92 Ky. 472 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1892
delivered the opinion op the court.
S. Gaye, Jr., & Co. borrowed divers sums of money from the Bank of Louisville for which notes were executed, and to secure their payment various collaterals were pledged. Gaye & Co. becoming insolvent and the bank being desirous of making its debt more secure, obtained the pledge of other collaterals, when a creditor of the firm, Charles Loekridge, instituted his action under the statute enacted to prevent preferences by debtors contemplating insolvency, and obtained a judgment determining that the pledge of the additional securities brought the case within the provisions of the statute.
In distributing the assets the court further held that the general creditors must receive a dividend equal to the amount realized by the bank from its collaterals before
It is contended by counsel for the bank that the same equitable rule of distribution should apply in the ease of an assignment by operation of law, as in the case of an assignment by the debtor himself, and the right of the lien creditor to share in the general distribution for his whole debt where the assets are not sufficient to pay all the creditors, is not to be diminished by reason of any lien he may have obtained by contract on the debtor’s estate. That when the lien fails to pay his debt, the amount realized from it is not to be credited on the debt and the 2)ro rata given him on the balance, but it must be made upon the entire amount due him. In cases of voluntary assignments, where a creditor has acquired a preference by lien, this rule of distribution has long since been adopted by this court.
In Logan v. Anderson, reported in 18 B. M., 114, the rule was established, and it has been followed in several reported cases: German Security Bank v. Jefferson, 10 Bush, 326; Citizens’ Bank of Paris v. Patterson, 78 Ky., 291; Spratt’s Executrix v. First National Bank, 84 Ky., 85.
It is said in Logan v. Anderson, if a creditor has a mortgage on property of the debtor sufficient to pay fifty cents on the dollar and then makes a subsequent mortgage to the same creditor, including other creditors, on other property sufficient to pay fifty cents on the dollar, the first mortgage creditor has the right to have his whole debt paid while the second mortgage creditors get but fifty cents on the dollar, and for the reason that each
It is true the law takes the estate from the debtor for creditors, but has the debtor given to the .creditor this double fund as a security for his debt, and if not will a court of equity favor the creditor who is attempted to be preferred so as at last to give him the preference over general creditors ? His lien he has the right to enforce, but will the law step in and give him a double security when at the same time it is attempting to prevent fraudulent preferment ? It is argued that the equitable rule would be to credit the claim of the bank by the amount realized from the lien and then give to the bank its pro rata share of the assets on the balauce of its debt. This rule, if adopted, would present three modes of distributing the
It seems to us that one of two modes of distribution must be followed in this case. The assets must be distributed in the same manner as that of a decedent who-dies insolvent or as in the case of a voluntary assignment.
Section 34, of article 2, chapter 39, General Statutes, provides the manner in which the estate of a debtor who dies insolvent shall be distributed, and is as follows : “ But when any creditor has a lien and the property subject to the lien is not sufficient to discharge the debt he shall not be entitled to any portion of the residue óf the estate until all the creditors not having liens shall have received a sum equal, pro rata, with such lien creditor.” The distribution as between creditors where the debtor dies insolvent is made plain by this statute, and the question arises, Bid the Legislature in enacting the law to prevent fraudulent preferences recognize or classify the estates of those passing by operation of law to creditors with the estates of insolvent decedents as to the mode of distribution ? All such estates are subject to the control of courts of equity, and some equitable rule for distribution must be ascertained. It is apparent that the law-making power, when enacting the law in regard to sales, etc., in contemplation of insolvency, had in view the act regulating proceedings in the settlement of the estates of debtors who had died insolvent.
The statute has designated the claims of those who under this operation of law passing the estate to creditors shall have prior liens, following the priority given to claimants against the estates of those dead, showing plainly that the Legislature regarded the act of insolvency as placing the estate of the insolvent debtor in the same condition and to be distributed in the same manner as the estate of a decedent, while the third section of the act may apply to the mode of proceeding alone, such as filing the petition and proving claims. A careful reading of both sections indicate clearly that the Legislature was attempting to regulate the mode of distribution as well as the mode of proceeding by the provisions of the statute with reference to the estates of deceased persons. It is the contract relation between the creditor and the debtor that gives to the former the right to resort to both funds to pay his debt when the lien is insufficient for that purpose. The rule springs from no equitable doctrine, but on the contrary a court of equity declines to interfere because the debtor, by his voluntary assignment, has placed
The judgment below conforming to these views is affirmed.