187 Pa. 151 | Pa. | 1898
Opinion by
On December 20, 1895, L. H. Taylor & Company, brokers, by writing under seal, assigned to Arthur B. Huey certain book balances and equitable demands payable to the partnership, in trust, to divide the amount pro rata among certain specified creditors, whose names appeared on a list attached to the assignment. This assignment was not recorded. The next day, the same partnership made a general assignment for the benefit of its creditors, to George G. Pierie and Harrison C. Seeler, which assignment was duly recorded the day following. The assignee under the unrecorded assignment collected a sum exceeding $30,000, which was claimed by the assignees for the general creditors. Of this amount $9,442.21 was asserted to belong to Prince, one of the assignees under the unrecorded assignment, individually, not only by virtue of the assignment, but because he had obtained a judgment for that amount against L. H. Taylor & Company, more than a year after the assignment, on which judgment an attachment was issued and levied on the funds collected under the unrecorded assignment. The balance of the $30,000 was held for the other creditors named in the list appended to the writing, which was also attached by Harry E. Keller, trustee, under a judgment confessed to him as trustee, for them more than a year after both assignments.
This .bill was filed for the purpose of determining the right of the assignees for general creditors to the fund. There was no dispute as to the facts, and the cause was argued in the court below on bill and answer. The fund was awarded, first, to the judgment of Abraham C. Prince, and the balance to the judgment of Harry E. Keller, trustee. From that decree the assignees for the general creditors bring this appeal, assigning for error the decree.
The question is, what is the legal result of the failure to record the first assignment of a particular part of the estate for the benefit of particular creditors ? The learned judge of the court below, following Seal v. Duffy, 4 Pa. 274, and Weber v. Samuel, 7 Pa. 499, held, that the fund passing by the unrecorded assignment was subject to levy on attachments issued on judgments obtained after the recorded general assignment. The decision is clearly right, if those cases ought to rule the question. There has been no decision by this Court since they
The first case between contending creditors which called for a constructioü of the statute, was Seal v. Duffy, supra. It is badly reported, the facts not being fully or clearly stated. It would seem, however, that Duffy, on a judgment against Taylor & Company, issued an execution and levied on the property of defendants. On the same day that the execution was issued, June 18, Taylor & Co. made a general assignment in trust for creditors generally, which was not recorded; two days after, on June 20, they assigned all their property to Seal for the benefit •of all releasing creditors. Other creditors, with notice of the assignment to Seal, then issued executions and levied on the property seized on Duffy’s execution, subject to his levy. The ■sheriff sold the property and paid the money into court; feigned issues were awarded to determine the rights of the claimants. Duffy’s judgment was found by the jury to be fraudulent, which •eliminated him from the contention; it was further found as a fact that Taylor, the assignee under the first deed, although he had not recorded it, had accepted the trust. The court decided that the neglect to record the deed could only be taken advantage of by the execution creditors who levied on the property subject to Duffy’s execution; that Seal, the second assignee, could not, as against them, take the fund. Seal appealed to this Court, and it was decided that the legal effect of the unrecorded assignment to Taylor was to vest in him, the moment the deed was delivered, title in all the property intended to be conveyed, and thereby created him a trustee for the credit
This case was heard before four of tbe five justices then constituting tbe court, Gibson, C. J., Rogers, Coulter and Bell; Burnside was absent. Tn less tlian two years thereafter the ease of Weber v. Samuel, 7 Pa. 499, came up for trial before Rogers, J., at nisi prius, one of tbe justices who sat in Seal v. Duffy. The main contention was as to tbe effect of an unrecorded assignment as to general creditors, and this was his instruction to the jury: “Was, then, the deed (the unrecorded one) of March 22, 1837, void? This is a question of law, and I instruct you that it is void, because it was not recorded in pursuance of tbe act of March 24, 1818. . . . That tliis case falls within tbe letter of tbe act cannot be doubted, for it applies to voluntary assignments such as this, and makes it tbe duty of tbe assignee to have it recorded in the county where tbe assignor resides.” On appeal, tbe majority of tlie Court reversed tins ruling, mainly on the authority of Seal v. Duffy, supra; Gibson and Rogers dissenting, and concurring with tbe construction of the act in Justice Rogers’s charge. While they do not expressly so state, the only inference is, that in less than two years after Seal v. Duffy was decided, two of the four justices who concurred in the decision bad changed tlieir minds.
It appears to us that the decision was not free from doubt in the minds of all the eminent justices who pronounced it. Even where ádhered to since, its soundness has been most ably questioned by the ’ profession, and more than one judicial decision was in the teeth of it, although not expressly overruling it. There is no reason why we should give a strained construction to the act of 1818 in favor of execution creditors. The assignors, here, first sought to prefer certain creditors by the assignment ; this, doubtless, they discovered would, under the act of 1843, inure to the benefit of all the. creditors; then, impliedly treating the assignment, themselves, as void, long after it was made, after the general assignees had filed their first account
But, aside from this, we think the decree of the court below ought not to stand. On the subject of assignments by insolvent debtors, dating from the decision in Seal v. Duffy, the judicial and legislative mind seems to have been somewhat antagonistic. The resolution of January 21, 1843, the acts of April 17, of same year, of April 16, 1849, of April 22, 1854, and of February 17, 1876, all seem to have been intended to overrule or modify judicial decisions. But the act of 1843 is the one which touches directly the case before us. It declares that: “ All assignments of property in trust, which shall hereafter be made by debtors, to trustees, on account of inability at the time of the assignment to pay their debts, shall be held and construed to inure to the benefit of all the creditors, in proportion to their respective demands.” This was followed by the decision in Blakey’s Appeal, 7 Pa. 449, that the act did not prevent the debtor preferring creditors by judgment before the assignment, and in Lea’s Appeal, 9 Pa. 504, that it did not prevent him from inserting a stipulation in the deed for a release from the creditors to be benefited. The latter case prompted the act of 1849, which declared, that such stipulation should be
While the act of 1848 was in force when Seal v. Duffy and Weber v. Samuel were decided, it was not referred to by either court or counsel. In Weber v. Samuel the facts all arose before the passage of that act, in Seal v. Duffy, afterwards. Whether the assignment, which is not printed, by its terms, did not. bring it under the act of 1843, or whether its application was. not noticed, we cannot tell; we can say that it had no effect on the decisions. But assuming that the court correctly decided that, under the act of 1818 the first and unrecorded assignment, was voidable only at the suit of an execution creditor, how it would have decided had the act of 1843 been invoked by the assignee of the general creditors whose deed was recorded, is not decided. That is now the ease before us. The assignment to Huey is on its face a preference; it says: “ The intent and purpose being, that having respect to the superior claims of these depositors everything realized from the said accounts is to belong to and be divided among them.” This preference assignment, it will be noticed, is dated December 20, 1895 ; the general assignment is dated the day after; the attachments were not issued until sixteen months thereafter. In whom was the title to the property by the very fact of preference ? The act of 1843 says such preference shall, inure to the benefit of all the creditors. It seems to us, the moment the general assignee qualified he had the right to demand and receive this property assigned to promote a preference; no judgment long subsequent, nor any attachment upon it, could affect the right of the general creditors, for in the eye of the law it belonged as completely to. the general assignee as any other chose in action, for he was the. representative of all the creditors, and was bound to protect their rights: Irwin v Keen, 3 Wharton, 347. To hold otherwise the very object of the statute might be defeated. For illustration, a debtor discovers his inability to pay his debts; suppose, as argued by appellee, he can withdraw from his general creditors by a preference assignment, specific property for' the benefit of favored creditors, and although the assignment, is not recorded, it is only voidable on attack by an execution.
Costs pf tbis appeal to be paid out of the fund.