State ex rel. Hengesbach v. Nelson Distilling Co.
State ex rel. Hengesbach v. Nelson Distilling Co.
Opinion of the Court
This is an action on an indemnifying bond. The defendant sued the ‘firm of Huffman & Gersbaeher by attachment. A' stock of goods was seized under the writ as the property of the firm. The relatrix filed with the constable a verified claim of the property, the defendant gave the bond in suit, and the goods were sold under the attachment proceedings.
The facts in the case are substantially as follows: The attachment was served on the thirteenth day of November, 1893. On the seventh day of September preceding, Huffman & Gersbacher executed to the relatrix a chattel mortgage on the goods in question, for the purpose of securing an alleged indebtedness from them to her of $500. The debt was represented by ten promissory notes of $50 each, due respectively in as many months. The mortgage contained this provision: “The property hereby sold and conveyed to remain in her (their) possession until default be made in the payment of the said debt and interest, or some part thereof;' but in case of a sale or disposal, or attempt to sell or dispose of said property, or a removal or attempt to remove the same from No. 2628 North Jefferson avenue, in said city of St. Louis, Missouri, or any unreasonable depreciation in value thereof, the said Mrs. Kate Hengesbaeh. (relatrix) may take the said property, or any part thereof, into her or their (sic) possession.” The mortgage was duly recorded on the fifteenth day of September. On the seventh day of November, Huffman & Gersbacher executed and delivered to the relatrix a bill of sale for the entire stock of goods and fixtures The consideration stated in the writing was $500. The evi
We have examined the record and have-found but one error, and that is an immaterial one, and was in favor of the defendant. The court at the instance of. the defendant, instructed the jury, as a matter of law, that the mortgage was fraudulent, having been made to the use of the grantors. This was error. The circuit court was doubtless misled by the decision of Judge Adams in the case of Lodge v. Samuels, Ex’r, 50 Mo. 204. There the mortgage conveyed the entire stock in a broom manufacturing establishment. It was held by Judge Adams that the plain meaning of the deed was that the grantors should remain in possession and continue to manufacture and sell brooms, and that for that reason the mortgage should, as a matter of law, be declared fraudulent and void as to the creditors of the grantor. But the doctrine of that ease was overruled in the subsequent case of Weber v. Armstrong, 70 Mo. 217. It was there held that, unless a chattel mortgage expressly authorizes the mortgagor to sell, or its terms are such that such power must necessarily be inferred, it can not upon its face be held to have been executed for the use of the mortgagor. In the mortgage here there is nothing expressly authorizing Huffman & Gers
There is no substantial evidence vin the case that the debt of Huffman & Grersbacher to the relatrix was not bona fide; nor is there anything to show fraud in fact in the execution of the mortgage. There was evidence tending to prove the execution and delivery of the bill of sale; that it was executed in settlement of the mortgage debt, and that the value of the goods was nut materially in excess of the debt; that the goods were immediately delivered to the relatrix, and were in the actual- possession of her agent at the time the defendant’s writ of attachment was levied. Therefore the defendant is conclusively bound by the finding and judgment of the circuit court.
The fact that the mortgage may have been constructively fraudulent by reason of the authority to sell in the grantors, is a matter of no moment. The relatrix claimed title to the goods under the bill of sale, and the presumption is that the court so found. But, if she had claimed under the mortgage, her subsequent possession after condition broken would have purged the transaction of the fraud. Dobyns v. Meyer, 95 Mo. 132.
The judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.