The opinion of the Court
The question referred to the Court is, whether the deed of assignment disclosed by the trustee is valid, so as to pass to the trustees therein named the debt, idmitted to be due from the respondent to the principal debtor. The supposed invalidity of the conveyance rests upon the provisions of the instrument itself, there being no evidence or suggestion of fraud upon creditors, in the transaction, dehors the instrument; and the only objectionable provision in the deed is that which requires of the creditors,
It may be said, that if such an assignment is valid at all, the assignees are entitled to all the property conveyed, because it cannot appear, until a final conversion of the property conveyed into money, that there will be sufficient to satisfy the demands of the assenting creditors ; but we think, in order to avoid an attachment, or the effects of the trustee process, by virtue of the assignment, the assignee must show and prove, as he will have an opportunity to do by becoming a party to the suit, that the property attached or debt arrested is wanted to answer the valid purposes of the assignment. If he fail to do this, it ought to remain subject to legal disposition for the use of the creditor making the attachment. In the present case, primd facie, there are ample funds to pay the creditors who are parties to the assignment, and as there is no evidence offered to the contrary, the person summoned as trustee must be charged to the amount of the debt which he owes, if that is not more than sufficient to satisfy the plaintiffs’ judgment.
Morton J. did not sit in this cause.
The assent of a creditor to an assignment in Massachusetts is not presumed until he has become a party to the same, although the assignment be for his benefit. See Widgery v. Haskell, 5 Mass. R. 144; Russell v. Woodward, 10 Pick. 408; Brewer v. Pitkin, 11 Pick. 298; Ward v. Lamson, 6 Pick. 358; Viall v. Bliss, 9 Pick. 13; New England Bank v. Lewis, 8 Pick. 113; Ward v. Lewis, 4 Pick. 518.
There are many cases in the other States in which it is held, that if the trust created by the assignment be for the benefit of the creditor, the law presumes his assent to it, until the contrary appears. See -Nicholl v. Mumford, 4 Johns. Ch. R. 529; Cunningham v. Freeborn, 11 Wendell, 248; Buffum v. Green, 5 N. Hamp. R. 71; Marlborough Manuf. Co. v. Smith, 2 Connect. R. 579; Halsey v. Whitney, 4 Mason, 206; Angell on Assignments, 168 et seq. and authorities there cited.
See Bradford v. Tappan, 11 Pick. 76; Jewett v. Barnard, 6 Greenl. 331; Copeland v. Weld, 8 Greenl. 411.
See the late statute on the subject of assignments. St. 1836, c. 238.
