Bradley v. G. Gotzian & Co.
Bradley v. G. Gotzian & Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendants, M. A. Eaton and E. A. Eaton, were husband and wife and engaged in mercantile business at Vancouver in this state; and, being
It is contended that the arrangement entered into between the Eatons and Gotzian & Co., was a fraud upon the other creditors; that Gotzian & Co., having originally taken a mortgage upon the homestead to secure the indebtedness to them, could not enter into the agreement aforesaid and transfer their security to the stock of merchandise, as the Eatons were at that time indebted beyond their ability to pay. It is also contended that the acceptance of this real estate mortgage was in effect an agreement upon the part of Gotzian & Co., to look to the real estate for their pay, and that the inducement to the other creditors to extend credit to the Eatons was the unincumbered stock of merchandise, and that, having obtained credit from the other parties by virtue of having this unincumbered stock, it would be a fraud on such creditors to permit the indebtedness of Gotzian & Co., to be made from said goods and the.real estate exempted.
But we are -unable to see where there is any founda-l tion for this. . It is not claimed that there were any ,
A further contention is made that the judgment should be reversed or modified because the court, after directing the payment of the amount due Gotzian & Co., ordered that the balance of the proceeds of the goods, if any, should be applied on the claims of the attaching creditors pro rata, when it should have been paid to them in the order of their levy or according
Anders and Gordon, JJ., concur.
Hoyt, C. J. and Dunbar, J., dissent.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Herbert Bradley v. G. Gotzian & Co., G. K. Porter & Co.
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCES — CHATTEL MORTGAGE—CONSIDERATION — . APPLICATION OF PROCEEDS OF ATTACHMENT LEVIES. The fact that a bona fide creditor who has a mortgage upon the homestead of his debtor, which, under the law, is exempt from execution, releases such mortgage and takes a chattel mortgage upon the debtor’s stock of merchandise, will not render the transaction a fraudulent one, although its effect is to prevent other creditors from realizing on their claims. The proceeds of goods directed to be sold under attachment levies should be applied on the claims of attaching creditors in the order of their levy, and not pro rata.