11 Misc. 610 | New York County Courts | 1895
The petitioner, an insolvent debtor, seeks to be discharged from his debts under the provisions of article 1, title 1 óf chapter 7 of the Code of Civil Procedure, sections 2149 to 2187 inclusive, commonly known as the Two-thirds Act.
The discharge is opposed by creditors whose claims aggregate $138,427.31, upon the grounds, among others:
First. That the insolvent, at the time of presenting his petition, was not a resident of the county of Dlster.
Second. That he did not, at the time of filing his petition, present consents executed by creditors as required by the act.
Third. That he has been guilty of such misconduct relative to matters involved as should bar his discharge.
Fourth. That the petition and the proceedings are not. in , accord with the provisions of the statute, in that they are faulty both in substance and in form.
In support of this last contention, so many objections have been urged that their mere enumeration would occupy almost as much space as is ordinarily devoted to an opinion, and while it must be conceded that in some respects the proceedings upon the part of the petitioner are slightly original and inartificial, the view taken of the merits of the application makes it unnecessary to discuss them at length.
It appears from the evidence, which is voluminous if not exhaustive, that the petitioner, in the year 1884, was the president of the Bankers & Merchants’ Telegraph Company, a corporation having its principal place of business in the city of Rew York.
That he was also interested in so-called financial operations in Wall street, and was largely indebted to various banks, bankers, brokers and trust companies. That on the fifteenth day of May of that year lie failed and executed a general assignment for the benefit of his creditors, his indebtedness at that time being stated at $2,633,895.37, and his assets of the nominal value of $3,848,932.06. This assignment was subsequently adjudged to be void, and was set aside in an action brought for that purpose, it appearing that the result, if not
The statute provides that the application for the discharge of an insolvent debtor must be addressed to the County Court of the county in which the insolvent resides. Code Civ. Proc. § 2150. That the insolvent must annex to liis petition written instruments executed by his creditors residing within the United States having debts owing them in good faith, then or thereafter to become due, which amount to not less than twol thirds of all the debts owing by him. to creditors residing within the United States (Id.. § 2152), and that the court shall grant the discharge when it satisfactorily appears, among the other things required by the statute, that the petitioner is justly and truly indebted to the consenting creditors in sums which amount in the aggregate to two-thirds of all his debts as hereinbefore specified. Id. § 2174.
It would seem, therefore, as conditions' precedent to the petitioner’s discharge that he must affirmatively establish:
First. That at the time of presenting his petition he was a resident of the county of Ulster.
Second. That creditors having debts owing them in good faith amounting to not less than two-thirds of ail the debts owing by him to creditors in this country shall, at the time of the filing of the petition, consent to his discharge.
Third. That he is justly and truly indebted to the' consenting creditors in a sum which amounts in the aggregate to two-thirds of all his debts.
It is claimed by the insolvent that his debts now amount to $2,442,073.84; that creditors whose claims aggregate $2,303,646.53 consent to his discharge, and that he has assets to the amount of $187.62 applicable ■ to the payment of this indebtedness.
The nonconsenting creditors, upon the other hand, claim that the true amount of the insolvent’s indebtedness exceeds three millions of dollars, and that the consenting creditors' do
As to the first point, it is well settled that in all cases where a statute prescribes residence as a qualification for the enjoyment of a privilege, or the exercise of a franchise, the word residence is equivalent to the place of domicile of the person who claims its benefit. People v. Platt, 117 N. Y. 167; Silvey v. Lindsay, 107 id. 55, 61; Jacobs Domicile, §§ 72, 75, 86, 92, 114, 125, 136, 181, 310, 393, 396 435; De Bonneval v. De Bonneval, 1 Curt. 856, 864; Jopp v. Wood, 2 De G., J. & S. 323; Hannon v. Grizzard, 39 N. C. 115, 120; State v. Aldrich, 14 R. I. 171; Roberts v. Cannon, 4 Dev. & B. 256, 269.
Domicile is succinctly and accurately defined by a scholarly writer as follows:
“ In a legal sense, that is properly the domicile of a person where he has his true, fixed, permanent home and principal establishment, and to which, whenever he is absent, he has the intention of returning.” Story Confl. L., chap. 3, p. 51, ed. of 1846. See, also, Burr. L. Diet.; 5 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 857; Standard, Worcester, Webster and Stormonth’s Dictionaries.
Whatever be the doctrines of the civil law, it has uniformly been held to be the rule of the common law that that place is a man’s domicile which is his home; that it will be presumed so to continue until a new one is acquired; that it is in no way affected by a temporary residence elsewhere, and that to effect a change there must not only be a change of residence, but an intention to abandon the former domicile, accompanied by an' actual abandonment, with the intention not to return, and the taking up of a residence in another place, with the intention of staying there permanently.
Dupuy v. Wurtz, 53 N. Y. 556 ; Frost v. Brisbin, 19 Wend. 11; Von Hoffman v. Ward, 4 Redf: 244; Bartlett v. New York, 5 Sandf. 44; Graham v. Public Administrator, 4 Bradf. 127; De Meli v. De Meli, 67 How. 20, apparently settle the rule in this state, which, however, is not
Did, then, within this rule, the petitioner have a legal residence in the county of Ulster at the time of filing his petition in this court on the 7th day of August, 1893 ?
It appears from the evidence that at that time and for some years he had been a member of the Peekamose Fishing Club, an organization then composed of four, members, owning many acres of mountain land, and having an extensive fishing preserve on the head waters of the Rondout at the foot of the Peekamose mountain in a wild and unfrequented part of the Catsldll mountains, but within the territorial limits of the town of Denning in this county. Its purpose is the protection* increase and capture of brook trout, and the promotion of social intercourse and rational amusement among its members. There is upon the grounds a club house* divided into nine bedrooms', a dining room and a kitchen, having a frontage of thirty-eight and a depth of twenty-five feet, with two. small extensions in the rear.' It is constructed in part of lumber, in part logs, and is principally used during the summer months. The constitution and by-laws of the club provide that a room in the club house shall be assigned to each member, and that the privilege of the club house may be extended to the families of members.
The petitioner’s family consists of his wife, her mother, a daughter, a son and himself. The other members of the club with their families visit the club house from time to time and are assigned rooms as provided J^y the by-laws. All the members when at the club house have their foocl cooked in common and eat together in the club dining room, being waited upon by such servants as the member’s take with them to the .moun-. tains, there being no club house servants.
The club house is some distance removed from any of the mountain settlements, in fact from anv human habitation.
. The petitioner and his family for some years have spent the summer, and occasionally the late spring and early autumn, at this place with such other members of the club and their families as went there. The residue of the year has been passed at Elizabeth in the state of Hew Jersey, where they occupy a house the title to which is vested in the petitioner’s wife.
This house is about forty feet in front, is two stories in height, with the ordinary mansard roof, and has the usual rooms of a city dwelling of that class. It is occupied solely by the petitioner, his family and their servants, and is fully furnished with the furniture owned by the petitioner during the years of affluence which preceded his failure. For some years prior to living in this house the petitioner and his family occupied another dwelling at Elizabeth, of much the same character, the value of which can to some extent be estimated from the fact that the Equitable Life Assurance Society of Hew Fork loaned $20,000 upon it. The relatives of the petitioner and of his wife live at Elizabeth, and his wife and children are connected with a church and Sunday school, and some of the social organizations of that city. It is to Elizabeth they have always annually returned when the approach of winter deprives the atmosphere of the Catskills of that balsamic softness for which the region is noted.
As the petitioner swore in support of this application .that he had been a resident of Ulster county for the last fifteen years, it is claimed by .the learned counsel who represent him that the court is precluded by that testimony from finding otherwise. This edntention can, however, hardly be said to be
In the general assignment executed- by him in 1884 he states that he is a resident of the city of FTew York. In the action brought to set aside that assignment, it was by his ¡procurement alleged and adjudged that in December, 1885, he was a resident of that city. In a deed executed by him at Elizabeth in October, 1892, to Josiah W.' Wentworth, one of his fellow-members in the Peekamose Fishing Club, and conveying an interest in lands in Ulster county, he describes himself as being a resident of Elizabeth; in a deed executed by his procurement in February, 1893, to his wife, she is described as residing at Elizabeth. During the last ten years, when away from home and registering at hotels, he has registered his residence as at Elizabeth; never at Peekamose. In the testimony given by him in an action brought by. one of the contesting creditors, he testified that for the last ten years he has resided in the cities of Hew York and Elizabeth.. And he testifies that, in event of this application being granted, it is his intention Once more to engage , in business in Wall street in the city of Hew York, which is but a few miles distant from Elizabeth.
Under all these undisputed facts, it would hardly seem that even -within the most elastic construction which the court is justified in giving to the terms “residence” and “domicile”
It is quite true that the Two-thirds Act is a remedial statute intended to accomplish a beneficent result, and should, therefore, -be liberally construed. Also, it is true that much power and discretion is vested in the court to which this application is addressed. But all discretion vested in courts and judges is judicial and not arbitrary, and it is an abuse, not an exercise of judicial discretion, to permit the provisions of even a remedial statute to be enlarged to such an extent as to bring within its terms a class of cases expressly excluded by the legislature. Such a construction in the end produces results more harmful in their effect than the fancied wrong it improperly seeks to remedy.
This conclusion renders an extended discussion of the remaining questions involved unnecessary, although it may not be amiss briefly to say that the evidence falls far short of satisfying me that the petitioner has either produced the consents of creditors required by the statute, or that he is justly and truly indebted to the creditors who have consented to the amount he and they claim.
Upon the contrary, I am at a loss to understand upon what view of the law an indebtedness to John B. Tale, one of such creditors, to the amount of $331,815.62, can justly and truly be said to exist, in view of Mr. Tale’s own testimony as to the facts out of which it is claimed to have arisen.
The claim of John R. Hageman, another consenting creditor to the amount of $171,212.78, does not appear upon the schedule of the insolvent’s creditors, filed with his general assignment in 1884, and the debt now claimed to be due is also claimed to have matured before that time. While this omission could not of course prejudice the creditor, who was not consulted regarding the preparation of those schedules, and whose testimony on this proceeding was, I think, frankly and fairly given, yet its omission at that time is some evidence as to the view then taken by the insolvent of the transactions out of which it is now claimed the indebtedness arose. It
It is urged that of those claims upwards of $777,000 have-been absolutely, and upwards of $247,000 conditionally released, but it is doubtful whether the authority to make the release executed by Russell Sage, the Third Rational Bank of' the city of Hew York, and Hague & Harris, for claims aggregating about $120,000, is sufficiently proven for the purpose of this application. And it is by no means clear that the claim of the Quebec Bank for $4.8,817 is not within the statute.
In fact, the marshaling of the alleged claims of the consenting creditors, the reasons assigned for the failure to include claims admitted once to exist and never paid, the insistence that the Statute of Limitations bars the consideration of claims of creditors, to the amount of hundreds of thousands of dollars, who have not been afforded an opportunity to be heard in their own behalf, and an equally strenuous insistence that claims of friendly creditors standing upon precisely the same legal footing are not barred by that statute, is an attitude hardly calculated to produce an unduly favorable impression Upon the mind of the court.
It is unnecessary to discuss the allegation of collusion and fraudulent intent, to which much attention has been devoted by counsel upon both sides, -as upon the whole case I am of the opinion that the decree prayed for should be refused, and an order may be entered denying the application and dismiss- ■ ing the proceeding upon the merits, with costs to the opposing creditors and against the petitioner.
Ordered accordingly.