34 S.W. 715 | Tex. | 1896
Lead Opinion
December 14, 1891, F.B. Duke and W.T. Dodson, composing the firm of Duke, Dodson Co., executed and delivered to M.L. Vanleer an instrument in writing which divested of unnecessary verbiage is as follows: "Know all men by these presents, that we, F.B. Duke and W.T. Dodson, composing the firm of Duke, Dodson Co., in consideration of one dollar, to us paid by Vanleer, for the uses and upon the trust herein mentioned, and by these presents doth sell, convey and deliver to said M.L. Vanleer forever, (here follows description of real and personal property.)
To have and to hold unto him the said M.L. Vanleer, trustee as aforesaid, the above described premises and personal property aforesaid, unto the said M.L. Vanleer, trustee, and his assigns forever in trust nevertheless and for the uses following and no other; that is to say the said M.L. *177 Vanleer, trustee as aforesaid, shall and does take actual and exclusive possession and control of all the above described property; and the said M.L. Vanleer, trustee as aforesaid, is to sell all of the aforesaid real and personal property, and make a deed in our name to same, at private or public sale, for cash in such manner and quantity as he may deem best for the purpose of obtaining the greatest amount of net proceeds in cash from the sale of said property or any part thereof. The said M.L. Vanleer, trustee, is to apply the proceeds of the sale of the said property in the following order, to-wit:
First. The expenses of executing this trust as they occur including the sum of fifty dollars per month for the services of the said M.L. Vanleer in executing this trust and all other necessary expenses connected therewith.
Second. The said M.L. Vanleer, trustee as aforesaid, shall apply the remainder of the proceeds of the sale of the said property to the parties hereinafter named and in the order named as the preferred creditors of the firm of Duke Dodson Co. (Here follows list of creditors.)
That is to say the said M.L. Vanleer, trustee as aforesaid, shall, as fast as he realizes money from the sale of any said property, apply it to the extinguishment of our indebtedness to said parties, commencing with No. 1 and continuing to pay them off according to their number as appears in the above list of creditors until they are all paid or until the property is exhausted.
But it is to be paid out in full of each claim in its order and number, and after faithfully executing the trust herein, should there be any surplus, the said M.L. Vanleer is to pay the same to F.B. Duke one-half and W.T. Dodson the other half of said surplus.
In testimony whereof we have on this the 14th day of December, A.D. 1891, signed our names at Mangum, Texas.
Duke Dodson Co., per F.B. Duke.
F.B. Duke, W.T. Dodson.
At the time the instrument was executed the grantors were insolvent and the property and creditors therein set out constituted all their property and creditors, and said property was not sufficient to pay said debts.
Vanleer, immediately upon the execution of the instrument, took actual possession of the property described herein, and the next day one of the creditors, standing near the last in the order of preference, with actual notice of the instrument, caused a portion of the personal property mentioned therein to be seized and sold under a writ of attachment issued against said grantors.
Vanleer, thereupon, brought this suit against the sheriff executing said writ and the plaintiff therein and their respective sureties for the value of the property so seized, and recovered judgment therefor, which was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. Vanleer's petition did not allege that any of the creditors, mentioned in the instrument above set out, had, at the time the attachment was levied, accepted its provisions. *178 Defendants specially excepted to the sufficiency of the petition for want of such an allegation, which exception the trial court and Court of Civil-Appeals held not well taken, and this ruling is here assigned as error.
Both of said courts treated said instrument as a statutory assignment. If such construction be correct there was no error in overruling the exception; for, though it be considered that an acceptance by the creditor is essential to the taking effect of a common law assignment or mortgage (
But is the instrument an assignment?
An assignment, whether statutory or common law, conveys to the assignee the entire estate of the assignor. It vests the title in the assignee, which cannot be divested by mere payment of the debts.
If the debts be satisfied the assignee would hold the balance of the assigned estate in trust for the assignor, but a conveyance or decree would be necessary to revest title in the assignor. If the instrument on its face, when construed according to the settled rules of construction in this State, does not pass the title of the assignor to the assignee it cannot be held to be an assignment, but must be held to be a mortgage. Johnson v. Robinson,
The instrument in question transfers the property to Vanleer as a trustee, authorizes him to sell and make deed in name of the grantors, and provides for return of the surplus to the grantors, and appears to have all the elements of an ordinary trust deed which, under the settled rules in this State, does not vest title in the trustee. Stiles v. Hill, Fontaine Co.,
We are of opinion that the instrument in question is a trust deed and not an assignment; that it was necessary to allege and prove that some of the creditors had accepted before the attachment was levied in order to show that the instrument had become effective before such levy, and that the court erred in overruling said exception. Milling Co. v. Eaton, Guinan Co.,
We are of opinion that the possession of Vanleer, if there was an acceptance by any creditor prior to the levy, was sufficient to authorize him to maintain a suit against the attaching creditor without joining all the beneficiaries.
It is his duty to protect the subject matter of the trust. If there be any danger of his misapplying the fund a court of equity has ample power to protect the beneficiaries upon a proper showing made by them.
Since the instrument is not an assignment it will not be necessary to discuss the other assignments of error, as the questions would not probably arise on another trial.
For the error above indicated the judgments of the Court of Civil Appeals and of the District Court are reversed and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Opinion delivered February 25, 1895. *179 A.P. Eubank, for defendants in error, filed a motion for rehearing.
Arguments supporting the motion were filed by B.P. Eubank,Willie, Campbell Ballinger, and by Scott, Levi Smith. D.G. Smith, for plaintiff in error, filed an argument resisting the motion.
Addendum
There seems to have been no serious difference of opinion among the members of this court since the passage of the act of 1879, regulating an "assignment made by an insolvent debtor, or in contemplation of insolvency, for the benefit of his creditors," as to whether any particular instrument presented for construction should be held to be a mortgage or trust deed in the nature of a mortgage, or to be an assignment, there having been on this question no dissent entered and no case overruled, so far as we have been able to ascertain. There seems, however, to be much confusion in the mind of the profession as to the principles of law to be applied in determining whether a given instrument belongs to the one class or the other. This is doubtless due in a great measure (1) to the inherent difficulty of determining by construction from the face of an instrument, read in the light of the circumstances surrounding its execution, the true intent of the maker and (2) to the fact that the various instruments construed by this court have not always been so fully set forth in the reported cases as to enable the profession to certainly ascertain the very question considered and decided.
The first difficulty is unavoidable. Aided by the accumulated wisdom of ages, it is often a very troublesome question to determine from the face of an instrument, even when read in the light of the circumstances surrounding its execution, whether it was intended as a will or a deed, a mortgage or a conditional deed, an executed or an executory contract, a mortgage or an assignment.
The second difficulty may be to some extent lessened by a review of some of the cases in which this court has been called upon to determine whether the instruments in question belonged to one class or the other, i. e. — whether the were mortgages or trust deeds in the nature of mortgages, or assignments.
In Jackson v. Harby,
In Milling Co. v. Eaton, Guinan Co.,
Notwithstanding the fact that neither Justice Robertson nor Chief Justice Stayton, in the opinions above referred to, seem to attach any importance to the formal defeasance clause, and certainly did not regard it as the decisive test as to whether the instrument belonged to one class or the other, and notwithstanding the fact that each of such instruments fixed preference liens on the property therein described and provided for the immediate sale thereof to pay the specific debts therein mentioned, as is done in the case before us, nevertheless it is urged that by reason of the existence of such clauses such cases are not authority in support of the latter.
While we do not agree with this contention, we will proceed to consider *182 another class of cases held by this court to be mortgages or deeds of trust in the nature of mortgages.
In Stiles v. Hill, Fontaine Co.,
In National Bank v. Lovenberg,
In Watterman v. Silberberg,
The court, in holding the instrument a mortgage, place stress upon the fact that it was a conveyance to the creditor, and say: "It is very generally held that a conveyance of personal property by a debtor to a creditor containing a power to sell the property and pay the debts, with an express or implied
reservation to the former of any part of the property not required to be sold to pay the debt, is, in effect, a mortgage. This was held in Stiles v. Hill, Fontaine Co.,
The learned Justice, however, in the course of the opinion states generally, that "an instrument which upon its face shows that it was intended as security for debt, or debts, is to be deemed a mortgage or an instrument in the nature of a mortgage, although it may give power to a creditor, creditors, or even a third person to sell the thing mortgaged and to apply the proceeds to the debt or debts secured. When it appears that the leading purpose of the instrument is to give security to the *184 creditor or creditors, the debtor making it will be deemed tohave the right at any time before property is sold to avoid itby paying the debt or debts secured. In such case, even where a mortgage is held to pass the legal title to a thing mortgaged, a condition of defeasance will be implied if it be notexpressed. When such condition is expressed or may be implied, the instrument must be held to be a mortgage or in the nature of a mortgage." (Italics are ours.)
In Hudson v. Milling Elevator Co.,
It is clear that this instrument evidenced upon its face an intent to fix a preference lien upon the property therein described in favor of the creditors in the order therein mentioned, and that such claims were to be satisfied out of the proceeds of sales of said property, but that such instrument bore no evidence upon its face of an intent on the part of the grantors to thereby divest themselves of all title or interest in said property and pass the same to the trustee.
In Adams v. Bateman, et al.,
Notwithstanding the fact that each of the instruments in the five cases next above, fixed preference liens on the property therein described, and provided for the immediate sale thereof to pay specific debts therein mentioned, and contained no evidence of an intention on the part of the grantor to divest himself of all title and interest in said property, as is the case in the instrument under consideration, — still it is contended that such cases are not direct authority in support of our former opinion herein for the reason that in each of such cases there is an express reservation to the grantor of such property as may not be disposed of in the execution of the trust, whereas in the instrument under consideration, the reservation is only of surplus of the proceeds of the sale. We are of opinion that this position is not tenable, but we will now examine the cases which contain a reservation only of the surplus of the proceeds of sale.
In Scott et al. v. McDaniel,
The insolvency of the grantors was shown and the property described in the instrument was not sufficient to pay the debts therein preferred. This court, in holding the instrument to be a mortgage or trust deed in the nature of a mortgage, through Justice Stayton, say: "The instrument is in effect a mortgage with power of sale and not an assignment, and any interest that might by any possibility remain after the payment of the enumerated debts would be subject to the claims of creditors and might be reached by them through any appropriate process. In such an instrument, a clause of defeasance is not necessary, but would be implied from the character of the instrument itself," and "it was executed by persons unable to pay their debts and gave preference to creditors named, but the right of even an insolvent debtor to do this has always been recognized, in the absence of legislation forbidding it."
In Bettes v. Weir Plow Co.,
The insolvency of the grantors was shown. The Weir Plow Co., an unpreferred creditor of the grantors, caused a portion of the property conveyed to be seized and sold under attachment, and thereupon the *187 trustee, Bettes, and the beneficiaries in the instrument sued the attaching creditor and the Sheriff to recover damages for the seizure of the goods. If the instrument had been an assignment, the trustee would have been entitled to recover in any event. If, however, it was a mortgage, their right to recover depended upon the other questions discussed in the opinion and the discussion of which would have been unnecessary unless the instrument was a mortgage. The question as to whether the instrument was a mortgage must therefore have been settled in the affirmative before the other questions could have been reached. In referring to the character of the instrument, the court, through Justice Gaines, say: "Our decisions have carefully distinguished between assignments and mortgages of the character of that now under consideration. The latter are held not to be assignments within the meaning of the act, and its provisions (other than contained in Sec. 17) have been declared to have no application to mortgages. It would seem therefore that mortgages and liens are not embraced in the terms of the title of the act."
In each of the two cases next above mentioned the conveyance was to a trustee, created preference liens upon specified property for the purpose of paying specified indebtedness in the order of preference, contained no condition of defeasance, no provision for the return of unsold property, but did provide for the return of the surplus of the proceeds of sale. There was, however, no expression on the face of either instrument evidencing an intent on the part of the grantor to divest himself of all title and interest in the property. It would seem that the instruments in these cases are substantially the same as the one set out in our former opinion herein. We will now examine the cases in which the instruments contained neither a defeasance clause nor any provisions for return of surplus of property or proceeds of sale.
In Wallis, Landes Co. v. Taylor,
In Laird v. Weis Bros.,
We will now notice the instruments which have been held by this court to be assignments and not mortgages or trust deeds in the nature of mortgages.
In Johnson v. Robinson,
If it had provided that upon the payment of the debt of appellees it should be void, or had provided, after a sale of a sufficiency of the property to pay that debt, balance should be returned to the debtors, the construction claimed by appellees would be correct; but the conveyance contains no condition of defeasance and passes the property absolutely to appellants to be administered according to the purposes therein created. (1) To pay the debts of the appellants, then to distribute the balance of the net proceeds among the other creditors. This is an absolute transfer of the property, to be sold and proceeds applied to the payment of the debts and not merely a conditional transfer for the purpose of securing debts and defeasible upon condition of their payment. It may be that if nothing had been said as to the disposition of the balance which *190
had remained after paying the debt due appellees, the object of the conveyance being merely to secure the prompt settlement of that obligation, the law would have implied a defeasance and the instrument would have been treated as a mortgage. (Stiles v. Hill, Fontaine Co.,
It will be observed that this transfer was to a creditor. On the face of the instrument the intention appears to fix a preference upon the property for the purpose of paying the debt due J. M. Robinson Co., and to sell same for that purpose; but it also went further and provided for an absolute distribution of all the proceeds of the sale left after paying said debt, among the creditors of the grantor, thereby evidencing an intention to divest the grantors of all title and interest in said property. It seems to be clear that the court considered this latter intent as sufficient to constitute the instrument all assignment. But for such intent the instrument would have been held to be a mortgage, for it would have left the instrument apparently upon an equal footing with that in Laird v. Weis Bros., above, if the expression that the instrument was "intended as a mortgage" be omitted from the latter. In such event there would have been nothing upon the face of the instrument to indicate an intent on the part of the grantor to pass the property absolutely to J. M. Robinson Co., and in the absence of such intent "the object of the conveyance being merely to secure the prompt settlement of that obligation, the law would have implied a defeasance and the instrument would have been treated as a mortgage."
In the case of Hart Co. v. Blum,
In Preston v. Carter Bros. Co.,
The instruments in Boyd v. Haynie,
The decision of all of these cases was but the application of the rule laid down in Johnston v. Robinson. The intent apparent upon the face of each instrument, not only to fix a preference lien and provide for its payment out of the property described in the instrument, but, in addition, to divest the grantor of all title and interest in the property, constituted the several instruments assignments.
We have thus briefly noticed, as we believe, every reported case in which this court has been called upon to determine whether a given instrument was a mortgage or trust deed in the nature of a mortgage, or an assignment, and have seen that each instrument has been held to belong to the former class except those construed in Johnston v. Robinson, and the line of decisions based upon its authority. We think it clear, as intimated in Johnston v. Robinson, that but for the intent apparent upon the face of each of these instruments, not only to create a preference lien on certain property in favor of named creditors to secure or pay same, but in addition thereto, to divest the grantor of all title and interest in the property, they too would have been held mortgages or trust deeds in the nature of mortgages.
We conclude from the above authorities that in determining the question as to whether a given instrument belongs to one class or the other, the court will be governed by the legal intent of the grantor as expressed in the language used therein, when read, in a proper case, in the light of the circumstances surrounding its execution. And where it appears from the face of the instrument, so read, that the intention of the grantor, therein expressed, was merely to charge the property therein described with a preference lien, either as a security or as a means of immediate payment of certain debt or debts therein specified, such instrument must be held a mortgage or deed of trust in the nature of a mortgage; but where, *192 in addition to such intention, there also appears from the face thereof an intent to thereby divest the grantor of and vest in the grantee all title and interest in the property for the purpose of providing for the immediate payment of such debt or debts, the instrument must be held an assignment. If only the first intention appears a condition of defeasance will, as a matter of law, be implied and the instrument read as if such condition were written therein; but if the second intent also, so appears, no such condition will be implied.
While it is true that a mortgage or trust deed in the nature of a mortgage does not, and an assignment does, divest the grantor of title, yet these are legal results flowing from the intent.
The intent is the thing to be determined. By this is meant the legal intent, and not merely an erroneous construction placed by the grantor on the instrument contrary to such intent clearly expressed therein.
Where, however, there is doubt as to the true legal intent courts have always given great weight to the construction placed upon the instrument by the parties thereto, whether such construction be evidenced by expressions on the face of the paper or by the subsequent acts of the parties thereunder. In such a case every expression on the face of the instrument, viewed in the light of the circumstances attending its execution, will be considered. The intimation that this court has ever held that any one clause or expression must, in all cases, be given controlling effect and allowed to override the clearly expressed intention of the grantor, is without support in and merely indicates a superficial consideration of its opinions.
In many of the cases above referred to expressions have been used in the opinions showing that the court considered the existence of a defeasance clause or a provision for the return of surplus of property or money as indicative of an intent to do no more than was expressly done on the face of the instrument i. e., to create a preference lien upon specified property to secure or provide for the payment of specified debts by sale thereof. So it is often said that the fact that the creditor or one of the creditors is the grantee, is strongly indicative of a mortgage and not of an assignment; but can it be fairly urged that any court ever intended by such expressions to hold that such isolated fact would control a clearly expressed legal intent to the contrary, especially in the face of the fact as evidenced by the cases above cited that such circumstance has often been ignored? We apprehend that if an insolvent were to convey all his property to one of his creditors in trust to sell same and distribute the proceeds pro rata among all his creditors according to the statute, the legal intent to make an assignment would be so clear that it would not be overturned by a provision for the return of surplus of property or money or even a declaration on the face of the instrument that the grantor did not intend to make an assignment, but a mortgage.
Let us discard for a moment the mist of theories with which this question has been attempted to be enveloped, and see if we can determine the intent of Duke and Dodson in executing the instrument set out in our *193
former opinion herein. It must be assumed that they were aware that, under the law of this State as declared by statute and repeated decisions of this court, they, being insolvent, could prefer creditors by mortgage or trust deed in the nature of a mortgage, but could not do so by an assignment. It is not to be lightly presumed that they deliberately intended to violate the express provision of the statute in attempting to create the preference provided for in the instrument. It is fair to presume that they intended to do a lawful thing. In applying this principle to the construction of an instrument in the case of Coffin v. Douglas,
We do not understand it to be urged here that the mere fact that it was shown that the creditors named in the instrument were all the creditors of the grantors, would distinguish this case from those above discussed. Indeed, since it is settled by the above cases that an insolvent may by mortgage or trust deed in the nature of a mortgage, fix a preference lien on all his property in favor of practically all of his creditors, it would be quite technical to hold that the character of the instrument would be in law transformed by the mere fact that all of the creditors were mentioned.
The opposition to the principle of the above decisions is based upon the erroneous assumption that it was the policy of the act of 1879 to force an equal distribution of the assets of an insolvent among all his creditors; and from such basis it has been persistently urged that if the facts show that the instrument, no matter in what language couched, was executed after the insolvent or person contemplating insolvency, as a matter of fact, formed the intent to part with all dominion over his property for the benefit of any creditor or creditors, it must be held an assignment.
Had this construction of the statute been adopted, the whole matter would have been simplified and the courts would not have been for these many years engaged in the difficult task of trying to glean, from the varied and doubtful expressions in the instruments, the true legal intent of the grantor, for every instrument, no matter what its form, executed after the formation of the intent first above mentioned would have been held an assignment; and such person could not have conveyed his property in satisfaction of or to secure payment of certain debts as has been steadily ruled by this court in a uniform line of decisions based upon La *195
Belle W. Wks. v. Tidball, Van Z. Co.,
We have deemed it unnecessary to notice cases not involving the question before us or to search therein for expressions used with reference to other matters, for the purpose of bringing them to the support of our views herein expressed. There are many cases in our reports of this class. We have not thought it necessary to examine the original instrument in all of them, but in such as we have taken time to examine, the instruments bear on their faces such unmistakable evidence of being intended as assignments that no question could fairly have arisen as to their proper construction and none was made here. Since, however, it has been urged that our former opinion herein is in direct conflict with one of these cases — Fant v. Elsbury,
It is contended that we were in error in holding in the original opinion that the exception to the sufficiency of the petition on account of its failure to allege the acceptance of any creditor under the instrument was well taken.
Plaintiff in his petition alleges that Duke and Dodson executed the instrument set out in our original opinion; that on the same day he accepted the trust and immediately took exclusive possession of the property to him in the instrument transferred and delivered; that by virtue of the instrument he became entitled to the possession of the property and to administer the same under the law for the benefit of creditors; that on the day of its execution he accepted the trust and proceeded to execute the same and was executing the same under the instrument until the 15th day of December, '91, while he was in the quiet and peaceable possession of the property in said instrument conveyed, Tittle, sheriff of Greer County, at the instance of the other defendants, seized and converted some of said property under a valid writ of attachment issued out of the District Court of Greer County in a suit by the other defendants against Duke Dodson, grantors in said instrument.
Since the instrument under which Vanleer, the trustee, entered and held possession, was, in our opinion, a mere trust deed in the nature of a mortgage, he acquired no title thereby, but was the agent of grantors Duke and Dodson in holding possession of the property, and his possession was their possession, and therefore the property was subject to levy at the suit of one of their creditors. If Duke and Dodson would have had no right to recover, how can the trustee, who shows affirmatively on the face of his own pleading, that he held merely as their agent, have any better right to recover than his principals would have had? In order to show a right in himself, the trustee should have alleged an acceptance at least by some creditor, whereby he would have shown that he held for some one else other than Duke and Dodson. In the absence of such an allegation, we are still of the opinion that the special exception was improperly overruled.
The motion for rehearing is overruled.
Overruled. *197