16 F. Cas. 660 | D. La. | 1872
On the twenty-third day of March, eighteen hundred and sixty-five, a suit entitled “U. S. v. The Rob Roy” [Case No. 16,179,] was instituted in the then United States district court for the Eastern district of Louisiana, wherein it was sought to forfeit said steamboat and cargo of one thousand one hundred and forty bales of cotton as enemies’ property, because said property had been sought for, obtained, and brought on board said steamboat from within territory held in occupation by armed enemies of the United States, “declared to be in a state of insurrection.” The boat and cargo were seized, and subsequently released on bond to one A. S. Mansfield, the claimant thereof. The cause was tried in this court, and a decision rendered therein adverse to the United States. Additional evidence having been produced in the eir-
On the twenty-seventh day of May, eighteen hundred and seventy, the judgment of the district court was reversed, the lihel sustained, and the Rob Roy and cargo condemned as forfeited to the United States. This judgment fixed the liability of Mansfield under the release bond. On the eighth day of June, eighteen hundred and seventy, the circuit court overruled Mansfield’s plea in bar, and gave judgment against him upon the release bond for the sum of two hundred and four thousand nine hundred and eighty-two dollars and twenty-nine cents, with five per cent, interest thereon from the twenty-fourth of March, eighteen hundred and sixty-five, till paid, and cost of suit. On the twentyrfirst day of April, eighteen hundred and seventy-one, George S. Bout-well, secretary of the treasury of the United States, for and in consideration of the sum of twenty thousand dollars paid into the treasury of the United States, transferred this second judgment in favor of the United States to Stewart Q. Cochrane, who, by motion, entered and filed in the circuit court, on the twenty-seventh day of May, eighteen hundred and seventy-one, caused himself to be subrogated to all the right, title, and interest of the United States in and to said judgment. On the same twenty-seventh of May, eighteen hundred and seventy-one. Cochrane filed a petition in this court in the matter of Asahiel S. Mansfield, a bankrupt, to set aside Mansfield’s discharge.
It is not necessary to enumerate the many allegations made and contained in said petition, nor to notice the exceptions taken and answers filed by Mansfield in avoidance of and responsive thereto, except as to the one question: Was the debt set forth in the petition of S. Q. Cochrane provable in the bankruptcy of A. S. Mansfield? Section thirty-four of the bankrupt act provides, “that any creditor or creditors of said bankrupt, whose debt was proved or provable against the estate in bankruptcy, who shall see fit to contest the validity of said discharge on the ground that it was' fraudulently obtained, may, at any time within two years after the date thereof, apply to the court which granted it to set aside and annul the same.” Under this section Cochrane’s petition was filed. Section nineteen provides, “that all debts due and payable from the bankrupt at the time of the adjudication of bankruptcy, and all debts then existing, but not payable until a future day, a rebate of interest being made, where no interest is payable by the terms of the contract, may be proved against the estate of the bankrupt.”
Mansfield was adjudicated a bankrupt on the ninth day of June, eighteen hundred and sixty-eight. A decree was entered granting him his discharge on the thirtieth of June, eighteen hundred and sixty-nine. During all this time, the suit of “the United States against the Rob Roy and her cargo,” was pending in the circuit court. It is to be remembered that judgment was rendered in the district court against the United States and in favor of Mansfield, the claimant restoring to him the property libelled, and that said judgment was reversed in the appellate court, on the production of evidence not produced in the lower court. Certainly, during the pendency of the appeal in the circuit court, and until the Rob Roy and cargo were adjudged forfeited to the United States, on the twenty-seventh day of May, eighteen hundred and seventy, there was no semblance of any indebtedness due from Mansfield to the United States, which could have been proved against Mansfield’s estate, on the ninth day of June, eighteen hundred and sixty-eight, the day on which he was adjudicated a bankrupt. Further, the judgment rendered on the twenty-seventh day of May, eighteen hundred and seventy, was not a personal judgment against Mansfield, condemning him to pay any certain sum of money, but a judgment against the Rob Roy and cargo, as forfeited to the United States. In order to obtain a judgment against Mansfield, further proceedings were to be had; and, accordingly, the conditions of the release bond not being complied with, further proceedings were taken upon the bond, which proceedings ripened into a judgment rendered against Mansfield and his sureties in favor of the United States, on the eighth day of June, eighteen hundred and seventy, for two hundred and four thousand nine hundred and eighty-two dollars and twenty cents. It is this judgment which the peti
Mansfield filed in the circuit court, on the eight of May, eighteen hundred and seventy, a plea in bar founded upon his certificate of discharge. The court, for reasons orally given, overruled the same. Certainly the plea was not a good one if it was intended to bar the right of the United States, under the clause eited from the nineteenth section of the statute, to fix Mansfield’s liability upon the release bond given by him March twenty-fourth, eighteen hundred and sixty-five. Neither was the plea in bar a good plea in bar of a judgment sought to be obtained upon the bond, where the creditor elects not to proceed under the clause cited from the nineteenth section of the statute, but to enforce his claim against the bankrupt personally as a debt due upon a liability, which has become fixed long after the bankrupt’s surrender and adjudication thereon. The United States elected to pursue the latter course. Let us now see what are the legal consequences of such election:
“When a creditor obtains from his debtor a security of a higher nature than he had before, the original debt is merged in the higher security, and can no longer be made the foundation of any action or suit, or of proof in bankruptcy or insolvency.” Liudl. Partn. 368; 10 C. B. 561; Wells & Leovy, 3 McM. & G. 378.
This doctrine has been repeatedly held in Louisiana. In Oakey v. Murphy, 1 La. Ann. 372, the court said: “In this case, which is an action by the holder of a promissory note against the maker, the plaintiff filed a supplemental petition, in which he alleged that a judgment had been rendered in his favor, at the time of the institution of his suit, on the note sued on in the circuit court of the United States for the Southern district of Mississippi. On a judgment by default being taken, it was confirmed on the evidence of this judgment rendered in Mississippi. So far from this judgment proving the right of the party to recover on the note, it establishes the reverse, inasmuch as it is a merger of the note. The plaintiff has lost his right of action on the note, and he has no right to amend his petition by an allegation which extinguishes it.” The court refers to 9 La. Ann. 419; 2 Mart (N. S.) 599; and 3 Bl. Comm. 398. See, also, 7 La. Ann. 334; 12 La. Ann. 738.
In Re Williams [Case No. 17,705], the learned judge for the district of Connecticut held, “that a debt, upon which a judgment of law is founded, is merged in the judgment and extinguished by it,” citing 27 Me. 441; 32 Me. 418: 2 Cush. 173; 2 Denio, 17, 72; and 11 Cush. 25; 17 Conn. 580. The authorities cited sustain the learned judge in the conclusion to which he arrives. See, also, 6 Hill, 255, where the court says: “The defendant has been discharged, under the bankrupt law, from all debts which he owed at the time he presented his petition. Subsequent to that time the cognovit was given, and the judgment recovered. The original debt has been merged and extinguished by the judgment. The judgment is a new debt, which is not affected by the discharge.” Bacon says: “If a bond creditor obtains a judgment on the bond, or has judgment acknowledged to him, he cannot afterward bring an action on the bond, for the debt is drowned in the judgment, which is a security of higher nature than the bond.” Extinguishment (D), citing 6 Coke, 40. The authority cited is Higgins’ Case, wherein Lord Coke says: “It was objected that if a man recovers debt on a bond, or rent on a lease for years, it is at the plaintiff’s election to sue execution on that judgment, or to have a new action.” But it was resolved “that so long as the judgment remains in force he cannot have a new action on the same bond, for, as he who has a debt by simple contract, and takes a bond for the same, or any part of it, the contract is determined, so when a man has a debt on a bond, and by ordinary course of law has judgment thereon, the contract, by specialty, which is of an inferior nature, is by judgment of law changed into a matter of record, which is of a higher nature.” The latest authority of the highest court of our country is to be found in 6 Wall. [73 U. S.] 234, in the case of Mason v. Eldred. Field, J., the organ of the court, there says: “If the note in suit was merged in the judgment, then
But however great may be my respect for my Brothers of the Eastern and Western districts of Michigan and of .the Southern district of New York, I cannot readily yield a doctrine which is supported by a long line of decisions, commencing with the year books cited by Lord Coke, and coming down to this day. When, therefore, on the eight day of June, eighteen hundred and seventy, the United States elected to take judgment upon the bond, they parted with all right to prove the bond as a debt due and payable from the bankrupt at the time of the adjudication of bankruptcy, and as a debt to be proved against the estate of the bankrupt. Coch-rane, the petitioner, and assignee of the judgment, cannot be held to be conditioned otherwise than was his assignor with regard to the same. It is res judicata that his debt is not affected by the discharge. It has been pleaded, and the decision made in his favor. This judgment is subsisting and -operative. What title, then, has he to impeach an act •of the court in which he was no wise concerned, and by which he is in no manner injured. The exception must be sustained and the petition dismissed.