57 Mich. 62 | Mich. | 1885
This suit was brought by the plaintiff to recover from defendants a balance of account which defendants owed to Bultman, Tompkins & Co., of New York, which had been assigned to plaintiff. On April 26, 1884, the defendants, who reside at Detroit, Michigan, owed to Bultman, Tompkins & Co., citizens of New York, an indebtedness of about $420. On this day Bultman, Tompkins & Co. made a general assignment for their creditors, a copy of which is given in the record, and appears to be an ordinary common-law assignment of all their property, with preferences to certain of their creditors. This assignment was voluntarily, made by Bultman, Tompkins & Co., in the individual names of the members of the firm at New York, to the plaintiff in this suit, who accepted the trust and entered upon the execution thereof. Minor & Richards were unsecured and unpreferred creditors of the assignors, and were citizens of Illinois, and on July 12, 1884, commenced suit in the circuit court for the county of Wayne against Bultman, Tompkins & Co., and at the same time garnished the defendants herein. No service was had upon the defendant's in the original suit in the State of Michigan, but service was made in New York, under the authority of How. Stat. § 8087. The writ of garnishment served upon defendants was returnable on the 29th day of July, A. D. 1884, and on the 26th day of July they filed their disclosure, in which they admitted that at the time of the service of the writ upon them they were indebted to said Bultman and Tompkins in the sum of $420, and that they had no property or effects in their possession, or under their control, belonging to the said Bultman and Tompkins, who composed the firm of Bultman, Tompkins & Co.
This suit was commenced on the 31st of July, 1884, by declaration, in the Superior Court of the city of Detroit.
The plaintiff filed a replication, and the judge of the Superior Court has made a written finding of facts, substantially as set forth in the plea of abatement. He also found that the plaintiff, Butler, was the assignee of Bultman and Tompkins of the said claim against the defendant Wendell, under ■a general assignment for the benefit of creditors, made and ■dated the 26th day of April, A. D. 1884, by said Bultman ■and Tompkins to him under the statutes of the state of New York in such cases made and provided ; a true copy of which was attached to and made a part of defendants’ plea in abatement. Thereupon he gave judgment for defendants that the declaration be quashed, and for costs. Plaintiff brings ■error.
The only question is whether the plea in abatement, which was found to be true by the court, should abate the plaintiff’s
The assignment is set out in full in the plea of’ abatement, but there is no allegation in the plea that the law under which the assignment was made was an insolvent la-w of that state, or that it contained any restrictions or limitations upon the common law as to assignments for the benefit of creditors. If the statute of the state of New York did notin any manner change the common law relative to assignments for the benefit of creditors, nor the manner of enforcing them,.
Assignments with preferences for the benefit of creditors are valid instruments at the common law, and, if made in this State, can only be challenged at the instance of creditors of the assignor. The defendants do not stand in that relation to the assignors, Bultman and Tompkins, and are not, therefore, in a position to attack the legality of the assignment because of the fact that it gives preferences. This point was recently passed upon by the supreme court of Massachusetts in the case of Train v. Kendall 137 Mass. 366. That case in its facts is quite similar to this, and we think was decided upon correct principles, and is an authority for the
Reversed, and the defendants are at liberty to plead issuably within thirty days.