12 F. Cas. 317 | D. Mass. | 1873
Section 20 of the bankrupt act [of 18G7 (14 Stat. 526)), which requires creditors who hold security upon any property of the bankrupt to procure it to be sold or valued, and its proceeds or value to be deducted from the debt before proof is made against the assets in bankruptcy, extends, I think, to a case in which an indorser, surety, or guarantor holds such security from the bankrupt, though there be no legal privity between the surety and the creditor. In equity, the creditor can compel the surety to apply the property towards the payment of the debt for which it is held; and, if both principal and surety become bankrupt, the general creditors of neither can have the property, but it must go to the benefit of the particular creditor or creditors for whose benefit it was equitably pledged. The rule is the same, though the pledge or mortgage should be, in form, merely to indemnify the surety and not to pay the debt, because it is only by the payment that there can be indemnity; in other words, equity implies the trust, if it is not adequately expressed. I am aware that the supreme court of Massachusetts, in very briefly reasoned cases, have admitted such debts to proof: Meed v. Nelson, 9 Gray, 55; Provident Inst. v. Stetson, 12 Gray, 27; but I do not at present see how these decisions are to be reconciled with those in which the same court have so fully and learnedly upheld the equitable doctrine above referred to: Eastman v. Foster, 8 Metc. [Mass.] 19; Rice v. Dewey, 13 Gray, 47; New Bedford Sav. Inst. v. Fairhaven Bank, 9 Allen, 175. These cases decide, in effect, that the surety is a sort of trustee for the creditor; and in the last case it was held that the proof of the debt by the creditor, even through ignorance, discharged the security, if the rights or position of the other creditors had been in any way affected thereby. It is quite inconsistent with this doctrine to hold that the creditor can prove his debt as if he had no security, and that the guarantor or indorser can go on and convert the security for his indemnity, as if nothing had happened. The practical effect of such a rule would be, that, whenever the security is insufficient, the creditor will prove his whole debt, and take his dividend, and the surety holding the security' will then pay the remainder, and indemnify himself out of the property held for the purpose, and thus defeat the statute, which requires the property to be applied first, and the balance only to be proved. If the creditor has power in equity to force the surety to apply the security, there is no legal difficulty in requiring it to be applied before the debt is proved. See In re Jaycox [Case No. 7,242). If a trustee' holds security for a considerable body or class of creditors, it may not be in the power of any one or more of the creditors less than the whole number to govern the disposition of the property. In such a case, 1 have permitted proof to be made by any creditors who chose to disclaim in writing all interest in the security, and to notify the trustees to that effect
But another consideration affects the case in hand. The patent-rights which were assigned for the indemnity of the sureties were not the property of the firm of F. F. Hol-brook & Co., but of the senior partner only. The statute only requires the property to be renounced, sold, or valued, when it is the property of the bankrupt. If the goods or estate of any third person have been pledged for the bankrupt’s debt, equity does not require that the general creditors of the bankrupt should have the advantage of this security; on the contrary, the equity is that the estate of the volunteer should be exonerated. If he pays a debt of the bankrupt, he has a right to full proof against the estate; and the creditor has the same right. It is" the bankrupt’s debt; and whether the creditor have security by indorsements, or in any other way that has not diminished the general assets, he has a right to prove it. This has always been the rule in England, and it has been adopted by Judge Fox, in an able opinion, to which I am happy to be able to refer: In re Cram [Cas. No. 3,343). This rule applies to partnerships when the estate of one partner has been pledged or mortgaged for a debt of the firm, and for the same reason, that the full proof should be made against that estate which is the principal debtor: Story, Partn. § 389; Ex parte Parr, 1 Rose, 76; In re Plummer, 1 Phil. 56; Wilder v. Keeler, 3 Paige, 167; Besley v. Lawrence, 11 Paige, 581; Ex parte Peacock, 2 Glyn & J. 27.
The patents, being the property of Hol-brook, may be disregarded by the bank in proving their debt, in so far as it is a joint or firm debt, which is a disputed question in respect to the second note. The first note is signed in the firm name, and is admitted to be the joint and several promise of the firm, considered as one legal entity, and of the three sureties; and it was agreed that a suit might be maintained against the firm only, or the firm and the three sureties, or against each surety, but probably not against each member of the firm separately. The second note is signed by six individuals, of whom three are the three members of the firm of F. F. Holbrook & Co. This is the note of all six of the signers, or of any one of them, but not of any two. three, four, or five. At law, no suit could be maintained against the firm upon this instrument. This consideration is not conclusive of the question whether it can be proved against the joint estate in bankruptcy, because the bankrupt court acts upon equitable rules. But I am not aware that in equity this note would bind the firm jointly. A learned author, in treating of the bankruptcy of partners, says: “Separate debts are those for which the cred
My decision, therefore, is. that the first note is to be admitted as a debt against the joint estate for the amount of $5,160, and the second note in full against the separate estates of Thomas B. Everett and J. B. Small; but not against the separate estate of Holbrook, until the security has been valued or disposed of. Order accordingly.