Court Opinion

ID: 4894426
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-02 23:55:06.141245+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:12:36.985861
License: Public Domain

Willie, Chief Justice.—
Unless the assignment was void upon its face, there was of course no error in permitting it to go to the ]ury. *574It is contended by the appellants that it is void for containing neither a full statement of the property conveyed nor of the claims to be paid by the assignee.
The instrument conveys all the property of every character owned by the firm making the assignment. This has always been held a sufficient description, and is as definite as an absolute owner is required to make in an ordinary deed to his property. It is only necessary that the description given should be such that, when supplemented by parol evidence, it will suffice to ascertain the property. Clark v. Few, 62 Ala., 243; Walker v. Newlin, 22 Kans., 106.
As to the other objection, it has been held by this court that it is enough if the assignment give the names of the creditors without stating the nature or amount of their debts; or at least that the failure to do more does not vitiate the deed, or authorize the court to declare it void upon its face. Van Hook v. Walton, 28 Tex., 74. The present deed does name all the preferred creditors, and that has been held sufficient without specifying those who are postponed. Halsey v. Whitney, 4 Mason, 206.
The omission to include in an assignment a full statement of the property conveyed, or of the creditors of the assignor, and the amount of their demands, must be done with a fraudulent intent iti order to vitiate it; and as no such intent appeared on the face of the present assignment, if it existed at all, it must have been by reason of extraneous facts to be submitted to the jury in connection with the instrument itself.
The case of Caton v. Mosely, 25 Tex., 374, cited as holding an opposite doctrine, arose upon a wholly different deed. The assignment not only did not specify the amount of the demands, but did not give the names of any of the creditors. Moreover, it authorized the assignee to hold the property and dispose of the same as soon as he could to the best advantage of the assignor’s creditors generally. Taking the provisions of the deed altogether, the court held that it did not declare the uses to which the property was assigned, nor settle the rights of the creditors under it. All this was left to the assignee.
Hot so with the present assignment, as the entire method in which the trust is to be executed is pointed out in the instrument. We think it was properly admitted in evidence. See Baldwin v. Peet, 22 Tex., 714; Van Hook v. Walton, supra. The deed we are passing upon arose before the passage of the assignment law of 1879, and is, of course, considered without reference to the provisions of that act.
It is further urged that the court erred in not charging the jury *575that the burden of proving that some of the creditors of the assignee were unpaid at the date of the trial of this cause was upon the plaintiff.
It is certainly clear that at the time the attachment was levied, as also when this suit was commenced, no debts had been paid, as no disposition had been made of the assets till February 1, 1879. If the assignment was valid it passed title to all the property out of Keep & Tates, and it was not liable to attachment for their debts, whether sufficient or insufficient to pay all debts in full. By levying the attachment the defendants became trespassers; and if they wished to justify themselves or show that the other creditors were not injured, or that they, the defendants, were entitled to the money which might be recovered in the suit as the only remaining creditors, the onus was upon them to prove it. It was a ground of defense for themselves, and not a necessary fact to be pleaded or proved by the plaintiffs to entitle them to recover. Besides, there was some proof made by the plaintiffs that a portion of the consenting creditors had not been paid, and the plaintiffs were of course not of that class. And had the judge charged as defendants say he should have done on this subject, it could not have altered the verdict, and it has been held that under these circumstances a judgment will not be reversed. G., H. & S. A. R. R. Co. v. Delahunty, 53 Tex., 206.
As to the refusal of the court to charge in reference to the supposed attempt of Keep & Tates to prefer creditors, it is sufficient to say that there was no proof to show that any individual creditors were preferred. Phelps & Co., the alleged individual creditors, state positively that their claims were firm debts. The only proof offered to the contrary was, that the books of Keep & Tates show that the claims of Phelps & Co. were charged up to Tates as his separate indebtedness. But this would only show that Tates had assumed the indebtedness, and that, as between him and Keep, Tates would have it to pay from his separate funds. But this did not render the partnership any less liable upon these claims to Phelps & Co. The latter had nothing to do with any arrangement between the parties from whom the debt was due. They looked to both members of the firm, could sue both and enforce these claims against them, and Keep & Yates might settle between themselves as to how they would charge up the money that was used towards their payment. The partnership property was liable for the indebtedness before it could be used to the payment of any separate debts, and hence an assignment of that property for its payment in preference to other *576firm debts was legitimate. There was, then, no evidence that these claims were the separate, debts of Tates, and hence the court was not authorized to give the charge requested by the appellants. Earle v. Thomas, 14 Tex., 583.
There is no error in the judgment, and it is affirmed.
Aefiemed.
[Opinion delivered May 13, 1884.]