in the mortgage debt and in that event defendant is liable for only such sum as would equal the balance due and owing plaintiff.
“5. The court instructs you that the chattel mortgage offered in evidence and bearing date July 24, 1894, given by Erancis & Riddle to C. C. Eields, is not fraudulent in law and that there is no evidence that said chattel mortgage is fraudulent in fact as against any creditor of Kiddle, who procured the sale of the goods under execution, and, hence, .if you believe from the evidence that the chattel mortgage of March 23, 1895”, was given by said Kiddle to Eields in lieu of and to correct the chattel mortgage of July 24, 1894, and that it was accepted by Eields in good faith for that purpose and no other, then you should find the issues for the plaintiff, provided you also believe that there was no additional agreement or understanding of the mortgage that Kiddle could sell the goods mortgaged and use the proceeds for paying other debts than the mortgage debt.
“6. The court instructs the jury that the burden of proof in this ease rests upon the defendant to show that the chattel mortgage offered in evidence was fraudulent as to the creditors of Kiddle, who sold the goods to pay the claims .against Kiddle under the executions and this the defendant must do by a preponderance of the evidence to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury.”
And for appellant the following:
“4. The court instructs the jury that if you find from*448 the evidence in this case that the goods sold by defendant Cryts, were sold at public auction under executions set out and admitted by plaintiff, and that they were sold for cash to the highest bidder, then you will find that the amounts received therefor to be the value of the goods so sold as described in plaintiff’s petition, unless you should find that said sale was not fairly conducted.
“5. The court instructs the jury that if you should find from the evidence in this case that T. A. Riddle, the mortgagor, in plaintiff’s mortgage, remained in possession of the goods described in said mortgage, continuing to sell the same in the ordinary course of business and converting the proceeds of such sales to his own use and applying the same to the payment of other debts than the ones named in plaintiff’s mortgage, and that plaintiff had knowledge of such facts and agreed or acquiesced in the same, then you will find that plaintiff’s mortgage is void as a matter of fact and your verdict will be for the defendant.”
I. The appellant contends that the first instruction is erroneous, because it makes appellant liable irrespective of his other securities and money he had recovered on his debt. The most that can be said against the instruction in this respect is that it did not tell the jury to deduct the value of respondent’s deed of trust on Riddle’s real estate, in arriving at what was due him or in arriving at the value of his lien on goods sold by the constable. It is not the law that a creditor, holding two or more securities for his debt, is compelled to surrender one, in favor of an unsecured creditor, even though the one left is ample to pay his debt. The doctrine of marshalling assets is an equitable one and can only be invoked at the instance of a creditor holding a junior mortgage. 2 Pom. Eq. Jurisprudence, sec. 1414; Colby v. Crocker, 17 Kan. 427; Iron Co. v. McDonald, 61 Mo. App. 559.
II. Instructions numbered two and six, given for the respondent, cast the onus on appellants to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that respondent’s mortgage was fraudulent. The mortgage being fair on its faée, the presumption was that it was given for a valid consideration, and the onus was on defendant to overthrow this presumption by evidence of fraud. Mansur-Tebbets Implement Co. v. Ritchie, 143 Mo. 587; Merrill Drug Co. v. Lusk, 73 Mo. App. 571.
III. Instruction three for respondent, when read, as it should be, in connection with instruction five given for appellants correctly states the law.
IY. The seventh instruction, to-wit: “7. The court instructs you that where a creditor has two 'securities, that is to say, a chattel mortgage and a deed of trust, securing the same debt, he can proceed on either security and no one can complain,” given for respondent, is unobjectionable. A creditor, having two or more different mortgages on different property as to unsecured creditors, has the right to resort to which of his mortgages he will, one or more or all of them for the payment of his debt. Unsecured creditors have a right to any
V. The respondent testified that the property levied on and sold by the constable was, as near as he could count it, worth $900. That was all the evidence there was as to their value, outside of the fact that they brought $378 at the constable’s sale. Yet the verdict was for $1,191.25, of which $181.20 was remitted, reducing the judgment to the actual balance due respondent on his debt. The verdict is excessive and the remittance does not cure it. The amount is still in excess of the value of the goods as shown by the proof.
YI. The venue of the court was changed from the Stoddard Circuit Court to the Cape Girardeau Court of Common Pleas.' It is contended by the appellant that no change of venue could be taken from the circuit court of any other county than Cape Girardeau to the Cape Girardeau Court of Common Pleas. The court of common pleas had jurisdiction of the subject-matter; the parties voluntarily appeared and submitted their persons to its jurisdiction. This' gave full jurisdiction to the court to hear and determine the cause. Scott Hardware Co. v. Riddle, Appellate Reporter, Vol. 3, No. 11, p. 482; Bankers Life Association v. Shelton, Appellate Reporter, Vol. 3, No. 12, p. 515.
It appears that the judgment as modified is yet $110.05 in excess of the value of the goods shown by the testimony. It is therefore considered that unless the respondent, within ten days from the rendition of this opinion, remit the sum of $110.05 of his judgment, the same will be reversed and the cause remanded. If the remittitur be entered as herein provided, the judgment as modified by such remittitur will stand affirmed.