12 F. Cas. 924 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1866
The right of foreign assignees in bankruptcy to maintain suits in the courts of this country,, and the extent of that right, if any exists, have been repeatedly and elaborately discussed, both by elementary writers and in judicial opinions. Great diversities of views have been expressed, and different results reached in different cases.- Ño advantage would be gained by a rehearsal of these-discussions here. In nearly all of the cases where the rights of the foreign assignees have been contested, there has been a conflict between their alleged rights and the claims of other parties, citizens or residents-of our own country, • or aliens, pursuing remedies in our own courts, against the assets of the bankrupt. But, in the language of Mr. Justice Story, in his Conflict of Laws (section 420): “In most of these cases in which assignments under foreign bankrupt laws have been denied to give a title against attaching creditors, it has been distinctly admitted, that assignees might maintain suit» in our courts under such assignments, for the property of the bankrupt This is avowed, in the most unequivocal manner, in the leading cases in Pennsylvania and New York, already cited, and it is silently admitted in those of Massachusetts.” This statement of the law is cited and concurred in by Buggies, C. J., in Hoyt v. Thompson, 1 Seld. [5 N. Y.] 320, 19 N. Y. 207, decided by the New York court of appeals, in 1851;
and Paige, J., in an opinion delivered in the same case, remarks: “‘Where neither the rights of domestic creditors, or of foreign creditors proceeding against the property under our laws, are involved, the foreign as-signee may be permitted to sue in our courts, for the benefit of all the creditors, on principles of national comity, without a surrender of the principle, that a foreign statutory assignment does not operate a transfer of property in this state.” The result of the cases was accurately stated by Mr. Justice Story, and citations might be multiplied from judicial opinions which, while they deny the right of the foreign assignee where it conflicts with the claims of creditors seeking the aid of our own courts, almost invariably concede his capacity to sue as the representative of the bankrupt, to the same -extent as the latter could have sued if no bankruptcy had taken place. This, as already shown, was evidently the judgment of the New York court of appeals when the case of Hoyt v. Thompson was decided.
The only doubt which has been raised as to the correctness of this view of the law, so far as I know, has originated from the remarks of the judges in the cases of Mosselman v. Caen, 34 Barb. 66, and Willitts v. Waite, 25 N. Y. 577. But the former case was disposed of on another ground. The latter followed Hoyt v. Thompson, and, as an authority, goes no farther than that case. See Judge Allen’s opinion, page 5S7. It is true, that the same judge (page 586), after stating that, “the rule as settled in this state