11 F. Cas. 841 | D. Vt. | 1842
In the first place, there is no pretence of anything fraudulent in the proceedings of the attaching creditors. Their debts were bona fide, and have gone into judgment. Their attachment was made in good faith agreeably to the laws of the state, and before any act of bankruptcy by the debtors. They had, up to the service of the injunction, taken the steps required by the laws of the state to enforce the payment of their debts. Does the attachment in this case constitute a lien or security, within the meaning of the proviso in the second section of the bankrupt law, and is it thereby saved from the operation of that law? In my opinion it does. The doctrine in this state is, that an attachment of property on mesne process, constitutes a lien. It is so treated in the statute, and so deemed and denominated by the supreme court of the state. The courts of the United States are to be governed by the decisions of the state courts, as to what the state laws are: the law of this state, thus clearly appearing, must gov
To the argument urged by counsel, that the proviso at the close of the second section was inserted to save certain rights peculiar to the laws of Louisiana, it is answered, that it does not appear from anything in the act, that the proviso was intended to have reference to Louisiana alone.' And certainly, though counsel in argument might take the liberty, it would by no means be proper for the court to regard the history of the bill in its progress of becoming a law, to giving effect to what are clearly its provisions. It is said, too, that by the words “lien and other securities” only such are intended as are created by contract Now this position is not true even with reference to Louisiana; for divers rights in respect to, and securities upon property to that state, within the clear meaning of the language of that proviso, arise as entirely by operation of law, and as little by virtue of contract either express or implied, as the lien by judgment to New York, or by attachment on mesne process to this state. That a judgment, docketed before an act of bankruptcy committed, is not in New York a lien on the property of the debtor, valid as against the operation of the bankrupt law, is a doctrine to which I cannot assent. Again, I am clear, that the phraseology and evident import of the law itself does not justify restricting the operation of the saving clause of the second section, to common law liens merely. In the different states there are various securities upon property, -unknown to the common law, which, by the laws of the respective states, are as essentially a lien upon the property, hs these existing at common law. And in my opinion, it is the purpose of the bankrupt law to preserve those liens or securities, thus peculiar to the several states, as much as to preserve common law liens. It is of no importance what they are called, whether liens, or securities, or anything else. What the bankrupt law provides for and saves against proceedings in bankruptcy, is any security attaching upon property by the state law. Now attachment on mesne process, by the laws of this state, is a security upon the property attached — a security valid as against the world, and indefeasible, excepting by the attaching creditor, up to the rendition of judgment He alone can control it, and if he recover, then that judgment must be satisfied, pro tanto, out of that property, unless he gives up his right to such satisfaction. Indeed, such an attachment constitutes more peculiarly a lien, than a docketed judgment in New. York — for by such attachment, the security is fixed upon specific property, and that specific property is holden to respond the judgment, while a judgment in New York is a general lien on all the debtor’s property, and no specific part is holden to satisfy that judgment till levied on by execution. However, a judgment in New York, and an attachment on mesne process in this state, rest on the same principle as to the security they fix upon the -property affected by them: and that security, when it fastens before an act of bankruptcy committed by the debtor, is not to be invalidated by such act As to the argument, that the rights or security upon property attached, is contingent, and depends upon a course of judicial proceeding to render it perfect and absolute, it is sufficient to remark, that it is no more contingent than a lien by mortgage. That is in its very nature defeasible. So, in fact, is the common law lien. Defeasibility, contingency, necessarily enter into the idea of a lien, for the moment the right becomes absolute, it ceases to be a lien. In case of mortgage, a course of judicial proceeding is as necessary to render absolute the right and title to the property, as in case of attachment Injunction dissolved.