6 Paige Ch. 486 | New York Court of Chancery | 1837
There is no legal or equitable foundation for the claim of preference in payment which the complainant is attempting to establish in this case. Although the assets of the company are in the nature of a trust fund for the payment of the debts due to the creditors of the corporation, no one of those creditors is entitled to any preference in payment over another, unless he has obtained a specific appropriation of or prior equitable lien upon some particular part of the fund. In this case it is not pretended that the identical $2000 which the complainant loaned to the company did in fact constitute any part of the assets of the company which remained on hand at the time the insolvency occurred, and which have gone into the hands of the receivers. On the contrary it appears that the money was loaned to pay off a loss which had previously taken place ; and was undoubtedly applied for that object. The complainant, therefore, was a mere creditor at large-at the time of the appointment of the receivers, without any specific lien whatever. His claim then appears to be based entirely upon the erroneous supposition that the creditors who became such by reason of the destruction of their property by the fire have no claim upon the assets of the company beyond the amount of the capital stock ; and that as the money loaned went to pay off a previous loss which must otherwise have been paid out of the surplus on hand at the time of the fire, the lender is entitled to a preference in payment out of such surplus. The capital stock, however,
The decision of the vice chancellor was unquestionably right, and it must be affirmed with costs.