(after stating the facts.)
i. unrecorded deed admissible in evidence, wlle“' 1. The deed of assignment was properly admitted . . . . r in evidence. Appellant is not claiming by priority ot x x 0 J x J attachment over the assignment, and the question of notice has no place in the case. Assignments are not required to be recorded as a prerequisite to their admissibility in evidence. The only purpose to be effected by their registration in any case would be to give notice. Besides, the property involved in this controversy is a stock of hardvjare as appears from the judgment.
2. The court told the jury “ the assignment was good on its face.”
The deed contains the following clause, which appellant contends invalidates it, to-wit: “That he, the said grantee, shall make an inventory of said property and give bond in the manner provided by the laws of Arkansas governing in cases of assignment for the benefit of creditors, and, after first having given bond, he shall take possession of said property and dispose of the same in the time and manner provided by law.” No ingenious transposition of words or artifices of construction should be indulged in by courts in order to give meaning to words in an instrument which in themselves are unambiguous. Such is the clause above, when the words are read in the order in which they are placed in the sentence, and are given their logical, or even grammatical, construction. The case of Lincoln v. Field, 54 Ark. 471, is not at all analogous. There the direction to the assignee was to ‘ forthwith" take possession, and nothing was contained in the deed to indicate that the taking possession was not the first thing to be do?ze, as plainly implied by the word ‘ forthwith.” The language of the above clause as unequivocally expresses (taking the words in the connection used) that the taking an inventory was the first thing to be done, under the direction of this assignment; then the making of the bond, and after that the taking possession. The words in the deed of assignment follow the order prescribed by the statute, in expressing the respective duties to be performed by the assignee before possession is taken. The taking' of the inventory properly precedes the making of the bond, because it furnishes the estimate for the amount of the bond. The court did right in pronouncing this assignment good on its face.
2. when as-3. The third and fourth grounds relate to alleged errors in modifying, giving and refusing instructions.
After telling the jury the assignment was good on its face, the court proceeded in a lengthy charge to declare the law applicable to the facts in evidence, as to what might be considered, and what was really necessary, in order to avoid such an assignment. We epitomize it as follows : (1.) Material part (meaning a portion that is not insignificant) must not be withheld. (2.) Right to prefer one just debt over another. (3.) The fraud that will vitiate an assignment must be in the assignment itself. (4.) Conduct of assigmor in making purchases, false representations, etc., are all matters proper to be considered in determining what the real intent was in making the assignment, the real question being, was the assignment itself executed with the fraudulent purpose to cheat, hinder, or delay any creditor ? If so, void; if not, good, notwithstanding prior or subsequent dishonest conduct. (5.) A debtor has the right' to prefer his attorneys for drafting the assignment. (6.) The preference of a sham or pretended debt is a fraud which vitiates the assignment. (7.) A gift is not a debt; to advance a party money to be repaid, even at the pleasure of the debtor, is not a gift.
The first and third instructions asked by appellant related to the alleged debt of assignor to his sister-in-law, which appellant claimed was a simulated debt, nr gift; or, if a real debt, that same had been paid. It was not error to refuse these, as the court had already sufficiently charged upon that point.
In instruction numbered two, refused, the appellant asked the court to charg'e “that, if defendant Owens made false representations to Dun’s Agency, and goods were sold him upon the faith of such representations, and the goods so sold were among the assigned assets, and the assignment directed the proceeds of the sale of assigned assets to other creditors than the ones misled, this would be a fraud which would vítate the assignment.”
This was an action of debt, with the provisional remedy for its enforcement. Appellant was not seeking to rescind the contract, nor to recover the specific property, but, on the contrary, was suing upon the notes. The instruction was not proper in an action of this kind. The title to the assigned property being in the assignor, he had the right to include it in an assignment for the benefit of any creditors he chose to prefer. But this conduct, like any other fact, was proper to be considered by the jury in arriving at the intent of the assignor in making the assignment, as the court told them in other instructions.
3. Ruieasto presumption*. The court refused to instruct “that possession of a promissory note after maturity by the maker is prima facie evidence of payment, and this presumption must stand until overcome by competent testimony.”
The possession of a note by the maker after maturity is prima facie evidence of payment. This presumption is based upon the fact that it is the common practice of persons owning notes not to deliver them to the maker except on payment, as was held by this court in Hollenberg v. Lane, 47 Ark. 394. That presumption may be rebutted by a fact inconsistent with it. The deed of assignment conveys to the assignee all the property of the assignor except his exemptions. The deed is valid on its face. It is presumed to have been executed in good faith until the contrary is made to appear. Now, can the possession of a note soon after the deed was executed raise the presumption of payment, where the amount of it is larger than the value of the property reserved by the assignor, unless it be shown that- the assignor, subsequent to the execution of the deed, acquired the means to pay it? We think not, where it is shown, as in this case, that all of his property except his exemptions went into the assignment. To indulge such a presumption would be equivalent to presuming that the assignor withheld assets which he pretended to convey, and that the deed was fraudulent. By sec. 1649, Mansf. Dig., it is made a misdemeanor to make a fraudulent, assignment. Hence, it would also be tantamount to presuming that the assignor was guilty of a crime. Thus, we would be allowing the presumption of innocence and good faith to be overcome by the presumption of payment, while the reverse is the law. Lawson on Presumptive Evidence, 582. The possession of the note is consistent with good faith in the execution of the assignment. His sister-in-law doubtless believed the assignor honest. She was willing to trust him. He preferred her, and it was consistent with good faith for her to trust him with the note for the purpose of collecting- it from the assignee. In view of these facts, the court did not err in refusing the instruction. The fact was given to the jury to consider with all the other facts.
4 Right of ciude. 5. ^be burden of proof was upon the interpleader, he was entitled-to open and conclude the argument, Had no evidence been introduced in this case on either side, appellee would have been defeated.* Mansf. Dig. sec. 2871. The parties seem to have gone to trial upon the general issue on the interplea. Appellee, according to the records, was put to his proofs, and required to introduce the deed of assignment, and to prove that its requirements had been met by assigmee taking inventory, filing bond, and going into possession. Appellant then introduced its proof, and “after the conclusion of the testimony, and before the argument began,” appellant’s, counsel admitted that all the necessary steps had been taken under the assignment. This had already been proven by appellee, and required no admission, as there was no evidence to contradict or rebut it.
6. Sec. 23, art. 7, of the constitution provides : “And in jury trials (circuit judges) shall reduce their charge or instructions to writing on the request of either party.” No such request was made to the judge in this case. Nor does it appear from the record that the judge made any oral explanations of his instructions. The record recites that he “began,” and “ immediately desisted” upon objection being made by counsel. There was no error in this.
No question is made as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict, and, finding no error of law in the proceedings, the judgment of the Sebastian circuit court is affirmed.
Compare Norton v. McNutt, 55 Ark. 59 (Rep.).