5 Mo. 241 | Mo. | 1838
delivered the opinion of the court.
[Swearingen sued Slicer in the circuit court, where fee
Darby moved the court on the trial to discharge him, and it was done accordingly, and the opinion of the court was excepted to.
There can be no doubt entertained of the right of any debtor to prefer any one or more of his creditors; such creditor may release his debtor upon the payment of .a part or of no part of the debt, if he choose so to do; and this payment may be made either in money or property, as the parties may agree. But here is a deed of irust, executed to Darby, conveying all the property to him in trust to raise money to pay certain creditors, on condition that such creditors shall, within four months from the date of such deed, become parties, thereby releasing said Sheer from any further liability to •them on account oE such debts.
This deed was dated the 18 th day of March, 1835; the deed was not executed by any one of the creditors on the 21st day of July, 1835, when Darby was summoned, The deed not being executed by the parties when the summons was served on Darby, the delivery of the goods io him could not, according to the terms of the deed, have vested in him a complete right to the property livered for their use.
If the act had been consummated, by the creditors’ executing the deed before the rights of Swearingen, th.® plaintiff in the execution, attached under that execution, then this question might have arisen: Was the transac
But the preferred creditor’s not having executed the deed, Darby, to whom the effects of Sheer, the defendant, were delivered for the purposes of that deed., can be regarded only in the light of a special agent or bailee of Sheer, to keep those effects, subject to the debts of any of the creditors of Sheer. The circuit court, then, in my opinion, committed error m decreeing that Darby should be discharged; and such being the opinion of the rest of the court, its judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.