119 Ala. 202 | Ala. | 1898
This is an appeal from a decree of the city court, sitting in equity, appointing a receiver to take possession and control of a stock of goods, the property, and all other assets, of the Builders’ & Painters’ Supply Company, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of this State, having its principal place of business in the city of Montgomery. The appellees, by Avhom the bill Avas filed on which the appointment of the receiver was made, are simple contract creditors, or creditors at large of the company. The purpose and prayer of the bill — and when analyzed, the allegations are not adapted or consistent with any other relief — is, to obtain a decree declaring that a judgment the First National Bank of Montgomery had obtained against the company, is in fact and legal effect a judgment. by confession, operating or inuring like a general assignment containing preferences, to the equal benefit of all creditors of the company.
The title to the relief is based upon a recent legislative enactment, approved February 13, 1897, entitled “an act to further define general assignments and to prevent the fraudulent disposition of property.” (Paraph. Acts, 1896-97, 1089-90.) The first section of the act is a substantial copy of the pre-existing statute in relation to general assignments, with the exception that it adds to mortgages given as security for a debt contemporaneously executed, pledges or pawns giAren as security for a like debt, excluding them from the operation of the statute. The.second section reads: “That a general assignment Avithin the meaning of the foregoing section shall include, in addition to the conveyances noAV defined as such by law, every judgment confessed, attachment procured by debtor, or other disposition of property by which a debtor conveys all or substantially all of his property subject to execution, in payment of or as security for a prior debt, or charges such property with the payment of such debt.” The third and con-
The appointment of a receiver is matter of discretion governed by the whole circumstances of the case, the most material of which is the probability that the plainiff will ultimately be entitled to a decree. As was said in Bank of Florence v. U. S. Savings & Loan Co., 104 Ala. 299: “The primary inquiry is, whether there is shown a reasonable probability that the plaintiff asking the appointment will ultimately succeed in obtaining the general relief sought by the suit. If ultimate success is matter of grave doubt, or if it be clear the general relief sought can not be obtained, the appointment ought not to be made.” The pre-existing statute in reference to general assignments, their legal operation and effect/ by its terms was limited to transfers or conveyances by which a debtor divested himself of title to all, or substantially all, of his property or effects subject to the payment of debts, either as payment or as security for prior debts. A judgment confessed, not a component part of a general assignment, was not within the operation of the statute, though by the record or registry of it in the court of probate, a lien was acquired on all the property of the- debtor subject to execution. Bell v. Goetter, 106 Ala. 462. It is therefore apparent that the appellee can not succeed in obtaining the relief prayed unless the recent enactment to which we have referred, is a valid exercise of legislative power.
The constitution, Art. 4, section 2, declares, with exceptions not now necessary to enumerate, that “Each law shall contain but one subject which shall be clearly expressed in its title.” The argument of the counsel for the appellant is, that the title of the act, and the act itself, contains or embraces -two distinct subjects — the definition of general assignments, and the prevention of the fraudulent disposition of property. Are these separate, distinct subjects, having no common ingredient, as known in prior legislation, and prior judicial
A general assignment, or any transaction to which the debtor assents, and to which the operation and effect of a general assignment may be ascribed, by which all, or substantially all, his property is devoted unconditionally to the equal payment of his creditors, can not have in it any element of fraud — it can not be of damage or injury to any creditor — it is the appropriation which the law favors. In Rapier v. Gulf City Paper Company, 64 Ala. 342, it was said: “A general assignment by a debtor is not prohibited — it is not declared void. The only effect of the statute is in its operation, depriving it of the character of a particular security for a particular creditor and converting it into a general security for the equal benefit of all creditors who come in and claim under it. As between the parties, it operates according to its terms. Creditors not named in it, or those who have not assented to it, alone have the right to claim that it shall inure to the benefit of all the creditors. The assignee may enforce any and every right which springs out of it, against the assignor and all claiming under him. He will, however, stand, at the election of creditors, a trustee for their benefit, bound to appropriate whatever he may realize, to the payment of all the just debts of the assignor. The instruments on which the statute operates, are transfers for the security of one or more creditors, to the exclusion of, or in preference to the remaining creditors; and an indispensable element is, that substantially all the property of the assignor, subject to the payment of debts, is thereby conveyed.”
In Bell v. Goetter, 106 Ala. 469, in construction of the amendatory statute, by which conveyances in payment of prior debts, were given the operation and effect of general assignments, it is said: “A general assignment, within the meaning and operation of the statute, in view of the repeated decisions in the construction of it, since its original introduction into our legislation by the Code of 1852, 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
Upon the theory that a general assignment is not akin to conveyances fraudulent as to creditors — the settled doctrine of the court is, that a creditor’s bill may not
The first two sections of the act under consideration, strictly speaking, do not define general assignments, but they do declare that particular acts of a debtor — the confession of judgment, or procurement of attachment, shall have the operation and effect of a general assignment — shall inure to the equal benefit of all his creditors, with which fraud can not consist. The third makes certain acts of a debtor a criminal offense, punishable by fine and imprisonment, the intent being to prevent the commission of fraud, for the acts of themselves are but frauds. These acts ivere, first, the selling, removing or otherwise disposing of any of his property subject to execution by a debtor with intent to hinder, delay or defraud his creditors; and, second, the secreting or withholding of any such property by a debtor from his assignee in a general assignment. Now neither of the acts, thus made a criminal offense,. is within the operation of the first and second sections, nor is it declared by either of these sections, that such acts can or ought to inure to the equal benefit of all the creditors of the debtor committing them. A conveyance by a debtor of all or a part of his property to a single creditor in-absolute payment of an antecedent debt, if there is no material disparity between the value of the property conveyed and the amount of the debt, and no reservation of .benefit to the grantor, has always been supported as a valid transaction, both at common
The enactment, it is apparent, by its title expresses two separate, distinct, independent subjects — made separate and distinct by legislation, judicial decision, and their inherent nature and character. If it be not offensive to the constitution, it is difficult to conceive of an enactment that would fall within its prohibition. As two subjects are expressed in the title, and the act in its body embraces each, the whole act must be treated as void, “from the manifest impropriety,” as said by Judge Cooley, “in the court choosing between the two, and holding the act valid as to the one and void as to the other.” — Cooley Const. Lim. 176; Ballentyne v. Wickersham, 75 Ala. 533.
Since the rendition of the judgment, and the filing of