32 Mo. App. 372 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs exhibited a demand against the assigned estate of the Guernsey Furniture Company, which was disallowed by the assignee and they appealed to the circuit court. The claim was allowed by the
“And the said lessors, in consideration of said increased rent, on their part hereby consent to the said use of said building as hereinbefore set forth, and hereby consent to all changes or alterations in said building heretofore made or which may hereafter be made by said lessee of said Electric Light Company in the prosecution of said business as aforesaid ; * * * * * * And said lessors further agree that all the covenants of said original lease, including the one for the restoration of said premises to the said 1 essors at the end of said lease in as good condition and order as the same were in when said lessee first took possession thereof, shall be considered in force and shall be construed as though this supplemental agreement had been a part of the original lease.”
The deed of assignment was dated on the twenty-first of January, 1888. About a month after the date of the assignment, the plaintiffs, by a proceeding before a justice of the peace, forfeited the lease for non-payment of rent.
The alterations having been made prior to the supplementary lease, any damages produced by a breach of the covenant of the original lease against alterations
The statute relating to assignments nowhere defines or limits the demands which shall be provable before the assignee. It merely recites (R. S. sec. 372) that the assignee shall, at a stated time and place, “proceed publicly to adjust and allow demands against the es'taté and effects of the assignor.” By the next section, he shall “commence the adjustment and allowance of demands against the trust fund” at a given hour, and continue the same a stated length of time ; and in the same section there is a proviso saving the rights of “ any creditor who shall fail to lay his claim, before said assignee during said term, on account of sickness,” etc. The next section empowers the assignee to examine witnesses on oath touching any claim exhibited to him for allowance. In other sections the words “demand” and “claim” are used indifferently to describe the debts which the assignee shall allow. Section 354, defining the purposes of voluntary assignments for the benefit of creditors, provides that they shall be “for the benefit of all the creditors of the assignor in proportion to their respective claims.'1'1
■A strict and technical construction of the statute would probably result in the contention which has been ably urged on behalf of the assignee in this case, — that a demand which does not exist at the time when the assignment is made, in any acknowledged or liquidated form, and which depends upon a contingency which may never happen, and which, when it does happen," presents itself in the form of an unliquidated demand,— is not within the terms of the statute. We have been cited to two cases in other jurisdictions which uphold this view. In re Church, 14 Atl. Rep. [R. I.] 874; In re
Here is the case of a trading corporation which has made a general assignment of all its assets for the benefit of all its creditors. Such an assignment, made by such a corporation, is tantamount to a dissolution of the corporation itself, and in a proceeding against its stockholders to charge them in respect of their individual liability, it would be so held. As a corporation it has, by thus dispossessing itself of all its assets, disabled itself from going on and responding to those who may subsequently become its creditors. If then we turn from this picture and suppose that, instead of such a corporation inflicting slight damage upon leased property, it had literally wrecked the building and inflicted great damage, we should probably be moved by a sense of the very hardship of the case to the view that the legislature could not have intended to exclude such a claim, growing out of the breach of a contract made before the assignment, merely because of the bare possibility that it might not have accrued at all.
But we do not rest the case upon a consideration of any supposed hardship. We are of the opinion that the purpose of the legislature was that the assets of the assignor should be administered in the payment of any class of meritorious demands springing out of the breach of contracts, which contracts were made prior to the assignment, provided the demands (being of the nature of this one) accrued in time for adjustment and allowance without prejudice to the winding up of the estate.
The point is made that there is no evidence of the damages which the circuit court awarded. Without
The judgment of the circuit court is accordingly affirmed.