Wile v. Butler
Citation | 4 Colo.App. 154,34 P. 1110 |
Parties | WILE et al. v. BUTLER et al. |
Decision Date | 11 December 1893 |
Court | Court of Appeals of Colorado |
Action by Isaac Butler and another, partners as Butler Bros against Hecht & Co. The attached goods were claimed by Mayer Wile and others, partners as Wile Bros. & Co., who intervened. Judgment for plaintiffs. Interveners appeal. Affirmed.
G.K Hartenstein, for appellants.
C.S Libby, for appellees.
Butler Bros., appellees, brought suit against Hecht & Co., and attached a stock of goods in possession of the latter firm. The appellants, Wile Bros. & Co. intervened, claiming the goods by virtue of a chattel mortgage before that time given by Hecht & Co. to the interveners, to secure a debt owing by Hecht & Co. to them. The mortgage covered the goods which were attached, and provided that the mortgagors might sell the mortgaged property, and that they should, after deducting the expenses of sale, pay the proceeds at once to the mortgagees retaining nothing for themselves. Contemporaneously, however, with the execution of the mortgage, an oral agreement was made between the parties that the mortgagors might retain out of the proceeds of the sales not to exceed $10 per week each, for the support of their families. This oral agreement gives rise to the only question in the case. A mortgage of merchandise which permits a mortgagor to remain in possession of the goods, and sell them in the usual course of business, paying the proceeds to the mortgagee until his debt is extinguished, has been repeatedly held to be valid, in so far as the instrument itself is concerned; but its requirements must be carried out in good faith, and to the letter, otherwise the instrument, which the law intends merely as a security for an indebtedness, might be used by the mortgagor as a weapon to protect him against the enforcement of other just demands. That it may not have that effect, the moneys arising from the sale of the property must be turned over to the mortgagee until the mortgage debt is paid; and if, either by the terms of the mortgage itself, or by any agreement, oral or otherwise, the mortgagor is permitted to retain the proceeds, in whole or in part, for his own benefit, the effect is manifestly injurious to creditors, and in fraud of their rights; and such an agreement, no matter when made, or in what form, except as between the parties themselves, destroys the lien of the mortgage, and renders...
To continue reading
Request your trial-
Hasbrouck v. LaFebre
... ... (Ala.), 44 So. 693.) Also in Colorado. ( Wilcox v ... Jackson, 7 Colo. 721, 4 P. 966; Wilson v ... Voight, 9 Colo. 614, 13 P. 726; Wile v. Butler, ... 4 Colo.App. 154, 34 P. 1111; Wilson v. Jones, 20 ... Colo.App. 317, 78 P. 622; Wellington v. Terry, 38 ... Colo. 285, 88 P ... ...
-
Glass & Bryant Mercantile Co. v. Farmers' State Bank of Ft. Morgan
... ... 1, L.R.A. 1918E, 636; Harbison ... v. Tufts, 1 Colo.App. 140, 143, 27 P. 1014; Roberts v ... Johnson, 5 Colo.App. 406, 39 P. 596; Wile v. Butler, 4 ... Colo.App. 154, 34 P. 1110; Edinger v. Grace, 8 Colo.App. 21, ... 44 P. 855; Lee v. Stanard, 15 Colo.App. 101, 61 P. 234; Estes ... ...
-
Carroll v. Anderson
... ... Dobyns v. Meyer, 95 Mo. 132; Claflin v ... Foley, 22 W.Va. 434; Rodman v. Norton, 29 So ... 637 (Ala.) ; Wilson v. Voight, 9 Colo. 614; Wile ... v. Butler, 4 Colo. App. 154; Dodge v. Norlin, ... 133 F. 363 (Colo.) ; Standard Co. v. Schultz, 25 Pa ... St. 625; Skelton v. Connington, 77 ... ...
-
Exchange National Bank of Colorado Springs v. Hough, 5828.
...that was mutually satisfactory to it and the mortgagor. One judge dissented saying that the effect of the decision was to overrule Wile v. Butler, supra; Wilson v. Voight, supra, and like The significance and effect of Brug v. Herbst and Glass & Bryant Mercantile Co. v. Farmers' State Bank ......