Lee & Cady v. Farr
Lee & Cady v. Farr
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff is a Michigan corporation engaged in the wholesale cigar and tobacco business in Detroit, Mich., and a creditor of the retail cigar and tobacco firm of McCree & Heald, formerly doing business at 92 Woodward avenue in said city. Defendant Farr is the trustee under a trust chattel mortgage given by McCree & Heald on their stock of merchandise and fixtures for the benefit of their general creditors. ■ This controversy is over their exemptions in said stock.
On August 26, 1916, the members of said firm, Arthur W. McCree and Walter L. Heald, executed and delivered to plaintiff, “for a valuable consideration to us in hand paid, and as security for any sum that we now owe or may hereafter owe to Lee & Cady,” an assignment of their exemption interest in their stock of merchandise at 92 Woodward avenue, stated to be “so far as and only to the extent that said property now belonging to us, or which may hereafter belong to us, is or shall be exempt from levy and sale on execution against us,” etc. This instrument, which is claimed and conceded to be in effect a chattel mortgage, was not supported by an affidavit of good faith, as required by Act No. 163, Pub. Acts 1915 (3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 11988), to entitle it to be made of public record, and was never filed with the city clerk or other proper official. McCree & Heald were then, and continued to be, indebted to plaintiff in an amount exceeding $500 not otherwise secured.
A trust mortgage for the benefit of all their cred
It is urged in behalf of plaintiff that any disposition a debtor may make of his exemptions is not a fraud upon the rights of his creditors; that defendant Farr as trustee for the creditors, is in no more advantageous position to question plaintiff’s instrument than an individual creditor would be; that his trust mortgage was given for a naked, pre-existing indebtedness to the general creditors, without any valid consideration ; and that, so far as creditors are concerned, said Act No. 163 has no application to a chattel mortgage on exempt property.
Counsel cite abundant authority to sustain the proposition that under our exemption law the owner of exempt property may do with it as he likes, and his creditors are powerless to interfere. He may voluntarily mortgage, convey, sell, or give it away, and they cannot be heard to complain of any disposition he may make of it. It may be conceded that defendant is in no better position to question plaintiff’s instrument than would an individual creditor be, in like position
Both parties, to this action are, or represent, creditors, and both were given mortgages on this exempt property by the owners, to plaintiff for its sole benefit, and to defendant for the benefit of all the grantors’ creditors, including plaintiff, and in both cases, it may fairly be inferred, chiefly to secure existing indebtedness. Plaintiff’s instrument recites that it was for a “valuable consideration,” and as security for any sum the grantors “now owe or may hereafter owe.” There is nothing to indicate that their indebtedness to plaintiff was thereafter increased. The same grantors made statutory affidavit that the consideration for defendant’s instrument was “actual and adequate,” given in good faith. Act No. 163, Pub. Acts 1915 (3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 11988), provides:
*497 “Every mortgage or conveyance intended to operate as a mortgage of goods and chattels, which shall hereafter be made, which shall not be accompanied by an immediate delivery and followed by an actual and continued change of possession of the things mortgaged, shall be absolutely void as against creditors of the mortgagor, and as against subsequent purchasers or mortgagees in good faith, unless the mortgage or a true copy thereof shall be filed,” etc.
In accepting the mortgage made to him and the trust it imposed, which he did in writing, defendant obligated himself to services and responsibilities for and in the interest of his grantors, as well as their creditors. As detailed in the instrument, the varied duties imposed upon him called for the assumption of responsibility, exercise of his business judgment, and expenditure of his time. We do not think it can fairly be said, against the affidavit of the grantors and the provisions of the instrument, that it was without valuable consideration. In such case, “good faith,” as used in statutes relative to priority in recording or filing chattel mortgages, has been construed as meaning “without notice.” Riederer v. Pfaff, 61 Fed. 872. • It is not shown nor claimed that defendant had any actual notice of plaintiff’s unfiled instrument, which was intended to operate as a mortgage, was not accompanied by an immediate delivery, nor followed by an actual and continued change of possession of the things mortgaged. Defendant not only represented creditors of the mortgagors, but was also a subsequent mortgagee in good faith under the disclosed circumstances surrounding these transactions.
So long as a debtor’s exemptions remain absolutely his, entirely independent of his indebtedness, and a free subject of barter and sale, donation, or hypothecation by him, we see no reason why they should be excepted from the provisions of said Act No. 163 above
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
Reference
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- LEE & CADY v. FARR
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