D., a resident at New Orleans, being at the time insolvent,
transferred to M. certain goods in a warehouse as a
dation en
paiement. M. pledged these goods to E. to secure $15,000, of
which $5000 was loaned in cash, and $10,000 in two notes for $5000
each, which notes were executed in all respects in the manner
required by the Civil Code of Louisiana, §§ 3157, 3158,
in order to secure a privilege and preference under those sections.
A creditor of D. commenced an action at law against him and caused
these goods to be sequestered, and subsequently filed a bill in
equity to set aside the whole transaction as fraudulent. Pending
the proceedings the two notes matured and were paid by E.,
held,
(1) That these instruments were sufficient under the laws of
Louisiana.
(2) That they were not simulated, but that the transaction was
bona fide.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court for the
Eastern District of Louisiana. 26 F. 824. The facts are these:
On October 30, 1883, appellants, creditors of Joseph Dreyfus,
commenced an action at law against their debtor, to recover the sum
of $19,000, and sequestered certain goods in the warehouse of
Meyer, Weill & Co. These goods had been transferred by Dreyfus
to Lehman Meyer, on October 27th, as a "
dation en
paiement." On November 6th, Abraham Ermann, one of the
appellees, filed in said suit what is known under the Louisiana
Code of Practice as a petition of intervention and third
opposition, wherein he
Page 135 U. S. 479
claimed that on October 29th, he had loaned to said Lehman Meyer
$15,000, evidenced by three notes of Meyer's, each for $5,000, and
had received in security therefor a pledge of the sequestered
goods. The appellants answered this petition, alleging in substance
that no pledge existed; that if it did exist, it was fraudulent,
and of no force against the creditors of Dreyfus; that Meyer's
title and possession were fraudulent, and intended to shield the
property from the claims of creditors of Dreyfus; and that,
therefore, this transfer of the property in pledge to appellee
conferred no privilege or lien under the Louisiana law. When this
action came on for trial, the circuit court ruled that at law the
only inquiry could be as to the reality of the pledge, and not as
to its fraudulent character. Thereafter, a bill in equity was filed
by appellants against Dreyfus, Meyer, and Ermann, alleging the
fraudulent nature of the pledge. Upon final hearing a decree was
entered in favor of the defendants.
Passing all mere matters of practice, we address ourselves to
the two substantial questions: first, whether there was a real
pledge, and not a simulated transaction, and second whether, if
sufficient in form and real, it was in fact fraudulent and void. At
the time of these transactions, Dreyfus was insolvent, and under
the circumstances, which it is unnecessary to state in detail, the
transfer of the property from him to Meyer, though good between the
parties and vesting title in Meyer, was subject to be set aside at
the instance of Dreyfus' creditors. Until so set aside, the title
being in Meyer, he could create a valid pledge in favor of a bona
fide party. Meyer held warehouse receipts from Meyer, Weill &
Co., with whom the goods had been stored, and the loan from Ermann
and the pledge to him were evidenced by three notes, of $5,000
each, alike excepting time of payment, of one of which the
following is a copy:
"
$5,000.00 New Orleans, Oct. 29th, 1883"
"Forty days after date I promise to pay to the order of A.
Ermann, Esqr., five thousand dollars, for value received, with
interest at the rate of eight percent per annum from maturity
Page 135 U. S. 480
until paid. Payable at the People's Bank of New Orleans. This
note is secured by a pledge of the securities mentioned on the
reverse hereof, and in case of its nonpayment the holder is hereby
authorized to sell the said securities a public or private sale,
without recourse to legal proceedings, and to make any transfers
that may be required, applying proceeds of sale towards payment of
this note. Margins to be kept good."
"L. MEYER"
Endorsement:
"Five warehouse receipts, dated Oct. 28th, 1883, numbered 1, 2,
3, 4, & 5, issued by Meyer, Weill & Co. to L. Meyer, and by
him endorsed to A. Ermann, payee. L. MEYER."
With the notes were transferred the warehouse receipts mentioned
in the endorsement. These receipts were alike in form, though
covering different properties, and the following is a copy of
one:
"Received from L. Meyer, in apparent good order, on storage in
our warehouse subject to the following conditions: goods
deliverable on production of this receipt or on the written order
of parties in whose favor it is given; goods when transferred
deliverable only on return of this receipt:"
"5/4 pipes B., D. & Co. cognac"
"9 barrels Smith Blair"
"2/8 pipes Cr. Gavi cognac"
"2/8 pipes Boston cognac"
"3/8 pipes kirshwasser"
"MEYER, WEILL & Co."
"Endorsed: 'L. Meyer'"
That these instruments were sufficient in form under the laws of
the State of Louisiana, where this pledge was created, and that the
transaction was real and not simulated is clear. By title twenty of
the Civil Code, which treats of pledges, the right to pledge or
pawn is given. Voorhies' Rev. Civil Code of Louisiana, pages 553
and following. Articles 3157 and 3158 read as follows:
Page 135 U. S. 481
"ART. 3157. The pawn invests the creditor with the right of
causing his debt to be satisfied by privilege, and in preference to
the other creditors of his debtor, out of the product of the
movable, corporeal or incorporeal, which has been thus
burdened."
"ART. 3158. But this privilege shall take place against third
persons only in case the pawn is proved by an act made either in a
public form or under private signature,
provided such act
has been recorded in the manner required by law;
provided
also that whatever may be in the form of the act, it mentions
the amount of the debt, as well as the species and nature of the
thing given in pledge, or has a statement annexed thereto of its
number, weight, and measure."
"When a debtor wishes to pawn promissory notes, bills of
exchange, stocks, obligations, or claims upon other persons, he
shall deliver to the creditors the notes, bills of exchange,
certificates of stock, or other evidence of the claims or rights so
pawned, and such pawn so made, without further formalities, shall
be valid as well against third persons as against the pledgeors
thereof, if made in good faith."
"All pledges of movable property may be made by private writing,
accompanied by actual delivery; and the delivery of property or
deposit in a warehouse shall pass by the private assignment of the
warehouse receipt, so as to authorize the owner to pledge such
property, and such pledge so made, without further formalities,
shall be valid as well against third persons as against the
pledgeors thereof if made in good faith."
The notes disclosed the amount of the debt, as well as the fact
of the pledge, and the property which was pledged, and the delivery
of the warehouse receipts, as stated in the last clause of article
3158, was a delivery of the property, so that the pledgee had
possession of the property as security for an indebtedness whose
amount, time, and payment were stated in writing. In
Cater v.
Merrell, 14 La. Ann. 375, the court said that
"the word 'pledge' is used in the statutes of 1852 and 1855 in
the sense of the definition of article 3100 of the Revised Civil
Code, which defines the contract of pledge, and as the second
section of these acts require the contract of be in writing, the
private
Page 135 U. S. 482
act between parties must contain what is declared to be
essential by this article to constitute a pledge -- that is, a
declaration of the thing given in pledge, and of the particular
debt for which the thing is pledged."
And in
Martin v. Creditors, 15 La. Ann. 165, the court
observed:
"The assignment of a warehouse receipt, in the absence of a
stipulation that the property is given in pledge to secure the
payment of a principal obligation, the amount of which is
specified, does not confer a privilege upon the transferee.
Cater v. Merrell, 14 La. Ann. 375. Privileges are of
strict right, and parties claiming them must conform to the
requirements of the law. It is required, in order to create a
pledge, not only that delivery should accompany the private deed,
but that the instrument itself should exhibit the nature and extent
of the rights and obligations of the contracting parties
reciprocally."
The transaction at bar comes within the requirements of these
authorities. The transfer of the warehouse receipts was a delivery
of the property, and the full terms of the contract of the pledge
were stated on the fact of the notes. And as Ermann gave to the
pledgeor $5,000 in cash, as well as his two notes for $5,000 each,
there is no room to doubt that the transaction was a real and not a
simulated one, as well as that the pledge was made in conformity to
the laws of the state of Louisiana. The first question, therefore,
must be answered in favor of the appellees.
A like answer must also be given to the second. That Ermann gave
the $5,000 and executed his two notes, and thereafter paid those
notes, so that he is out the $15,000 of the loan, is not disputed.
That he had no other security and must rely for repayment solely on
the pledge is clear. That he was a man of means, and able to make
such a loan, though before he had never made a single loan of that
magnitude; that he had theretofore accommodated Meyer with loans;
that his relations with Meyer were such as to justify him in
loaning upon what seemed to be sufficient security; that he had no
knowledge of whence the goods in question were obtained; that the
attendant circumstances were not such as to arouse suspicion in the
mind of a reasonably prudent man; and that
Page 135 U. S. 483
the loan and pledge have all the appearance of an ordinary
business transaction, are conclusions which the testimony
satisfactorily establishes. It is objected that after notice by the
action at law and sequestration he paid the notes which he had
given to Meyer -- in other words, that he unnecessarily paid a
portion of this loan, after notice of the fraudulent character of
the transactions by which Meyer acquired title, and after, by suit,
his own rights under the pledge had been challenged. But the only
attack by this litigation up to the time of payment was upon the
reality of the pledge, and of that there was no question. While
doubtless the failure of Dreyfus, the suits commenced against him,
and the facts concerning Meyer's and Dreyfus' condition, as
developed in litigation and otherwise, disclosed that the property
which he had in pledge had come to him through a devious channel,
yet until some assertion of personal wrong was made against him, he
was under no obligations to let his own paper go to protest, and
thereby tacitly, at least, admit that his own conduct and good
faith were objects of suspicion and inquiry.
We think that the conclusion of the circuit court on the
question of
bona fides was correct, and the decree is
Affirmed.