60 Wis. 622 | Wis. | 1884
The following opinions were filed May 15, 1884:
In the case of Vernon v. Upson, ante, p. 418, we hold that a voluntary assignment by an insolvent firm for the benefit of its creditors, which assignment contains preferences in favor of creditors of the individual partners, is void as against the unpreferred creditors of the firm who repudiate the assignment. To the same effect is the recent case of Powers v. C. II. Hamilton Paper Co., ante, p. 23. The reasons upon which such ruling is based are sufficiently stated in the opinion in Vernon v. Upson, and need not be repeated hero.
The assignment of Brearly & Adams in the present case prefers the Manufacturers’ National Bank in respect to an indebtedness of $1,000, evidenced by two promissory notes, amounting to that sum, made by II. Iiirko Adams (who was a member of the assigning firm), and indorsed by H. D. Adams, of Beloit. Looking at the terms of the assignment alone, this is clearly a preference in favor of the bank of the indebtedness to it of II. II. and II. D. Adams, evidenced by their notes. Indeed, the emphatic language of the assignment is that the assigning firm intended thereby “ to prefer said promissory notes due or owing said bank hj said II. Kirke Adams, upon which said II. D. Adams is indorser, and none other! The instrument of assignment contains no statement or intimation that the firm of Brearly & Adams were parties to the notes, or had assumed or become liable to pay them, or that it ever had any interest in the proceeds thereof, or anything whatever to do with them. Hence it shows on its face a preference in favor of a creditor of one
The circuit court admitted evidence, extrinsic the instrument, of the relations of the firm to the notes in question. Stated as strongly for the plaintiff as the evidence will permit, the facts are briefly these: The firm of Brearly & Adams sought to obtain a loan of $1,000 from the Manufacturers’ Bank, on the indorsement of H. D. Adams, of Beloit. The bank agreed to make the loan on that security. Thereupon H. IT. Adams, with the consent of his partner, Brearyl, drew the notes in question, payable to IT. D. Adams, and signed his individual name thereto. ITe then sent them to the payee, rvho indorsed and returned them to the maker. IT. D. Adams was an accommodation indorser. The notes were thereupon taken up on the books of the firm, and entered therein as “ bills payable.” The firm took them to the bank for discount, and the same were discounted, and the proceeds placed to the credit of the firm on the books of the bank,— the firm being indebted to the bank. The firm name was never put to the notes in any form.
The whole transaction amounts to this: H. IT. Adams made his notes to IT. D. Adams. The latter indorsed them for the accommodation of the maker, who then transferred them to his firm. The firm sold the notes to the bank without indorsement or guaranty, and. received the proceeds. It is very clear that neither the bank nor the indorser ever had any claim against the firm of Brearly & Adams on these
We think there is no significance in the circumstance that the notes were entered in the books of the firm as “ bills payable.” Although our knowledge of book-keeping is imperfect, we suppose that account should contain entries of notes, drafts, and the like, to which the proprietor is a party, or has in some effectual manner bound himself to pay. As we have already seen, the firm of Brearly & Adams never placed itself in that attitude in respect to these notes. It seems to us that the entry of them in the books of the firm should have been in “ bills receivable ” account, and that the corresponding entry therein would be a credit to IT. IL Adams for tile same amount. This may not be a correct view of what would have been the proper entries in the firm books; but, if it is not, that does not change the essential characteristics of the transaction.
The maker and indorser, not the firm, are the debtors of the bank on the notes, and if the indorser takes them up the maker alone is his debtor. Hence the parol testimony does not remove the fraudulent feature from the assignment. The preference still remains one for the payment of the individual notes of a partner, for the payment of which the firm is not liable to the preferred creditor.
We think the court erred in directing a verdict for the plaintiff. On the contrary, a majority of the court are of
Were there no such conclusive proof of the invalidity of the assignment, we are all of the opinion that there was evidence tending to show the assignment fraudulent in other particulars, sufficient to send the question of fraud to the jury. But the view we have taken of the case renders it unnecessary to discuss this proposition.
By the Oourt.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
While I do not dissent from the decision of this court reversing the judgment of the circuit court, I am unable to assent to that part of the opinion of the court which holds that the assignment under which the respondent claims the property in question is void on its face, because, as it is claimed, it gives a preference to a debt due from one of the partners, and not from the firm, or to that part of the opinion which holds that the parol proof offered on the trial does not show that the debt preferred by the assignment was a debt due from the firm. I think the parol evidence clearly shows that the firm, as between the partners, owed the debt which was preferred to the bank, and if so, then as to the other creditors of the firm it is immaterial whether the bank could enforce the collection of the debt in an action at law against the firm or not. This court, in the case of First Nat. Bank v. Bertschy, 52 Wis., 438, held, after mature consideration, that it wms not a fraud against the other creditors that the debtor gave a mortgage to secure the payment of money which the mortgagor had promised to pay to the mortgagee, when the invalidity of the promise arises merely from the fact that it is not in such form or evidenced in such manner as the law requires, to enable the mortgagee to enforce it in an action at law. It seems to me very clear that the evidence in this case shows that the debt
A motion for a rehearing was denied September 23, 1884.