By the interpleader, the assignee tinder Lockwood’s general assignment for the benefit of his creditors, is seeking to contest the right of the attaching creditors to hold, under their writ of attaehmemt, the property, credits and effects attached in the hands of the garnishees, In point of tíme, the attachment writ has the priority, and it follows that if the assets sought to be reached, are subject to garnishment, the rights of the attaching creditors are superior to those of the assignee,
It should be observed that upon the hearing of the issues raised by the interpleader, neither party has shown or attempted to show that the transactions between Lockwood and the garnishees were in any respect fraud ulent. The consideration for which the judgment notes were given, is not attacked or questioned, nor is there any attempt made to show that the transfer to the garnishees of Lockwood’s book accounts, was not made in good faith and upon a good and adequate consideration. Fraud will not be presumed, but must be shown by the party alleging it, and as in this case fraud has neither been proved or alleged, it must be assumed for all the purposes of this decision, that the judgment notes and the transfer of the book accounts were made in good faith and upon a sufficient consideration, and that they are in all respects valid.
Proceeding, then, upon the assumption of their validity, what is the situation of the assets sought to be reached, and what are the rights of the parties in relation thereto? So far as regards the money collected on the execution, that is clearly beyond the reach of either of these contestants. The lien of the execution was prior both to the attachment and the assignment, and as the money collected has been applied upon a valid judgment in favor of the garnishees, it is theirs, and their right to it can not now be called in question.
How is it with the book accounts transferred to the garnishees? The instrument by which that transfer is made is, in form, an absolute sale and assignment of the accounts from Lockwood to the garnishees, and apparently vests them with the entire property therein, both legal and equitable. If that effect is to be given to it, then, clearly, the accounts and all moneys collected thereon belong to the garnishees, and neither the assignee nor the plaintiffs in the attachment suit can have any interest therein.
But we think the circumstances by which the transfer was surrounded, and from which its true character is to be determined, warrant the conclusion that, though absolute in form, it wa« really intended by the parties to operate merely as a security for the indebtedness of Lockwood to the garnishees. See Jones on Chat. Mort., § 24. Lockwood, at the time, as we must assume, was indebted to the garnishees in the sum of $91,149.66, the amount of the notes. Having failed in business, he gave them his judgment notes due on demand for the amount of the indebtedness with the manifest intention of having judgments entered forthwith, and his property-liable to execution, levied upon and sold in satisfaction thereof. At the same time, in consideration of “one dollar, and other good and valuable considerations,” he transferred to them all his open or book accounts, with authority to collect the same and apply the moneys to their own use. It can not be doubted that these papers were all parts of the same transactions, and that the real consideration of the transfer of the accounts was the indebtedness for which the notes were given. Ho other adequate consideration is shown, and that being sufficient, will be assumed to be the true one. But it does not appear that the accounts were taken or accepted by the garnishees in payment or satisfaction of the indebtedness, or any part of it, or that any portion of the indebtedness was thereby cancelled, but directly the contrary is fairly inferable from the evidence.
■ One of the principal tests by which to determine whether a conveyance of lands made in consideration of the grantor’s indebtedness to the grantee, is to be deemed an absolute sale or a mortgage, is, the effect which the parties intend the conveyance shall have upon the indebtedness itself. As said by Mr. Jones in his Treatise on the Law of Mortgages: “ If the indebtedness be not cancelled, equity will regard the conveyance as a mortgage, whether the grantee so regarded it or not. He can not at the same time hold the land absolutely and re-1 tain the right to enforce payment of the debt on account of which the conveyance was made. The test, therefore, in cases of this sort, by which to determine whether the convejrance is a sale or a mortgage, is to be found in the question whether the debt was discharged or not by the conveyance. 1 Jones on Mort. § 267. The same rule is laid down in Sutphen v. Cushman, 35 Ill. 1 §6. We perceive no reason why this test does not apply with equal propriety to sales and assignments of chattels.
But treating the instrument in question as a conditional sale in the nature of a mortgage, it is manifest that the rights of the garnishees are paramount to those of both the assignee and the attaching creditors, to the extent of Lockwood’s indebtedness to them. It is only as to the surplus, if there should be any, that any controversy can arise, and the real question in the ease is, whether such surplus is subject to garnishment If it is, the service of the attachment writ being prior to the assignment, the lien of the attaching creditors upon the surplus is paramount to the rights obtained by the assignee through the assignment If, on the hand, it is not liable to garnishment, the attaching creditors took nothing by their writ, and the right to the surplus passed by the assignment to the assignee.
It is doubtless the rule that legal rights only are subject to garnishment, and that mere equitable interests in dioses in action, can not be reached by this process. May v. Baker, 15 Ill. 89. In other words, the process of garnishment being a legal proceeding given by statute, it only entitles a party to recover such indebtedness as could be recovered by an action of debt or indebitatus assumpsit in the name of ihe attachment debtors against the garnishee. Webster v. Steele, 75 Ill. 544; Wilcus v. King, 87 Id. 107.
Could the surplus in the hands of the garnishees in this case be recovered by Lockwood in his own name in an action at law? A mortgagee, after converting the mortgage security into cash, by sale1 or otherwise, so as to produce a surplus after paying the mortgage debt, holds such surplus as a trustee of the mortgagor, and may be compelled in equity to execute such trust by paying the surplus over to him. But we think he is liable also to an action at law for money had and received. He has in his hands money belonging to the mortgagor, which, in equity and good conscience, he ought not to retain; and in such case the action for money had and received is ordinarily the appropriate remedy. In Coke v. Wheeler, 41 N. Y. 303, it was held, that where a surplus realized from a statutory foreclosure of' a real estate mortgage was equitably retained by the mortgagee, the action for money had and received was the proper form, in which the mortgagor might sue him therefor. In Webster v. Singley, 53 Ala. 208, it was held that the same action would lie in favor of a junior mortgagee who, ex wquo et liono, was entitled to the surplus. The rule is laid down in Jones on Chattel Mortgages, as follows: “A mortgagee becomes a trustee for the mortgagor as to the surplus received upon a sale in the exercise of a power, and the existence of this relation gives the mortgagor a right to the aid of a court of equity to obtain an account of the trust. But ‘generally a resort to equity to obtain the surplus is neither ¡necessary or proper. A suit at law is generally sufficient.” Jones on Chat. Mort. §817.
It is true that in the present ease, there is no power of sale, nor does it appear that any money has been or will be made by the garnishee by sale of the accounts transferred to them as security, but they are given the most ample power to convert them into cash by the more direct and appropriate mode of collection, and if on collection a surplus results, that surplus in equity and good conscience belongs to their mortgag- or, precisely the same as though it had been produced by a sale in the execution of a power; and is recoverable in the same manner.
. The surplus, then, in the hands of the garnishees, being recoverable by Lockwood in an action at law in his own name, was liable to garnishment. It follows that the lien of the attachment creditors is paramount to the rights of the assignee derived through the assignment, and that the decision of the court finding the issues and rendering judgment against the assignee on the interpleader, was in accordance with the facts as they appeared at the hearing. 0
A minor question is raised upon the decision of the court overruling the assignee’s motion to dismiss the writ, on the ground that the garnishees were non-residents of the State, and so not liable, as is claimed, to the process of garnishment. Without determining the validity of this defense, if properly presented and sustained by proof, it may be remarked that it is questionable, to say the least, whether a defense which goes to the jurisdiction of the court of the persons of the parties, can lie properly raised by motion. But waiving that question also, it is sufficient to say that we have carefully examined the bill of exceptions which purports to embody all the evidence given at the hearing of the interpleader, and fail to find a syllable of evidence showing or tending to show that the garnishees were non-residents at the time of the service of the writ, or at any other time, except that in the instrument transferring the accounts to the garnishees, they are described as being of the city, county and State of Hew York. Even if that description was evidence of the fact, it only showed that at a date several days anterior to the service of the writ, the garnishees were residents of Hew York. Non constat, but that they may have become residents during that interval, and the fact that the garnishee served was found here, raises a presumption that he at least was resident here. There being no evidence, therefore, upon which the motion could be based, it was properly overruled.
We find no errors in the record, and the judgment will accordingly be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.