31 Minn. 456 | Minn. | 1884
It appears by the complaint that on the first day of December, 1881, insolvency proceedings were instituted against the Faribault Windmill Company in the district court, under the insolvent law of 1881, (Laws 1881, c. 148,) by the filing of a petition by creditors. Thereupon, and pursuant to that statute, this plaintiff was appointed receiver, and he has commenced these actions for the purpose of having adjudged void a chattel mortgage and a real-estate mortgage, executed by the Windmill Company to the respective defendants on the 19th day of November, 1881, and filed for record on the 25th of the same month. The defendants were under legal liability as sureties for the insolvent debtor, and the mortgages were given to secure them in respect to such liability. By means of the mortgages the defendants obtained a preference over other creditors. There was no change or transfer of possession of the mortgaged property. The answer alleges that the mortgages were not given with a view of giving a preference to the defendants, and that, when they were given, the defendants had no reason to believe, and did not believe, that the mortgagor was insolvent. The case comes here by .appeal from an order sustaining a demurrer to this answer.
In Weston v. Loyhed, 30 Minn. 221, construing this statute, we decided that it avoided a conveyance of property made by an insolvent •debtor, with a view of giving a preference, within four months prior
Section 4 of the act, so far as we are to consider it, is as follows: “Conveyances * * made and securities given by any insolvent debtor, or a debtor in contemplation of insolvency, within four months of making an assignment, as provided in section one of this act, with a view of giving a preference to any creditor upon a preexisting debt, or to any persons under liability for such debtor over another, shall be void as to all creditors or persons receiving the same who shall have reasonable cause to believe that such debtor was insolvent; and all such conveyances made and securities given at any time, unaccompanied with a delivery or change of possession of the property to the grantee, unless the instrument containing the grant or conveyance shall have been duly filed or docketed before the commencement of such sixty days, shall be void, as a preference, as to any creditor.”
The fact alleged in the answer and admitted by the demurrer, that the defendants had no reason to believe, and did not believe, that the mortgagor was insolvent, presents a case not within the first part of the section above recited. That applies only to cases where the person receiving the conveyance, payment, or security had cause to believe the debtor to be insolvent. The most satisfactory construction we are able to place upon the succeeding part of this section gives to it this meaning: All such conveyances made and securities given, (that is, conveyances and securities given by an insolvent debtor, or by a debtor in contemplation of insolvency,) at any time, (being more than 60 days prior to the commencement of insolvency proceedings,) unaccompanied with a delivery or change of possession of the property, unless the instrument containing the grant or conveyance shall have been duly placed on record prior to such period óf 60 days, shall be void as a preference (that is, shall not be allowed to stand, and
In thus expressing our views as to the effect of this statute, we would not be understood as intimating that conveyances which are not avoided by it may not be void under our statute of frauds, or the statutes relating to the recording of such instruments. We do not Consider that this insolvent law modifies those statutes. It follows, from this construction, that conveyances and securities given and filed less than 60 days prior to the instituting of insolvency proceedings, as was the case in respect to the mortgages in question, are not avoided by force of this insolvent law, merely by reason of there having been no change of possession. If, however, the person receiving the same had reasonable cause to believe the debtor insolvent, they
Although the defendants alleged to have been preferred were only sureties for the insolvent debtor, the provisions of the statute applicable have the same force as in respect to actual creditors.
Order reversed.