3 Barb. 79 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
After hearing counsel for the respective parties, upon the appeal,
The Court unanimously affirmed the decree appealed from, for the reasons stated by the vice chancellor in the opinion delivered by him on deciding the cause; which opinion they adopted as their own. It is as follows:
P. Gridley, Y. C. The bill was filed by the complainant in this cause, to determine the conflicting claims of several of the parties interested in the provisions of the assignment mentioned in the pleadings and proofs; to obtain the directions of the court in relation to the disposition of the trust funds among the several claimants; and to close the trust as to all the parties to this suit, so as to bar their right hereafter to question the manner in which the proceeds of the assignment shall be distributed. The creditors who are interested in the fifth provision in the assignment, have not been made parties to the bill, for the reason, as mentioned in it, that they are very numerous, and that after satisfying the parties preferred in the preceding classes, there can in no event be a surplus in which they wilL have a right to participate. No decree therefore to be made in the cause, will conclude or in any manner affect their rights.
It is suggested that Luther Hall, who is made a party, and who has suffered the bill to be taken as confessed, has obtained a verdict against Farmer & Doolittle, as sureties or guarantors of a debt of the assignors, Kathern & Doolittle; and therefore that although Farmer &. Doolittle insist that they are not sureties, and intend to take the opinion of the supreme court
The most important question in the case, however, arises upon a claim set up by the defendants, Southworth & Beach, to have a demand which they insist they have established against Kathern & Doolittle, paid out of the assigned funds, under the provision in favor of the class of creditors first preferred in the assignment. Kathern & Doolittle were country merchants and dealers in produce, residing and doing business in Herkimer county. The defendants were commission merchants and dealers in produce, in New-York. During the season of 1844, the firm of Kathern & Doolittle transmitted to the defendants, from time to time, large quantities of cheese, to be sold on commission, and by an agreement between the j-espective parties, drew upon them, and the drafts so drawn were accepted on the credit of the property thus placed in their hands. The defendants claim a balance, upon a just statement of the account, of about $1900 to exist in their favor, by reason of the acceptance and payment of drafts for the firm of Kathern & Doolittle, exceeding by that amount the , net proceeds of their sales. This sum, I think, should be diminished by deducting one draft for $400, which was accepted on the individual account of one of the members of the firm, without the consent of the other member of the firm, and with the knowledge that it was in fact a transaction for the benefit of the individual who presented it, and which was not charged in the account of the firm, at the time. I also think the loss sustained on the lot of cheese sold in Philadelphia should be borne
We now come to the question whether the defendants are entitled to have this balance, whatever it may be, against the firm of Kathern <fc Doolittle paid, as. being embraced within the class of demands first preferred in the assignment. The clause under which this claim is made is in the following words: “ Second. To pay, satisfy and discharge all and every sum of money owing by said firm, whether the same has yet become due and payable, or is to become due and payable hereafter, for which Harvey W. Doolittle and John Farmer are endorsers or sureties, or in any way bound for the accommodation of said firm, whatever may be the form of the security, and whether the said Harvey W. and John are jointly or separately liable for the same, and whether they, or either of them, are liable alone or together, and with any other person or persons.” It is manifest that a demand to be embraced in this provision, must be, first, a sum of money owing by Kathern & Doolittle; and secondly, it must be a demand for which Farmer & Doolittle are endorsers or sureties, or bound for the accommodation of Kathern & Doolittle.” These two conditions being satisfied, then, indeed, it is declared to be immaterial whether the demand is due and payable, or is to become so thereafter, and also in what manner or by what form of security they were so bound, or whether jointly or severally or with third persons. Now, were the sums of money” secured by the three drafts above mentioned, oioing by Kathern & Doolittle? Looking to the rights and obligations of the parties to these drafts, Southworth & Beach, the acceptors, are by the settled rule of law, applicable to commercial paper, the principal debtors ; so, too, we have seen, that regarding only the just and legal rights of the parties, irrespective of the rule just referred to, the defendants were the principal debtors, and Kathern & Doolittle sureties, merely. And so strictly is this rule of relative liability
But, it seems to me, that there are very strong reasons against
Now let us see what they must have intended, to do with this property, if we impute to them the intent, and to the words they have employed the interpretation which the defendants contend for. They must have intended that the three drafts mentioned, amounting to $2100, should be paid out of the first proceeds or avails of their property, in preference to and in exclusion of many of the most sacred of their own debts, and those of their own friends and relations, who were not only creditors but sureties; and what was this demand and whose was the debt, for the payment of which their brother and their neighbors who were sureties without consideration, were to be postponed and sacrificed? It was in the first place not a debt for which they were primarily liable; it was a debt which they and others supposed did not belong to them to pay, and never would, for they believed the defendants indebted to them ; it was also a debt of the defendants, w7hich they were not only bound primes rily to pay, but which they were entirely able to pay, and which the assignors had no reaspn to doubt they would pay, at the maturity of the drafts; and finally, it was a debt upon which they did not believe, and had no reason to believe, that Farmer & Doolittle would ever be made liable, much less exposed to any ultimate loss.
I now ask, in the light shed upon this question, by putting ourselves in the position of the assignors when they executed this assignment, what possible motive could operate upon them to adopt a phraseology which should distinctly express the intention of devoting the first proceeds of their ruined fortunes to the payment of a debt of the defendants, which they were supposed to be liable, able and willing to pay? If no reasonable motive can be assigned, then I think we should not depart from the ordinary and natural interpretation of the provision in question, and' impute an intent to the assignors, the very supposition of which is in the highest degree improbable and absurd.
The decree must be framed jn accordance with the conclusions expressed in this opinion.