217 N.W. 894 | Mich. | 1928
The question: If a debtor, without compliance with the bulk sales law, sells a half interest in his business to another who becomes his partner, and later, and again without compliance with the bulk sales law, sells out to his partner, may his creditors hold the purchaser in garnishment proceedings for the value of the merchandise received?
The answer: Yes.
The facts: Gaylord B. Angus conducted a retail coal business. In March, 1924, he was indebted to plaintiff, had about $500 worth of coal on hand, sold a half interest in the business and merchandise to defendant John W. Noor, and the seller and purchaser became equal partners and continued the business. In August, 1925, the partnership had $1,500 worth of coal on hand and Noor purchased the interest of Angus. The provisions of the bulk sales law (2 Comp. Laws 1915, *692 § 6346 et seq.) were not complied with at any time. Plaintiff obtained judgment against Angus in the sum of $1,289.44, and sued out a writ of garnishment against defendant Noor. The garnishee was examined in court and adjudged liable to respond to plaintiff for one-half the value of the coal in stock at the time of each purchase. Noor paid some other creditors of Angus to an amount, he claimed, in excess of the value of the coal, but how much was so paid before the writ was served and how much after service was not shown. The garnishee defendant, by case-made, reviews the judgment rendered against him for $1,000.
Claims of garnishee defendant:
"(1) The transfer by the owner of a stock of merchandise and fixtures of an interest in his business to another is not a sale, transfer or assignment in bulk within the purview of the 'bulk sales law.' (Fixtures are not involved in this case.)
"(2) The disclosure and examination of the garnishee defendant failed to show unqualified liability on the part of the garnishee defendant, and are, therefore, insufficient to support a judgment for plaintiff.
"(3) In no event was plaintiff entitled to recover a judgment for the full value of all merchandise received by the garnishee defendant from the principal defendant."
The law: If defendant Noor is liable by reason of noncompliance with the bulk sales law, then garnishment was proper procedure. Spurr v. Travis,
The statute (2 Comp. Laws 1915, § 6346) provides:
"The sale, transfer or assignment, in bulk, of any part or the whole of a stock of merchandise, or merchandise and the fixtures pertaining to the conducting *693 of said business, otherwise than in the ordinary course of trade and in the regular and usual prosecution of the business of the seller, transferor, or assignor, shall be void as against the creditors of the seller, transferor, assignor," * * *
unless certain specified conditions are observed. In the first sale of a half interest and formation of the partnership there was a transfer in bulk of a part of the stock and merchandise, and such was not in the ordinary course of trade or the regular and usual transaction of the business of the seller, and, having been made in violation of the bulk sales law, was void as to creditors, and the purchaser became accountable to the creditors of the seller to the value of the interest in the merchandise so purchased. See Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. v.Bouchelle,
Authorities are at variance upon the question here presented; the divergence in some instances being attributable to language of particular statutes, in others to the adoption of strict or liberal construction, while in still others there is flat disagreement. We have examined the cases, and, without citing all, will give our views.
Some courts consider the bulk sales law as in derogation of the common law, and, therefore, to be strictly construed (Smith-Calhoun Rubber Co. v. McGhee Rubber Co. [Tex. Civ. App.],
In Daly v. Sumpter Drug Co.,
"That a sale of a half interest in a stock of goods, where the purchaser contemporaneously becomes a partner therein with the seller, does not fall under the 'bulk sales law,' and therefore, he was not bound to comply with the terms of that law, and his purchase was not fraudulent in law."
The court answered:
"We are of the opinion that the case before us falls within the terms of the act. The language of the act is:
" 'A sale of any portion of a stock of merchandise otherwise than in the ordinary course of trade in the regular and usual prosecution of the seller's business, or a sale of an entire stock of merchandise in bulk, shall be presumed to be fraudulent and void as against the creditors of the seller, unless,' etc.
"A half interest is a portion of the stock. We do not think the act means that it must be a distinct portion or a part severed from the whole stock. The sale of a half interest by a merchant for the purpose of taking the vendee into partnership is within the purpose and reason of the act, since it very materially changes the relation of the vendor's creditors to the stock, if such sale be valid."
It will be noted that the Tennessee statute is similar to the Michigan statute, except in the particular that our statute declares a sale in violation of its conditions to be void. See, also, Marlow v. Ringer,
In Schoeppel v. Pfannensteil,
"It is insisted that under a strict construction of the act it should not be made to apply to a sale by one partner to his associate of his interest in a mercantile business. This was held in Taylor v. Folds,
"If the debtor and the claimant had been partners in the business at the time the credit was extended to Cook, a subsequent sale by Cook to the claimant of his interest in the business would have been valid, under the decision inTaylor v. Folds, supra. But Cook and the claimant were not partners when the credit was extended to Cook. After the extension of credit, Cook sold out a half interest in the business to the claimant, and then, within less than three months, sold out the other half interest to his partner. If a transaction of this kind could be sustained, it would be quite an easy matter in any case to defeat the act of 1903 by selling out on one day a half interest in a business and then selling the other half on the day following. No such construction of the act of 1903 is permissible, and the decision in Taylor v.Folds does not so hold."
In Fairfield Shoe Co. v. Olds, supra, it was held that a sale by one partner to the other partner of his interest in a stock of merchandise was not within the purview of the bulk sales law, citing, among other cases, Taylor v. Folds, supra.
Defendant Noor held the merchandise he purchased on both occasions for the creditors of Angus and is liable to plaintiff in garnishment although he has paid *696 his vendor in full, and even if he has disposed of all the merchandise so received.
We think the examination of the garnishee defendant in open court disclosed a liability sufficient to support the judgment rendered. Upon the record, plaintiff was entitled to recover to the full value of all merchandise received by the garnishee defendant from the principal defendant in violation of the bulk sales law.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs to plaintiff.
NORTH, FELLOWS, CLARK, McDONALD, and SHARPE, JJ., concurred.
Chief Justice FLANNIGAN and the late Justice BIRD took no part in this decision.