Park v. South Bend Chilled Plow Co.
Park v. South Bend Chilled Plow Co.
Opinion of the Court
Findings of Fact.
Appellant, trustee in bank-rutcy of the estate of Skinner Mercantile Company, of Rogers, Bell county, Tex., brought suit to recover the title to certain agricultural implements, and to cancel alleged liens thereon claimed by appellee. He alleged that the Skinner Mercantile Company purchased said goods of appellee under a written contract, by the terms of which it was agreed that appellee retain title to same until they were fully paid for, and that proceeds of the sales of same should be held in trust for appellee; that it was agreed in said contract that said goods were to be daily exposed for sale, and sold by said mercantile company in their usual course of trade, and that title thereto would by such sales be vested in any purchaser who might buy the same; that said written contract was filed in the office of the county clerk of Bell county as a chattel mortgage a short time prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy by Skinner Mercantile Company; that said goods were unsold when such petition in bankruptcy was filed, and were in the possession of appellant as trustee for said bankrupt estate, and that title thereto is vested in him as such trustee; that by virtue of the laws of the state of Texas, the attempted reservation of title constitutes said contract a chattel mortgage, and that the same is void under the laws of this state; that by virtue of the act of Congress he, as such trustee, has all the rights in said property that could have been acquired by a creditor who had fixed a lien thereon by any judicial process; that he is the owner of said goods for the further reason that the Skinner Mercantile Company might, as of the date it was adjudged a bankrupt, have transferred said goods and passed title thereto to, the *844 purchaser, under the terms of said contract with appellee.
The court sustained a demurrer to said petition, and from judgment thereon appellant has perfected this appeal.
Opinion.
In 1879 the Legislature of this state passed an act providing for assignments by debtors for the benefit of their creditors. The seventeenth section of that act reads as follows:
“Every mortgage, deed of trust, or other form of lien attempted to be given by the owner of any stock of goods, wares or merchandise daily exposed to sale, in parcels, in the regular course of the business of such merchandise, and contemplating a continuance of possession of said goods, and control of said business, by sale of said goods by said owner shall be deemed fraudulent and void.” Acts 16th Leg. c. 53.
This section was omitted from title 8, Assignment for Creditors, in the Revised Statutes of 1895, hut was carried forward as article 2548, title 50, relating to Frauds and Fraudulent Conveyances, and is now article 3970 of the Revised Statutes of 1911. Article 5654 of the Revised Statutes of 1911, passed in 1885, reads as follows:
“All reservation of the title to or property in chattels, as security for the purchase money thereof, shall be held to be chattel mortgages, and shall, when possession is delivered to the vendee, be void as to creditors and bona fide purchasers, unless such reservations be in writing and registered as required [by law] of chattel mortgages.”
In Harling v. Creech, 88 Tex. 301, 31 S. W. 357, Mr. Justice Brown, speaking for the court, said:
“The language, ‘all reservations of title to or property in chattels as a security for the purchase money thereof, shall be held to be chattel mortgages,’ is plain, and admits of no other construction. Whenever the transaction assumes that shape, the law gives it the character of a chattel mortgage.”
In Crews v. Harlan, 99 Tex. 97, 87 S. W. 656, 13 Ann. Cas. 863, Chief Justice Gaines said:
“The effect of the statute is to change the nature of the contract from that of a sale, to take effect so as to pass the title, only upon the payment of the purchase price, to a mortgage to secure the debt.”
But, in Bowen v. Lansing Wagon Works, 91 Tex. 385, 43 S. W. 872, in which the facts were substantially the same as in the instant case, in so far as concerns the point now under consideration, it was held by our Supreme Court that article 3970 did not apply, for the reason that the transaction was “a reservation by the vendor and not any form of lien attempted to be given by the owner.” I do not think this proposition is sound. It is true that the parties there, as here, intended to reserve title in the seller. But, as said by Chief Justice Gaines, in the excerpt above given from Grews v. Harlan, the statute in such cases passes the title to the purchaser. Parties to a contract are conclusively presumed to have intended the legal consequence of the language deliberately used by them. The contract having passed the title to the purchaser, and it being in law a chattel mortgage given by him, it was, in my opinion, a “form of lien attempted to be given by the owner,” which, if it comes within the condemnation of article 3970, supra, is void. • However, as the decision in the Bowen Case was rendered by our Supreme Court, and has been followed by Courts of Civil Appeals in Mayfield v. Harlan, 184 S. W. 313, Hall v. Keating, 33 Tex. Civ. App. 526, 77 S. W. 1054, and in Mlansur v. Beeman, 45 S. W. 729, and by the federal court in Re Raney (D. G.) 202 Fed. 1003, and in Re Anson (D. C.) 203 Fed. 871, and has doubtless become the basis of numerous, commercial transactions, I feel *845 constrained, to yield to its authority, and, speaking now for the court, we overrule appellant’s contention in this regard.
It is true that appellee could have transferred the property in question at any time prior to his becoming a bankrupt, and the purchaser would have acquired a perfect title thereto. But he had not done so. The title which he had was the legal title subject to the mortgage which he had given. This title and none other passed to the assignee.
For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the trial court herein.
Affirmed.
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