Missouri Court of Appeals, 1887

Heideman-Benoist Saddlery Co. v. Urner

Heideman-Benoist Saddlery Co. v. Urner
Missouri Court of Appeals · Decided February 8, 1887 · Philips
24 Mo. App. 534; 1887 Mo. App. LEXIS 223

Heideman-Benoist Saddlery Co. v. Urner

Opinion of the Court

Philips, P. J.

This is an action by attachment. The grounds of attachment alleged in the affidavit are, that defendants are about, fraudulently, to conceal, or dispose of their property, etc., so as to hinder and delay their creditors, and that they have fraudulently removed or disposed of their property, etc.

On trial of the issues, on plea in abatement, had before the court sitting as a jury, the issues were found for the defendants.

*536The evidence showed that defendants were merchants, in saddlery, in the city of Nevada, Vernon county. They became largely indebted, beyond the amount of their assets. Some of their foreign creditors were pressing them for money, and threatening to bring suits against them by attachment. They had several home creditors, among whom were Martin, Taylor and Swan. One of the defendants, Urner, went to Martin, while said foreign creditors were so pressing for their debts, and’informed him of the fact that they threatened to attach, and suggested to him that he had better attach first, as they wanted to prefer their home creditors. Martin said he had no grounds of attachment. Urner suggested th^t he would make grounds. Thereupon Martin did attach.

The evidence tended to. show that defendants owed said Taylor about fifty-two dollars, and about this time they advised him to pay himself by taking harness out of the store-room, which he proceeded to do, taking some of it out at the front door and others through the back door. Swan was the father-in-law of one of the defendants, and the night before the attachment in question he was advised by the son-in-law that he had better remain in town that night, as their creditors were talking about attaching, and that if they moved in the matter, he should get out an attachment to get in ahead of them, which course he pursued.

The evidence also showed that one Cotton, residing in the country, owed the defendants on account about twenty dollars. On the day of the attachments, or about that time, one of the defendants visited him and requested him to pay the account to them, as they had been attached, ancl wanted the money to turn over to Thornton’s bank, which they were owing. The account book of defendants, also, showed that they had marked this account of Cotton’s as having been paid on the day before the attachment. Thornton’s bank was, however, a creditor of defendants.

*537The evidence also tended to show that the evening before the attachments were sued out one of defendants took home with him the pocket book that usually remained in the store. But how much, if any, money, it contained, the evidence failed to show.

There was some other immaterial evidence.

The plaintiff: asked, and the court refused, the following declaration of law:

“ The court declares the law to be, that, if the defendants were insolvent, and were being pressed by their creditors for the payment of their demands, but that plaintiff did not intend to attach until it ascertained that defendants had an understanding with one Martin, a home creditor, and one Swan, a father-in-law of defendant Prewett, that if the foreign creditors intended to attach that they, defendants, would make grounds for attachment, and thus give home- creditors a preference in their attachments, and that plaintiff did not attach until it had learned of said fraudulent conspiracy between ■said Martin, Swan, and defendants, and did not in fací run their attachment, nor intend to do so, until it had ascertained that said Martin and Swan had run their attachments in accordance with their understanding as aforesaid with defendants, then said company and confederation was fraudulent, and tended to hinder and delay these plaintiffs in the collection of their claim, and the attachment should be sustained.”

The court, of its own motion, gave the following instruction :

“The court declares that on the issues joined on the plea in abatement in this case, the 'finding must be for the defendants, unless the court finds that said defendants, at the time of the swearing out of the writ of attachment, were about to fraudulently conceal or dispose of their property or effects so as to hinder or delay their creditors, or that they had fraudulently removed or disposed of their goods and chattels, so as' to hinder or delay their creditors, and if the court believes from the *538evidence that the goods taken by Stevens were in value-no more than sufficient to pay. a valid and subsisting-debt due to Stevens from defendants, and that the defendants, by tkeir other acts, intended only to give a preference to their kome creditors, and tkat. said acts-had only tkat effect, then tke finding must be for tke defendant.”

I. Tke question decisive of tkis appeal, as we conceive, is not, as suggested by plaintiff’s counsel, whether or not there was sufficient evidence to have justified tke trial court in sustaining tke attachment; but it is rather whether tke court erred in tke giving and refusing of declarations of law, and whether tke evidence offered by plaintiff was of suck persuasive or overwhelming character as to make tke finding of tke court reversible error.

The instruction asked by tke plaintiff was faulty, in assuming tkat tke arrangement between defendants and tke kome creditors was, per se, a “ fraudulent conspiracy.” Tkat was tke very fact in issue, to be determined by a consideration of all tke facts and circumstances in evidence. Tke instruction does not seem to question tke validity and bona fieles of tke debts sought to be preferred by tke defendants, but is predicated on tke theory tkat, notwithstanding they were bona fide debts, yet if tke defendants induced these creditors to attach, or accept goods in payment, in order to get in ahead of other creditors, tkis was, per se, a fraudulent conspiracy to kinder or delay tke deferred creditors, suck as to invite and uphold tke attachment.

A debtor in failing circumstances has tke right to prefer one creditor to another, by either paying him in money, or by transferring to him, in any mode, sufficient of his property to pay him in full. And although his act may have tke effect to delay or kinder the.other creditors in tke collection of tkeir claims, tkis is not of itself sufficient to warrant an attachment. Murray v. Cason, *53915 Mo. 379; Dougherty v. Cooper, 77 Mo. 531; Forrester v. Moore, 77 Mo. 651.

If the defendants were actuated, in inducing the home creditors to attach, by an honest purpose to secure-their debts in preference to other creditors, and this was not done with the view to secure to themselves any advantage, or to defeat such other creditors, otherwise than by the necessary effect of such preference, this of itself was not sufficient ground for an attachment.

The instruction did not properly put the issue of good faith and fraudulent intent.

The instruction given by the court, of its own motion, indicates that the court comprehended clearly enough the real issue in the case. With its conclusion, as the trier of the facts, we see no just grounds for our interference.

II. The record in this case is a fit illustration of what seems to be becoming a common understanding and practice among some creditors, that if a debtor is unable to meet his debts, and is hard pressed by his creditors, this is a sufficient ground for an attachment; and the commercial enterprise evinced in getting ahead of all other creditors in the .race of diligence and vigilance, is enough to give a quietus to the conscience for making the statutory oath required to authorize the issue of the writ of seizure.

The defendants themselves seem to have been victims to this popular practice. So that while protesting that there existed, in fact, no grounds for attachment, tho eight they could create one by asking a creditor to swear there was cause. Because one creditor may be found so pliable as to swear to a fact for which there is no foundation, could hardly be a legal justification for a second affidavit based on the existence of the first.

The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

All concur.

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