46 A. 187 | N.H. | 1898
The plaintiff, a non-resident creditor who has not submitted his claim to the probate court, seeks by suit in this court to hold as trustee the debtor's assignee in insolvency, appointed by the probate court under P. S., c. 201. He does not claim to hold the assignee for the property of the debtor generally which came to the assignee by virtue of the insolvency proceedings, but only for the amount of an allowance made the debtor out of the estate for the necessary support of himself and family. P. S., c.
By the assignment all the debtor's property not exempt from attachment passes to the assignee. Dube v. Insurance Co.,
The debtor's property after the assignment is a trust fund in the hands of the court for the payment of creditors and the necessary charges established by law. The allowance to a debtor is not for himself alone. The members of his family are beneficiaries of the fund decreed him in trust for his and their support. "If the trust exists for the benefit of any other than the debtor, the trustees cannot be charged, because the fund to be reached is in equity, that is, by the law of the land, the property of the beneficiary and not of the debtor." Richards v. Railroad,
If any change has taken place in the debtor's family which makes the original decree an unwise exercise of probate discretion, the remedy, if one is needed, will be found in reopening the decree and readjusting the allowance, not by permitting one creditor to secure to himself a portion of that in which all have an equal right under the law.
Exception overruled.
C. J., did not sit: the others concurred. *372