15 N.J. Eq. 150 | New York Court of Chancery | 1862
The complainant and defendant are respectively creditors of the late firm of Horace Southmayd & Sons, merchants of the city of New York. On the first of April, 1861, the complainant caused an attachment to be issued out of the Circuit Court of the county of Hudson against the estate of the partners in said firm, as nonresident debtors. The attachment was served upon the real estate of Horace Southmayd, one of the partners. On the twentieth of April, 1862, judgment in the attachment was rendered in favor of the complainant, Jesse W. Benedict, for $2079.60, in favor of James M. Benedict for $48,407.45,
The bill asks that the defendant, James M. Benedict, be restrained from receiving any dividend under the judgment in attachment until the claims of the complainant and of other applying creditors under the attachment are satisfied, and that the assets of the firm be marshalled, and applied in satisfaction of the debts upon equitable principles.
The fact that the property attached is the individual property of one of the partners, and not the joint property of the ' firm, in no wise affects the rights or equities of the parties to this suit. Both the complainant and defendant are creditors of the firm. The separate estate of an individual partner is, by the express terms of the statute, made liable to an attachment for the recovery of a debt due from the partner
If any objection was designed to be raised to the form of attachment, this is neither the time nor the forum in which that objection, if it existed, can be made available. Judgment upon the attachment has been rendered, and the property made answerable to the claims of the creditors of the firm.
The only question now open for the determination of this court is, how is the money arising from the sale of the property attached to be distributed ? The statute has, with great precision and minuteness, prescribed the time when, the manner in which, and the persons to whom the distribution shall be made. It directs, among other things, that the auditors “ shall distribute among the said plaintiffs and creditors, equally and in a ratable proportion, according to the quantum or amount of their respective debts, as ascertained by the said report and the judgment thereon, all the moneys arising from the sale of the said goods and chattels, lands and tenements, first deducting legal costs and charges.” Nix. Dig. 41, § 36.
Each petitioning creditor under the attachment has a judgment in his favor for his debt, which he is entitled to have satisfied out of the proceeds of the sale, so far as there are assets for that purpose. It is made, the duty of the auditors so to distribute the fund. Will a court of equity so far interfere with the legal rights of the creditor as to prevent his receiving satisfaction of an admitted debt out of a fund raised by judicial proceeding ready to be paid over and especially appropriated to the satisfaction of that debt, and turn him round upon a mere question of equity to seek his remedy by legal process upon his collaterals or by proceeding in a foreign jurisdiction? Can this be done without an unwarrantable infringement of his legal rights ? Even if this be admissible in the case of a judgment creditor, where the rights of a single creditor are involved, will the court, upon a principle of sound public policy, arrest the proceedings in attachment and the
It would seem that the utmost, under such circumstances, the complainant could ask would be to be subrogated to the rights of the defendant, his claim being first satisfied in full. But that relief the complainant does not ask and cannot have. The whole frame of the bill rests upon the assumption that, if James M. Benedict comes in under the attachment, none of the creditors claiming under the attachment can receive their claims in full. Unless his claim is satisfied in full he cannot be asked to surrender his securities, nor can the complainant claim to be subrogated to his legal rights. What the complainant does ask is, that the defendant shall be compelled to apply first the proceeds under the deed of assignment made for the benefit of creditors in New York, and of the several collateral securities in his hands, to the payment of his claim before resorting to the attached property or the funds in the hands of the auditors, and that he shall be permitted to claim from the auditors a dividend only upon such part of his claim as shall not be satisfied by the said securities, or that the said securities shall be marshalled in such manner as to secure to the complainant and the other judgment creditors under the attachment the full benefit and advantage pro rata of the said securities.
This end cannot be attained in the mode proposed without driving James M. Benedict to sue upon his collaterals, delaying him in the receipt of his money, compelling him to incur the hazard, expense, and delay of litigation, and at the same time arresting the proceedings in attachment and the distribution of the funds by the auditors for an indefinite and uncertain period, until the suits upon the collaterals and the proceedings under an assignment in a foreign jurisdiction may be eventually settled.
When the injunction was issued I was not without apprehension that this measure would be an unwarrantable interference with the proceedings under the attachment, in conflict with the policy of the law and a violation of the rights of
But I am not aware of any authority which sanctions the extent of power which the court is asked to exercise in this cause, nor do I perceive any principle upon which it can be sustained. But if this objection be unftmnded, and the right of the complainant to claim the interference of the court for the protection of his rights be clear, has he any equity which entitles him to the relief asked for ?
The first ground of relief is, that the defendant is a preferred creditor under the assignment in New York, and that his claim is secured upon that fund. The rule of equity is well settled, that where one has a lien upon two funds, and another a subsequent lien upon one of them only, the former will be compelled first to exhaust the subject of his exclusive lien, and will be permitted to resort to the other for the deficiency only. But the equity is a personal one against the debtor, and does not bind the paramount creditor nor the debtor’s alienee for value.
It is an equity against the debtor himself, that the accidental resort of the paramount creditor to the doubly charged estate, and the consequent exhaustion of that security, shall not enable him to get back the second estate discharged of both debts. Adams’ Eq. (ed. 1859) 585.
But it is clear that the debtor in this case cannot get back the estate held under the assignment discharged of either debt. That estate in the hands of the assignee, after the satisfaction of the claim of James M. Benedict, is charged with all the debts of the firm of Southmayd & Sons, including the debt of the complainant himself. The debtors cannot get back the estate, nor derive any benefit from the fund assigned, until all their debts are paid in full. This difficulty appears to have presented itself to the mind of the draftsman of the bill^ and, as if to avoid it, he charges a fraudulent combina-'
In considering this question, it must be assumed that the assignment made by the debtors for the benefit of their creditors in the state of New York is a valid and legal assignment under the laws of that state, and that all its provisions are in accordance with the recognized principles of law and equity which there prevail. The debtors had a right, by their assignment, to make preferences among their creditors, to prescribe the order of priority in which the creditors should be paid, and the amounts they should respectively receive. These provisions the trustee is bound to carry into effect. The terms of the assignment are the law of the trust, which the trustee must respect. They regulate the rights of the several classes of creditors under the assignment. These preferences are for the purposes of this case not to be regarded as inequitable. Our statute has indeed prohibited all preferences of one creditor over another in a general assignment for the benefit of creditors. But it does not prohibit it in any other form. Every debtor, by our law, has a right by the transfer of property by mortgage, by judgment, or in any
The decided objection to throwing the claim of the defendant upon the assignment for satisfaction is, that it cannot be done without prejudice to the claims of the creditors who are entitled to share the fund under the assignment.
It will operate to the prejudice either of the creditors in the same class with the defendant, or, if there be funds sufficient to satisfy those claims in full, it will operate to the prejudice of the general creditors, who are in the next class, and are not preferred. They have equal equities and an equal claim to protection with the creditors under the attachment, and I perceive no ground upon which the claim of the defendant can bo thrown exclusively upon that fund to thoir prejudice. All that the complainant can ask is that the defendant shall not rocoive his pay twice, or use it for the benefit of the debtors. That result is secured by the terms of the assignment. The creditors entitled under it can receive a dividend -only upon what may remain due after deducting from their respective claims the amount received upon their collateral securities.
If the complainant was a citizen of this state, complaining of the effect of the assignment in a foreign jurisdiction, alleging that it operated in evasion of our statute, and to the prejudice of his interest, and claiming to have the funds administered in this state for his bonefit, a different case would be presented for consideration. But it is unnecessary to consider the case in this aspect. The complainant and defendant are both citizens of New York. Neither can complain that the funds are removed to the jurisdiction of the state in
If there be any equity whatever in this bill, it must rest upon the charge of actual fraud. That charge is fully denied by the answer.
The injunction is dissolved with costs.