
    Case No. 12,889.
    In re SIMS.
    [19 N. B. R. 57.] 
    
    District Court, E. D. Michigan.
    June 24, 1878.
    Bankruptcy — Mortgage — Good Faith — Actuad Value.
    When a bankrupt, within two months prior to the commencement of proceedings, had mortgaged his stock of goods, it being understood before the mortgage was executed that the consideration he received from the mortgagee should be paid to and accepted by a creditor then pressing the payment of a debt past due, for the same sum at which he received it, the mortgagee and the creditor being present and active in the negotiation with the bankrupt, the •onus of showing “good faith” and “actual value” within the meaning of section 5128, Rev. St., will be upon the mortgagee, before he will be allowed to enforce his mortgage.
    Tills cause came before the court upon the petition of the assignee for direction as to the distribution of the proceeds of the sale of certain property belonging to the estate .and claimed to be covered by a chattel mort.gage held by James Monaghan. It was referred to the register in charge to take proofs to be certified into court with his opinion thereon. On the 21th day of June, 1870, [Stephen] Sims gave to Monaghan four notes of five hundred dollars each, payable at 6, 12, 18, and 24 months, to secure the payment •of which Sims gave Monaghan two mortgages, one on four ánd four-tenths acres of land in New Boston, and the other on his •entire stock of merchandise, fixtures, furniture, etc., then in the store occupied by him. The last mortgage gave the mortgagee the right to take all the mortgaged property into his possession at any time when he should deem himself insecure. The consideration of these four notes — -to secure the payment of which the two mortgages were given— was four hundred shares of the stock of the New York Silver Co. These notes and mortgages were executed at New Boston, the place where Sims was carrying on business as a country merchant. The circumstances under which they were executed were these: Mr. McCarthy, of the firm of McCarthy, Roney & Giles, accompanied by Monaghan, had come on the day of their execution to New Boston for the purpose of collecting or securing a claim of over two thousand dollars, some time past due, which the firm of McCarthy, Roney & Giles held against Sims. McCarthy states that he regarded the claim ns a “dubious” one, and that he invited Mon-.aghan to accompany him because he was conversant with legal forms. The negotiations which followed at New Boston were participated in by McCarthy, Sims, and Monaghan; .and it resulted in the transfer by Monaghan to Sims of four hundred shares of the stock ■of the New York Silver Co., for which Sims . gave his four notes of five hundred dollars,— two thousand dollars, — secured by the mortgages above mentioned, and the taking by Sir. McCarthy of the silver stock in full payment of Sims’ debt to McCarthy, Roney .& Giles. The concurrence of all three — Sims, .McCarthy, and Monaghan — was necessary to -.the completion of the transaction. The mortgaged property remained in the possession of Sims until, in consequence of the bankruptcy proceedings which were commenced on the 11th of July following, they came into the hands of the assignee, who was appointed on the 23d of November following, and, as stated in the petition of the assignee, which is the subject of this reference, was sold on the 13th, 14th, and 15th days of March, 1S77.
    [See Case No. 12,888.]
    H. E. Burt, assignee, in pro. per.
    John Atkinson, for Monaghan.
    
      
       [Reprinted by permission.]
    
   By

HOYEY M.. CLARKE, Register:

The question is whether the mortgage to Monaghan was executed to secure the payment of a “loan of actual value, made in good faith," or whether it was executed to secure the payment of an existing indebtedness owing by Sims to McCarthy, Roney & Giles, and in violation of the provisions of sections 5128, 5129 — one or both — of the Revised Statutes. That Sims was insolvent on the 26th of June, 1876, and that this insolvency was known to McCarthy, is established by the testimony. If the mortgages which were given to Monaghan for nearly the full amount of the debt of Sims to McCarthy, Roney ■& Giles had been given directly to them, the transaction would have been so clearly in violation of the provisions of the bankrupt act [of 1867 (14 Stat. 517)] that it is not probable that any attempt would have been made to sustain it. It is the interpolation of a sale of silver stock for two thousand dollars for notes and mortgages having 6, 12,18, and 24 months to run; Monaghan, a third party, being the vendor of the stock, and the mortgagee of the debt- or’s property, which is relied upon to take the transaction out of the provisions of the bankrupt act. and thus render valid in the hands of Monaghan that which would have been void in the hands of the creditors. But it seems to me that the negotiations conducted between these three parties were essentially one; that every fact which was known to McCarthy, and which, because known to him, would bring the transaction within the inhibition of the bankrupt act, was also known to Monaghan; that Monaghan was there in the service of McCarthy, employed by him with express reference to the exigencies of the occasion, where a creditor is seeking to collect or secure a debt due to him by an insolvent debtor; that nothing appeared at the time, or in the testimony taken on this reference, to establish the “good faith” required by section 5128 of the transaction between Monaghan and Sims, essential to which, as it seems to me, was “actual value” in the subject of the trafile between them. The circumstances, indeed, did not require any consideration by Sims of the value of the silver stock; for the taking of it by McCarthy at one thousand dollars was a part of the negotiations by which Sims was to take it of Monaghan. In short, it seems clear to me that this transaction was such that Monaghan cannot claim rights under it severed from or apart from the consideration of the purposes and liabilities of McCarthy in it. I deem it sufficient to rest my opinion on the principle that the onus of showing, within the meaning of section 512S, “good faith” and of the “actual value” of that which passed first from Monaghan to Sims and from Sims to McCarthy is upon any party who seeks, upon such a transaction as this is shown to be, to take the bankrupt’s property out of the fund for distribution to the general creditors; and that, so far from such good faith being shown, all the testimony in the case tends in the opposite direction, and to show that it was a scheme devised by McCarthy and Monaghan on their way to and while at New Boston to obtain a lien upon all of Sims’ property to secure the debt due to McCarthy, Roney & Giles, and at the same time evade the inhibition of the bankrupt act. It is by no means necessary, in order to reach the conclusion that this transaction cannot be supported, to affirm that any such tripartite agreement, even when it is clear that each part depends upon the others, and that the payment of a past-due debt by an insolvent is the result attained, that such transaction is a violation of the bankrupt act; but I think it may properly be held that the good faith of it must be affirmatively shown, and that essential to such a showing is satisfactory evidence of value in that which passes from the third party to the debtor, and from him to the creditor; and it entirely begs the question here raised to say that the creditor’s receipt is evidence of such value.

I am therefore of opinion that no part of the money in the hands of the assignee, derived from the sale of the mortgaged property, should be paid to Monaghan.

June 10, 18,78. The certificate was argued, and on the 24th of June THE COURT (BROWN, District Judge) directed an order to be entered approving the opinion of the register and confirming his report.  