80 Va. 668 | Va. | 1885
delivered the opinion of the court.
The facts necessai-y to be stated are as follows, viz: On the 27th of June, 1883, the plaintiffs, Waller & Jordan and others, filed their bill in the clerk’s office of the circuit court of Southampton, Virginia, alleging that William H. Jenkins, J. F. Cutchin, Joel H. Cutchin- and C. A. Cutchin, merchants and partners, trading as Jenkins & Cutchin, and doing business in the town of Franklin, Southampton county, Virginia, are justly indebted to the said complainants, Waller & Jordan, in the sum of $102, by an itemized account filed with the bill, and marked Exhibit No. 1; to Siekel, Hellen & Co. in the sum of $330.84, by an account filed with the bill and marked Exhibit No. 2; to Bruff, Maddox & Faulkner in the sum of $870.19, by an account filed with the bill and marked Exhibit No. 3; to J. Whitehill & Co. in the sum of $688.60, by an account filed with the hill and marked Exhibit No. 4; aggregating an indebtedness to the
The said complainants charge, that the said confessed judgments, writs of fieri facias, and levies made thereunder, are, each, illegal, and null and void as to complainants, because the supposed causes of action upon which the said suits are based, nor any part of either of them, arose in the city of Norfolk, but the same, and each and every part of the said supposed causes of action, arose in Southampton county, Virginia; and
That the said W. W. Briggs, sheriff of Southampton county, proposes to sell the said stock of general merchandise, in Franklin, at public auction, for cash, on July 2d, 1883; that the sale of so large a quantity of goods, for cash, in so small a place as Franklin, and without extensive advertisement, would be a great wrong to complainants, because of the sacrifice of their said property at prices much below its real vahie.
That the said Jenkins and Cutchin are insolvent and heavily indebted; and that the said confessions of judgment were made in pursuance of a collusive bargain between the said William II. Jenkins, J. F. Cutchin, Joel II. Cutchin, C. A. Cutchin and J. J. Cutchin, with intent on their part to hinder, delay and defraud the complainants and other creditors of J enkins & Cutchin; and that the said bargain, judgments and executions, are founded upon considerations not deemed valuable in law, and .are voluntary, fraudulent and void as to complainants.
The bill further charges, that the said Joel II. Cutchin and C. A. Cutchin, are partners of the said William TI. Jenkins and J. F. Cutchin, jointly interested in the profits of the business of Jenkins & Cutchin; that they participated in the said profits; furnished capital for the conduct of the saidfibxisiness; were in the habit of accepting drafts drawn upon them in the name of
The bill calls for the strictest legal proof of the amount and bona fide character of the alleged indebtedness to J. H. Cutchin & Co. and to J. J. Cutchin.
The bill charges the insolvency of the said Jenkins & Cutchin; and that the assets of the said firm consist of the said stock of general merchandise, and certain debts due to the firm, evidenced by their book accounts, notes, bonds, and other evidences of debt.
The bill makes William H. J enkins, J. F. Cutchin, Joel TI. Cutchin and C. A. Cutchin, merchants and partners, trading as Jenkins & Cutchin; the said Joel IT. Cutchin and C. A. Cut-chin, merchants and partners trading as J. IT. Cutchin & Co.; J. J. Cutchin, M. L. T. Davis and B. D. Thomas, merchants and partners trading as M. L. T. Davis & Co.; and W. W. Briggs, sheriff of Southampton county, parties defendant to the suit, and prays for an injunction tc^prohibit and restrain William H. Jenkins, J. F. Cutchin, Joel IT. Cutchin, C. A. Cutchin, J. J. Cutchin, M. L. T. Davis, B. D. Thomas and William H. Briggs, their agents and attorneys, and all other persons, from proceeding to sell, or in any other way disposing of the said stock of dry goods and geueral merchandise in the store recently occupied by Jenkins & Cutchin in the town of Franklin, Southampton county, Virginia, and from collecting any debts duo to the said firm, or disposing of any of the assets of the said firm by any ways or means whatsoever; and prays for the appoint
Upon this bill the judge of the circuit court of Southampton county awarded an injunction as prayed for, and on the 30th of June, 1883, appointed a receiver, and directed him to take into his possession the said stock of general merchandise and all other assets of Jenkins & Cutehin, and to sell the said stock at public or private sale, and authorized him to sell the same, as a whole, privately, for seventy-five per cent, of the cost value thereof. The receiver at once gave the required bond, with security, for $25,000, took possession of the property, and proceeded to sell the same according to the terms and authority of the said decree of June 30, 1883.
On the 17th day of July the cause was. heard by the judge on the motion of the defendants to dissolve the injunction, upon the bill and answers and exhibits and affidavits filed, and general replication to the answers, and was argued by counsel, whereupon the following order was made, viz: “On consideration whereof, the court being of opinion that the cause should be further proceeded with, and without deciding any of the principles, doth overrule the said motion, and continue the said injunction; and all other directions are reserved.”
On the 21st day of July, 1883, an appeal was allowed and a supersedeas awarded by this court to the foregoing order of the circuit judge of Southampton county, with directions, that, the execution of an appeal bond in the of $5,000,
The case of Howell & Co. and others v. Whitehill & Co. and others, is exactly similar in all respects, and was argued and submitted along with this ease above stated to be decided as one case.
The bills filed in these causes were Jiot pure bills of injunction; they are creditors’ bills, seeking to recover debts, and to prevent the insolvent debtor, mercantile firms, from squandering their assets. They charge that the firms of Jenkins & Cutehin, and Howell & Co., were colluding and conspiring with the creditors, in whose favor they had confessed large judgments, to sacrifice their assets, by a forced cash sale, to the detriment and damage of their other creditors. The bills show, on their faces, ample ground for the interlocutory injunctions, and their allegations were sustained by affidavits. The acts of confessing judgments, and placing their assets in the hands of the sheriff for sale, were such acts of insolvency by the debtor firms as entitled their unpreferred creditors to have the aid and intervention of a court of equity to prevent a sacrifice of the property, and to procure a due administration of the fund; and in the cases at bar, it cannot be held that the injunctions were improvidently awarded. The question, and the only question, presented for this court to decide, at this stage of the case, and until the’ lower court shall have decided.and adjudicated some principle in the cause, is, was the action of the circuit court, or judge in vacation, in overruling the motion to dissolve and continuing the injunction till the hearing, erroneous? The orders entered in these causes, expressly and in terms, declare that the judge was of opinion that the cause should be further proceeded with, andj without deciding any of the principles, and reserv
The injunction bonds were sufficient in penalty, and conditioned according to law. These creditors were getting no indulgence, they did not ask and could not obtain possession of the property levied on. They merely asked the court of equity to intervene and prevent a sacrifice of the assets of their insolvent debtors, and to hold it until their conflicting claims could
It rests in the sound discretion of the court to dissolve an interlocutory injunction upon the coming in of the answer denying the equities of the bill, or to continue it to a final hearing on the merits, if such course shall seem best calculated to sub-serve the ends of justice, and to protect the rights of all parties in interest. (High on Injunctions, sections 878-881-2-3.)
“It is to be constantly borne in mind, that the dissolution, like the granting of interlocutory injunctions, is largely a matter of judicial discretion, to be determined by the nature of the particular case under consideration. A dissolution, therefore, does not follow' necessarily, and of course, upon the coming in of the answer denying the material allegations of the bill upon which the injunction issued, and the court may, in the exercise of a sound discretion, refuse a dissolution and continue the injunction to the hearing, vdiere the circumstances of the case seem to demand this course. Especially will this course be exercised where fraud is the gravamen of the bill, or whore it is apparent to the court that a dissolution of the injunction would
“So where the case, as presented by the bill, is one which seems to require investigation, and the effect of dissolving the injunction would be to place the property which is the subject of controversy beyond the control of the court in which the action is pending, and would be equivalent to a complete denial of the relief sought by the bill, the injunction will not be dissolved.” High on Inj., sec. 900. (Nelson v. Armstrong, 5 Grat. 354; Beale v. Diggs, 6 Grat. 591.)
The court was justified in appointing a receiver to convert the assets into money, because the property was expensive to keep and to guard, and was liable to many contingencies of depreciation, ruin and loss; and because it was evident, from the numerous petitions filed by the general creditors, that the mercantile firms wore insolvent, making it proper and necessary for a court of equity to administer the assets and to distribute them with regard to the interests of all parties. These causes must be remanded to the circuit courts of Southampton and Isle of "Wight counties, respectively, to be further proceeded in; and the appeal and supersedeas in each case be dismissed and vacated as having been improvidently awarded.
An order will be made requiring the appellants to deposit the funds arising from the sale of the property in some solvent bank, to the credit of these causes, to await the determination of the issues involved in the merits.
DECREE AEEIRMED.