In re ULROP-HUFF Co.

HAZEL, District Judge.

The facts, which are not disputed, show that the claimant, Whitehouse, Davis & Co., Inc., sold and delivered 250 hags of nuts, valued at $2,000, to one lilrop, to be paid for by Mm on September 6th, 30 days after sale. Thereafter Ulrop sold to the Ulrop-IIuff Company, Ine., bankrupt, which assumed the payment of the nuts. Later the bankrupt suggested securing the vendor in lieu of meeting its payment. It was - then agreed that the title, should vest in the vendor until the nuts were fully paid for, and none used or sold until released by the latter. Possession of the nuts continued in the bankrupt.

Tbe referee found that the title of the merchandise was in claimant, that it did not appear that there wore any creditors that the bankrupt had at the time of entering’ into the new arrangement, or that it was insolvent. Nothing was done to separate the nuts from other property in the possession of the bankrupt. They were kept in the cellar of the bankrupt, but were not tagged, nor had they been delivered back to tbe claimant, and no bill of sale or chattel mortgage was executed.

It is the contention of the trustee in bankruptcy that the arrangement following tbe sale was tantamount to a chattel mortgage to secure the original indebtedness, and, not having been filed as required by the state law, was void as against creditors. Coneededly the sale of the merchandise at the beginning was absolute. The effect of the new arrangement was evidently to secure the vendor for payment of the purchase price, and, in my opinion, an informal chattel mortgage eventuated.

A mortgage on personal property is defined to be a conditional sale of chattels, by which the legal title thereto is transferred to the mortgagee, to be defeated only by complete performance of the condition, and it suffices, in my opinion, that the parties intended a sale of the chattels as security. Blake v. Corbett, 120 N. Y. 327, 24 N. E. 477.

In Re Friend, 278 F. 153, 47 Am. Bankr. Rep. 511, the Circuit Court of Appeals for this circuit had before it a case which seems to me to be analogous in principle. ‘ There the merchandise had been sold to the bankrupt, who was in possession thereof. Later suit was brought to recover the purchase price, which was subsequently compromised, in pursuance of a written agreement wMch stated that the goods were in possession of the vendor and held by them under a lien as unpaid sellers of the goods; that under the agreement the vendees were “intrusted” with the goods, but that the delivery was not in any way to affect the subsisting lien. Tbe agreement also recited that the goods were consigned to the bankrupt firm for sale by them. The court declared the agreement to be a “wholly unsuccessful attempt to evade sections 134-137 of the Personal Property Law of this state [Consol. Laws N. Y. c. 41].”

In this case the arrangement was that the vendors were to be reinvested with the title, but I nevertheless think that the provisions of section 230 of the Lien Law of the state (Consol. Laws N. Y. e. 33), providing that a mortgage of goods and chattels, unaccompanied by immediate delivery and change of possession of the merchandise mortgaged, is void as against creditors, must control the disposition of the question under consideration. The claim that the transaction was equivalent to a bill of sale and reinvested the vendor with title is not believed maintainable. Even if it were, it is doubtful if the seller could retain possession of the goods in the manner contemplated as against creditors. Such a sale would be prima facie fraudulent as against creditors under the common law. Sturtevant v. Ballard, 9 Johns. (N. Y.) 337, 6 Am. Dec. 281; Stimson v. Wrigley, 86 N. Y. 332, 336.

It is also contended by the trustee that in any event the sale was in bulk, and *924therefore void under section 44 of' the Personal Property- Law, which provides that a sale of any part or the whole of a stock of merchandise, not in the ordinary course of business, shall be void as against creditors of the seller, unless an inventory is made as required by law. The asserted sale back to the vendor, or reinvesting of title in it, was not in the ordinary course of business. The transaction covered a part of the stock, and continued in the possession of the bankrupt. The referee found that no evidence of insolvency was given, although it appears that the bankrupt company was financially unable to pay the debt as required by the original arrangement.

However, this question need not be decided, since in my view the transaction became a chattel mortgage, without the usual formality; its effect, however, being to secure the debt without delivery of the goods and without filing. It is- therefore void as against creditors. The claimant contends, also, that the new contract amounted to a conditional sale cf the goods or warehousing, and accordingly the arrangement was valid; but since the goods were not specially set aside or marked, to show that title had been reinvested in the vendor, this contention cannot be 'sustained.

The decision of the referee is reversed.