On December 1, 1913, the Mayfield Company, a private corporation, acquired at a bankrupt sale a stock of goods, wares, and merchandise, together with some furniture and fixtures. On the same date all of those goods, furniture, and fixtures were delivered to the possession of one M. T. Sheets, of Tyler, Tex. The value of the goods amounted to $3,100; the value of the furniture and fixtures to $800. M. T. Sheets immediately advertised in the only daily paper published in the city of Tyler, where the transaction occurred, that E. O. Sheets *314had. purchased through the Mayfield Company the John P. Haden & Son bankrupt stock of groceries, and would conduct a grocery business at the old stand of John E. Haden. On December 6th following, February 12, 1914, and in August of the same year the Mayfield Company and Sheets entered into different written agreements, which were offered in evidence and form a part of the findings of fact filed by .the trial judge. These tend to show that the goods were delivered to Sheets upon consignment, to be disposed of by him as the agent of the Mayfield Company. The trial court, however, found that these agreements, when properly construed, were intended to constitute merely a mortgage upon the goods in favor of the Mayfield Company to secure the original price, and that the transaction between the Mayfield Company and Sheets was a sale and purchase of the goods, furniture, and fixtures for the aggregate sum of $3,900. M. T. Sheets took charge of the goods, and, so far as the evidence discloses, conducted it according to the usual methods of carrying on a retail grocery business. During the year 1914 he incurred debts to various parties among whom was Harlan & Harlan, a private corporation, the appellee in this suit. After deducting payments which had been made to Harlan & Harlan at different times, Sheets owed that company when he quit business the sum of $103.40. On November 25, 1914, the Mayfield Comx>any, by agreement or otherwise, took charge of all the goods which Sheets then had on hand which had been purchased from it, and closed the house. The only goods in the building at that time which were not taken possession of by the Mayfield Company consisted of a small lot amounting in value to the sum of $90 according to an estimate then made, but which were subsequently appraised at $35. At the time of this transaction Sheets was indebted to the May-field Company in the sum of $2,250.20, and owed other debts to the amount of $600. On the 28th of November the Mayfield Company sold and delivered to the appellant W. E. Nunnellee this entire stock of goods, together with the furniture and fixtures. The goods were invoiced in that sale at $985.17; the fixtures at $519.20. The consideration paid by Nunnellee was part cash and a promissory note amounting in the aggregate to over $400. In January following Harlan & Harlan filed suit in the justice court against Sheets for the $103.40 due on account, and at the same time sued out writs of garnishment which were served upon both the May-field Company and Nunnellee.' The May-field Company answered, denying that it owed Sheets anything, or had any effect belonging to him in its possession. By way of special answer, however, it alleged that previous to that time it had delivered to M. T. Sheets on consignment a stock of goods, wares, and merchandise, and that subsequently Sheets, in order to pay to the May-field Company a part of his debt, had turned over and delivered to it goods, wares, and merchandise inventoried at about $900, of the probable value of $600, which were a part of the goods theretofore -consigned to Sheets by the Mayfield Company; that this .amount was credited on the account of Mayfield Company against Sheets; that prior to the time the writ of garnishment was served upon it the Mayfield Company had transferred and sold the merchandise received from Sheets to other parties, and had no interest in or claim to the merchandise. Nunnellee answered, denying that he owed Sheets anything or had in his possession any effects belonging to Sheets, except a small amount of merchandise appraised at $35; that before the service of the writ of garnishment a judgment was rendered against him in favor of I. H. Crutcher & Son in a suit similar to the one then pending for an amount greatly in excess of the $35, and, if Crutcher’s judgment is sustained, the garnishee would have nothing belonging to Sheets. These answers were controverted by Harlan & Harlan.
In a trial before the court a judgment was rendered in favor of Harlan & Harlan against the Mayfield Company, finding as facts that at the time the writ of garnishment was served Nunnellee had in his hands effects belonging to Sheets consisting of a stock of groceries, goods, wares, and merchandise of the value of $985.17; that Mayfield Company had in its possession a promissory note executed and delivered to it by Nunnellee for the stock of goods in the sum of $450. It was ordered that Mayfield Company deliver up to the sheriff, or any constable of Smith county, Tex., presenting to it an execution in favor of the plaintiff Harlan & Harlan, the note of Nunnellee, and that Nunnellee deliver the effects, or so much thereof as was necessary to satisfy the execution. Both the Mayfield Company and Nunnellee have appealed.
[1, 2] In one group of assigned errors the appellants contend that the evidence shows that the Mayfield Company had never parted with the title to the goods when delivered to Sheets; that such delivery was a mere consignment to an agent, and that the Mayfield Company had a right to retake these goods at any time with the consent of Sheets. That contention is based upon the various written agreements which were offered in evidence. The court’s finding to the contrary disposes of that issue of fact. The dealings between the Mayfield Company and Sheets were much like those which usually occur between a vendor and purchaser, and in many respects unlike those which generally take place between a principal and his agent. The entire absence of any stipulation in those written agreements fixing the compensation which Sheets was to have for handling the goods, when considered in connection with his man*315ner of advertising and conducting the business, all tend strongly to support the findings of the trial court. It is conceded that the Mayfield Company took the goods from Sheets on the 25th day of November, 1914, without complying with the requirements of articles 3971, 3973 of the Revised Civil Statutes, commonly known as the “Bulk Sales Law,” and that its purchase from Sheets was void as against the latter’s creditors. The liability of the Mayfield Company to those creditors for the goods remaining in its hands, or their proceeds if sold, in a proceeding of this character, is settled by a recent decision of our Supreme Court. Owosso Carriage & Sleigh Co. v. McIntosh & Warren (Sup.) 179 S. W. 257. We deem it unnecessary to add anything to what is said in that opinion.
[3] The Mayfield Company insists that the stock of goods received by it from Sheets was insufficient to satisfy all of the creditors of Sheets, and that, if it is liable upon the ground that its purchase was unlawful, nevertheless Harlan & Harlan is not entitled to collect its entire claim; that it should share with other creditors of Sheets a part of the loss resulting from the insufficiency of the assets to satisfy his indebtedness. This proceeding is not one in which we can enforce an equitable distribution of the assets of an insolvent debtor. We are not referred to any evidence showing that Sheets was, in fact, insolvent, or that the Mayfield Company will lose its debt unless such a distribution is made. It may be that in its purchase from Sheets the Mayfield Company released, in whole or in part, whatever debt Sheets owed it. If so, it cannot now revive that claim and insist on sharing with other creditors the right to a distributive portion of the assets of Sheets. The contract by which it secured possession of the goods from Sheets was unlawful; and the law will leave the parties just where they placed themselves.
We therefore conclude that the judgment against the Mayfield Company should be affirmed.
[4] But the appellant Nunnellee occupies)a different situation. He purchased from the Mayfield Company, and gave his promissory note in part payment. Assuming that goods in the hands of a vendee of one who has purchased in violation of the “Bulk Sales Law” may be reached through garnishment proceedings by an aggrieved creditor, it would be manifestly unjust to so hold under the circumstances presented by the record before us. The appellee recovered a judgment against the Mayfield Company requiring it to deliver to the proper officer the note by Nunnellee for the goods, and that judgment is here affirmed. Appellee is not entitled to subject both the note and the goods to its debt. Armstrong v. Elbert, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 141, 36 S. W. 139, and cases cited. The record further shows that the goods held by Nunnellee other than those for which the note was given had been previously garnished by another creditor of Sheets.
The judgment as to Nunnellee will therefore be reversed, and judgment here rendered in his favor.