Citation Numbers: 39 N.J. Eq. 595
Filed Date: 3/15/1885
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/24/2022
On appeal from a decree advised by Vice-Chancellor Van Fleet, whose opinion is reported in Lister v. Simpson, 11 Stew. Eq. 438.
The dispute in this case is between a judgment creditor and a chattel mortgagee for priority of position. The facts of the case
On October 17th, 1883, Lister took possession of all the contents of the store, and advertised the same for sale on October 23d, 1883.
On October 20th, 1883, the appellant Smith recovered a judgment against Simpson in the Essex circuit court, on which execution was issued, by virtue of which execution a levy was taken by the sheriff of Essex on the contents of the drug store.
The answer admits all the material facts set out in the bill, and the cause was brought to a hearing on the bill and answer only.
The claim of the judgment creditor is that the chattel mortgage is void, as a fraud upon creditors, and, as against his levy, has no standing as a lien on the chattels levied on, and this claim is based on the fact that the mortgage provides that the mortgagor may sell the chattels mortgaged in the regular cou/rse of business, and thus divest himself and the mortgage, also, of all title to and interest in the chattels.
We claim that this provision makes the mortgage ipso facto void, the argument being that the mortgagor retains not only the possession of the property mortgaged, but also the absolute control of it for his own benefit, and that while such an arrangement is no security to the pretended mortgagee, it is, if sustained, a shield to ward off the other creditors, and so hinders and delays them.
Professor James O'. Pierce has collected all the cases on the subject in his book, Fraudulent Mortgages of Merchandise, published by F. H. Thomas & Co., St. Louis, 1.884, and has shown that the weight of authority is in favor of our insistment.
There do not appear to be any recent English cases in which the exact point is involved or considered. There are recent cases which hold that retention of possession alone by the mortgagor is not conclusive evidence of fraud, but we find no case in which the absolute power of disposition for his own benefit by the mortgagor is an element. Martindale v. Booth, 3 B. & Ad. 498.
The leading case on the subject in the United States is Robinson v. Elliot, 22 Wall. 513, in which Davis, J., declares a mortgage of such character to be fraudulent in law, and void as to other creditors. He says: “ Both the possession and right of disposition remain with the mortgagors. They are to deal with the property as their own; sell it at retail, and use the money thus obtained to replenish their stock. There is no covenant to .account with the mortgagees, nor any recognition that the property is sold for their benefit. Instead of the mortgage being directed solely to the bona fide security of the debts then existing, and their payment at maturity, it is based on the idea that they might be indefinitely prolonged. * * * It hardly need be said that a mortgages, which, by its very term, authorizes the parties to accomplish such object, is, to say the least of it, con.structively fraudulent.”
The federal district and circuit courts have also frequently declared the doctrine. In re Kirkbridge, 5 Dill. (Mo.) 116. Dillon, J., stated the rule as follows: “A conveyance of personal property to secure creditors, when the grantor, by the understanding of the parties, expressed or implied, is to remain in possession of the property, with a power of sale, is void upon a principle of public policy embodied in the statute, irrespective of any question of actual or intended fraud.” In re Forbes, 5 Biss. (Ill.) 510; In re Bloom, 17 N. B. R. (N. J.) 425 ; Wells v. Langbein, 20 Fed. Rep. (Iowa) 183; In re Cantrell, 6 Ben. (N. Y.) 482; Smith v. Ely, 10 N. B. R. (N. Y.) 553; Crooks v. Stewart, 2 McCrary (Iowa) 13; In re Kahley, 2 Biss. 387; Catlin v. Currier, 1 Sawy. 12.
Woods, J., in Johnson v. Patterson, 2 Woods (Ga.) 443, says:. “ The general rule is that a chattel mortgage, with possession left in the mortgagor and power of sale, is fraudulent and void.”'
The precise question involved in this case has never arisen in. New Jersey. As stated by the vice-chancellor in his opinion, the question here has always been whether mere retention of the possession of mortgaged chattels by the mortgagor makes the mortgage void. Our courts have not had, until now,'an opportunity to decide upon the effect of the reserved power of sale..
I. George F. Simpson appeals from that part of the final decree in the cause which adjudges that he should pay to the complainant $1,451.20.
Simpson is not entitled to prosecute an appeal, for the reason that he did not answer or appear in the cause at any time; a decree pro aonfesso was entered against him, and the decree was made in his absence. Townsend v. Smith, 1 Beas. 350.
II. Charles B. Smith appeals from that part of said decree which adjudges the mortgage given by Simpson to Lister to be a lien upon the chattels therein described.
Although, at law, a mortgagor must have a present property, either actual or potential, in the things mortgaged to make a valid mortgage (Looker v. Peckwell, 9 Vr. 253; S. C. on error, 10 Vr. 134), in equity the rule is otherwise, and a mortgage valid, both as between the parties and as against the creditors of the mortgagor, may be made upon personal property to be acquired by the mortgagor after the execution of the mortgage.
In such cases, though the property is not within the grasp of the mortgage at the date of its execution, yet it comes within its grasp the moment the mortgagor acquires title to it.
a. A conclusive inference or presumption that such a mortgage is fraudulent is in conflict with the course of judicial opinion of this state.
Prior to the statute providing for the recording of chattel mortgages, the continuing possession of/the mortgagor was held to be only prima faeie evidence of fraud, and might be explained; such possession was, at most, only evidence of the fact of fraud, but not a fact in judgment of law, of itself conclusively establishing the fraud.
The same rule of evidence seems to be now generally accepted elsewhere. The writer in Jones on Chat. Mort. § 320, says: “ The modern English doctrine, and that more generally adopted by the American courts, is, that possession by a vendor or mortgagor is only prima fade a badge of fraud; that the presumption arising from that circumstance may be rebutted by explanations, showing the transaction to have been fair and honest; and that'the question of fraud is always one of fact for a jury to determine.”
In Gay v. Bidwell, 7 Mich. 519, 525, Judge Campbell, says : “ To hold that a merchant cannot mortgage his goods without closing his doors would be to hold that no mortgage of a merchant’s stock can be made at all.”
(e) A conclusive presumption that such a mortgage is fraudulent has no reason for its existence derived from general observation and experience.
In Brett v. Carter, 2 Low. 458, Judge Lowell says: “Take this very case as an illustration. It is admitted there was no fraud in fact; that the trader’s whole stock was supplied by the defendant; that the mortgage shows that all the stock, present and future, is hypothecated, not as á cover or blind, for there was none, but to the payment of a certain debt by certain installments. No offer is made to prove that any one was deceived, or even was ignorant of the mortgage; but I am asked to find fraud in law when I know, and it is admitted, there was none in fact.”
(d) Without proof of external facts, a conclusive presumption, either of the intention of the parties, or of the bearing of the mortgage upon creditors, is impossible. Gay v. Bidwell, 7 Mich. 519; Oliver v. Eaton, 7 Mich. 108; Cheatham v. Hawkins, 76 N. C. 325.
In England, “ if fraud is alleged to exist in a sale or mortgage, it must be proved as a fact, and is never adjudged to exist, in law, on the face of the deed. Though the vendor or mortgagor remain in possession, and act as apparent owner of the mortgaged property, either with or without a power of disposal, the question of fraud is, in every case, to be determined as one of fact.” Jones on Chat. Mort. § 413.
. In support of the doctrine it is said that a mortgage which allows the mortgagor to sell the goods is no security, because he may, at any time, sell the entire property, and therefore the mortgage is of no benefit, except to ward off creditors. But the power of disposal contended for is that the mortgagor may sell in the ordinary course of trade. The mortgagor could not, if he would, make a valid sale of the entire property at once. The mortgage being duly. recorded, a purchaser would have legal notice of the extent of the power of sale. Jones on Chat. Mort. § 422
It is also urged that a mortgage of the character in question is, irrespective of fraud, against public policy.
In Mitchell v. Winslow, 2 Story 630, 647, Judge Story says: “ I am not aware of any policy of the law, or of any principle of law, which makes any conveyance of this sort invalid as to creditors, if they have full notice, or may have full notice of it by the exercise of reasonable diligence. Indeed the law makes the registration of the deed constructive notice of its contents to all persons, since it was required to be registered, and was registered in conformity to law. What ground is there, then, to assert that the conveyance was against the policy of the law? The phrase itself is somewhat indefinite, and, in its actual application here, is difficult to be grasped and comprehended. I profess that I am not able to perceive any; and, so far as authorities go, they point the other way.”
In those states where this doctrine of constructive fraud has
In New York, Minnesota, Illinois, Missouri and Ohio, if the agreement to sell is not contained in the mortgage itself, the question whether there is any such agreement, and what are the indications of fraud arising from it, is one for the jury. Jones on Chat. Mort. § 424.