28 How. Pr. 333 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1864
I. Without asserting that the statute of limitations is or is not properly pleaded, it is sufficient to say that the cause of action in this case did not accrue until after the recovery of the judgment and the return of the execution in the common law action' against the defendant Beebe. The plaintiff could not commence this action until such proceedings were taken and consummated. He had no right to commence it, and, therefore, no right of action
II. Did the conduct and acts of the defendant Beebe, before and at the time of the execution of the assignment, and subsequently to it, manifest beyond reasonable doubt an intent to hinder, delay or defraud their creditors ? It is not sufficient to say that the execution of the assignment necessarily had the affect to hinder and delay them. If mere hindrance and delay should avoid an instrument of this nature, then of course it could in no case whatever be upheld. Every assignment in trust for the benefit of creditors operates to hinder or delay them in the enforcement of their claims. But as the law recognizes and upholds such a disposition of a debtor’s property, when it is in other respects without taint, it is palpable that the mere effect of hindrance or delay cannot invalidate them. If indeed the primary and controlling purpose is to hinder or delay, then, undoubtedly, the statute is violated, and this will be the result, even when the moral intention of the debtor is honest, as when he thinks it would be better, that the property could be sold more advantageously for the interests of the creditors at a future time, and for this primary purpose executes an assignment. If this is the purpose which induces him to make an assignment, it will be set aside, but if his primary and controlling purpose is to preserve his propertjr for such a distribution of it among his creditors as the law sanctions, the assignment will be upheld, although it operates also to hinder or delay. In the one case hindrance or delay is the main and primary purpose, in the other it is only an incidental effect.
On the 1st of September, 1857, the defendants Beebe, bullion brokers and bankers, stopped payment and closed their doors in consequence of the revulsion which so disastrously and widely followed the unexpected failure of the Ohio Life and Trust Company. But although they stopped 'payment for the time, they were confident that they had
III. If there are no extrinsic causes to authorize me to set aside this assignment, the next inquiry is, has it intrinsic defects which render it null and void ? It is alleged that it. provides for the assignee a greater compensation than the law allows. It provides “ that the assignee shall retain, pay and disburse all the just and reasonable expenses, costs, charges and commissions of executing and carrying into effect the assignment, including a just, reasonable and lawful compensation for his own services as such trustee.”
It would be an overstrained construction, to infer from this provision that it authorizes the assignee to retain or
The assignment provides that after the payment of the partnership debts, the trustee shall pay all the private and individual debts of. each assignor. It is contended that this is an illegal provision, and that it is illegal as against the copartnership creditors. It is certainly not intended to affect them injuriously. Not only is the individual property of each copartner, in common with the copartnership property, assigned to pay copartnership debts, but it is expressly directed that no individual debts shall be paid until all the copartnership debts are paid in full. It is contended that this provision renders the assignment null and void, and I must say with Johnson, J., in Turner agt. Jaycox (40 Barb. 164), that this is a novel proposition. At least it was very novel to me until the counsel of the plaintiff directed my attention to some few cases maintaining a similar proposition. The furthest point in this direction which anything like reliable authority had previously reached, was that such a provision may avoid an instrument when it appeared upon its face that each assignor was individually insolvent, and that the property assigned by each was unequal in value, and the debts of each unequal in proportion. This proposition is based on the ground that such a provision is taking the property of one partner to pay the debts of another who had less property or more indebtedness. But I think even here there is a fallacy, for the assignee would not be bound to pay the debts of one assignor with the property of the other, unless the assignment contained an .express provision to that effect. It would, be presuming an illegal meaning to imply that the trustee was authorized to do anything more than to pay
By the same principles of equity jurisprudence, it is expressly affirmed that the separate creditors are entitled in equity to seek payment from the surplus of the joint property, after satisfaction of the joint debts. This is precisely the disposition of the surplus of which the plaintiff complains. The assignment provides nothing more or less than what the elementary principle to which I have referred expressly sanctions, and to which the individual creditors of the assignors in this case would be entitled, even if the provision to which the counsel so strenuously objects was not contained in the assignment. Surely that which the law expressly allows and directs, even without any positive direction in the instrument, cannot become nugatory merely because it is expressly recited in it. This
My conclusions of fact are: 1st. Six years have'not elapsed from the time the right of action in this case accrued until its commencement. 2d. That the parties to the assignment in trust executed on the 26th November, 1851, did not intend thereby to hinder, delay or defraud the creditors of the assignors.
My conclusions of law are : 1st. That this action is not barred by the statute limiting the time of commencing civil actions. 2d. That the said assignment contains no provisions affecting the validity thereof on its face. 3d. That the same is a valid instrument; and 4th. That the complaint should be dismissed, and judgment given for the defendants, with costs.