4 Md. Ch. 75 | New York Court of Chancery | 1853
But a single question of law is submitted in this case, and that arises upon a state of facts about which there is no dispute.
Upon a careful consideration of these facts, and the written arguments of the solicitors of the parties, I am of opinion, that the money received by the complainant upon the New York drafts should be distributed, pro rata, among the creditors mentioned in the letter of Joseph W. Finley to him, of the 31st of March, 1850.
The case of Cross et al vs. Cohen, 3 Gill, 257, illustrates very strongly the desire of chancery in administering funds under its control to give an equal portion to each creditor, and would be decisive of this case if the rights of the parties depended entirely upon the letter. But it appears that cotemporaneously with the letter, Mr. Finley gave to each creditor mentioned in it an order on Mr. Gibson to pay the sum due him. The orders are all dated on the same day, 31st of March, 1850, and the only difference in them is that the one in favor of H. Rieman k Sons is payable only out of the proceeds of the drafts on the New York House, whilst those given to the other creditors are payable out of any money to be collected upon the drafts on New York and Baltimore. And the draft drawn on Baltimore having been dishonored and those on New York having been paid, but being inadequate to pay the claims of all the creditors, it is insisted on the part of Rieman & Sons, that they are entitled to a preference over the other creditors, that is, that their entire claim must bo paid out of the proceeds of the drafts on New York, and the balance only distributed among the other creditors.
It is urged on their part that they have nothing to do with the letter from Finley to Gibson, that their right to payment rests upon the draft, which was sufficient to operate an equitable assignment of the fund in question, and that by force of it, they are entitled to be paid out of that fund to the exclusion of the other parties.
In this case there is no pretence that Mr. Gribson ever consented to the appropriation in favor of Messrs. Rieman & Sons, either by an acceptance of the draft held by them, or in any other way, and certainly no obligation to accept can be implied from the course of trade between them. On the contrary, the complainant, as shown by the whole record, has certainly refused to involve himself in any manner with the conflicting pretensions of these parties, or to come under any obligation to any one of them, leaving them to litigate and settle their rival claims among themselves.
But conceding that the order to Rieman k Son did amount in equity to an assignment, though it was only for a part of the fund, according to the view of Mr. Justice Story, in 2 Oom. on Pq., section 1044, still, in my opinion, they would only stand on a footing of equality with the other creditors.
If the order in favor of Rieman k Sons amounts to an assignment in equity, the orders in favor of the other parties have the same effect. They are all dated on the same day, and the only
In this view of the caso they are all assignees in equity of the fund received by Mr. Gibson on the New York drafts. It is true, the other creditors hold another security, but that, without their default, has turned out to be worthless. But why should this weaken their claim against the New York fund or postpone them to a creditor whose claim against, or lien upon, the fund is contemporaneous in time and created by an instrument similar to those held by them ?
It is urged by the solicitor for Rieman & Sons, that the preference claimed by them is equitable, because, if the Baltimore draft had been paid, and those on* New York dishonored, they would have been entirely excluded. This may be so, and probably looking alone to the orders themselves and throwing out of view the letter of instructions, is so. But why so ? Simply because their order was payable out of that particular fund, and that only, whilst those held by the other parties out of that same fund and another likewise. The additional security of the Baltimore fund could not impair their claim to be paid out of the New York fund if the former proved unavailing.
The solicitor for some of the creditors goes further and says, that Rioman & Sons, by issuing an attachment from the Superior Court of Baltimore city against Finley as a non-resident debtor, have forfeited their right to any portion of the fund in question. That it amounts to a renunciation of their claim under the order and letter of instructions of the 31st of March, 1850.
It might be a sufficient answer to this view to say, that there is no evidence before the court of the attachment, or for what it issued, if it did issue. But if there was, it would not, as I think, deprive the creditor of his right to participate in the