106 Ala. 462 | Ala. | 1894
— The principal question of the case, to state it most favorably to the appellees, is, whether a judgment confessed by a debtor in failing circumstances, which, when recorded in the office of the judge of probate, becomes alien on all the property, real and personal, of the debtor within the county subject to execution, and which has been recorded in the several counties in which the property of the debtor is situate, is to be taken and deemed a general assignment inuring to the equal benefit of all the creditors of the debtor.
The statute as it now exists, and within the operation of which it is insisted the judgment must be drawn, reads: “Every general assignment made by a debtor, or a conveyance by a debtor of substantially all of his property in payment of a prior debt, by which a preference or priority of payment is given to one or more creditors over the remaining creditors of the grant- or, shall be and inure to the benefit of all the creditors of the grantor equally; but this section shall not apply to or embrace mortgages given to socure a debt contracted contemporaneously with the execution of the mortgage, and for the security of which the mortgage was given.” — Pamph. Acts, 1892-93, p. 1046. By its own terms the statute is limited to conveyances, to transfers, by which the debtor divests himself of title, passes it to a trustee for the benefit of one or more creditors, to the exclusion of all others, or directly to one or more creditors in exclusion of all others. First, it' is a general assignment creating preferences which it is declared shall inure to the equal benefit of ail creditors. A general assignment, within the meaning and operation of the statute, in view of the repeated decisions in construction of it, since its original introduction into our legislation by the Code of 1852, (Code of 1852, § 1556), is capable of a clear and precise definition. It is a voluntary transfer by a debtor of all, or substantially all, of his property subject to the payment of debts, for
In Mobile Savings Bank v. Burke, 94 Ala. 130, it is said : “The lien of a judgment is not the subject of, and has none of the properties of a contract. It is the creature of legislation, and may be taken away without impairing the obligation of contracts — a statutory lien.” This is but a reaffirmation of a principle which has been of frequent assertion and application in this court — that the lien of a'judgment, or execution, is derived from statute, and a repeal of the statute creating it destroys it, in the absence of an exception or clause preserving it. The exercise of the repealing power by the legislature is not an invasion of any constitutional prohibition or guaranty, State or Federal. — 1 Brick. Dig., 900, § 144. ,A general assignment, or a sale or conveyance in payment of debts, is, each, a contract, within the prohibition and protection of the constitution, State and Federal. No subsequent legislation can destroy or impair the rights and interests they may create. The legislature pending this suit may take away the lien of the judgment, which is the feature supposed to convert it into a general assignment inuring to the'common security of all creditors— then the judgment would cease to be a general assignment not by the act or by the assent of the parties, but by the declaration of the legislative will.
The statutes secure to the judgment debtor, the right to redeem lands which may be sold under execution issuing on the judgment; and a like right is secured to judgment creditors. These are rights which are not to be taken away or impaired by judicial construction. Now suppose, by construction the judgment is converted into a general assignment, can these rights survive? A general assignment passes to the assignee an indefeasible
We may concede, as is argued by counsel, that the purpose of the confession of the judgment was-the preference of the judgment creditor to the exclusion of all other creditors ; and that thereby the result is produced which the statute interdicts from being produced by a general assignment. This furnishes no reason for an expansion of the statute by the courts to cases to which the legislature has not extended it. The debtor by the common law has the right to prefer creditors ; a right circumscribed only by the statutes and the principles of courts of equity directed against frauds’upon creditors. When a statute does not abrogate, but simply limits or qualifies the right, it would be an infringement of the well settled principle of statutory construction, that statutes are not to be regarded as derogating from the principles of the common law, save so far as may be expressed or fairly implied, if the courts were to take up the limitation or qualification where the legislature leaves it, and widen it to meet those cases to which it may be supposed it ought to have been extended. Prior to the amendment of the statute, drawing conveyances or sales in payment of pre-existing debts within its operation, the like argument was frequently pressed upon the courts. The invariable answer was, that such sales or conveyances were
The statute has received a liberal construction — a construction intended to suppress the mischief against which it is directed, and to promote equality among creditors which it manifestly favors. Prior to the adoption of the statute, general assignments were recognized as a distinctive security for the payment of debts. They passed to the assignee the entire estate, or title, or interest of the assignor, leaving in him only a possibility of reversion. And in this respect they differed from other forms and kinds of security, such as mortgages or deeds of trust, by which the debtor did not part with his estate, or right, or title absolutely, but only conditionally, and to which an equity of redemption inhered. As the policy of the statute was the withdrawal from the debtor of the power to prefer creditors, and the promotion of equality among them, the construction it received from an early day after it became of force, and which has been continuous, is, that the form or character of the instrument creating the preference or priority of payment, is not controlling. Whatever may be the form of the instrument, if it is a transfer of substantially all of the property of the debtor, subject to the payment of the debts— if by its terms the property is redeemable on the payment of the debts — or, if by express terms, or by implication of law, a trust results to the debtor of any surplus remaining after satisfying the debts, it falls within the statute, and is a common security for all creditors.— Danner v. Brewer, 69 Ala. 191. But it must be observed that this construction reaches only instruments of transfer or conveyance for the security of debts, proceeding from the act and will of the debtor, and, as was said in Iiolt v. Bancroft, supra, it is only preferences as a feature of such instruments the statute condemns.
The power of the debtor to prefer creditors is limited, not abrogated. He may now convert his property into money, and pay the money to one or more creditors, leaving all other creditors unpaid. The statute is incapable of extension to such a transaction, which is unas
The result is, the chancellor erred in overruling the motion to dismiss the bill for want of equity, and in the appointment of a receiver, and the decree must be reversed, and the appointment vacated. The decree was rendered in vacation, and of consequence the cause will be remanded.
Reversed and remanded.