King v. Kirby

28 Barb. 49 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1858

By the Court, Hogeboom, J.

Prior to the act of 1831, imprisonment was one of the remedies authorized by law to enforce the collection of debts. By that law this remedy was abolished, except in certain cases. The excepted cases were in general where there was an intended fraudulent removal, or a fraudulent concealment, or a fraudulent assignment or disposition of property; or a fraudulent refusal to apply it to the payment of a debt; or a fraudulent contracting of the debt or incurring of the obligation respecting which the suit was brought. It cannot be denied that the plaintiff’s debt, as to the subject matter thereof, originally came within one or more of these exceptions, and the only question is whether it lost that character by being assigned to the present owner. I am clearly of opinion that it did not. The remedies provided by the law of 1831 were, I think, intended to aid the enforcement of the claim, in whose hands soever it was. Before the passage of the non-imprisonment act, the owner of the demand, whether the original creditor or his assignee, could imprison the debtor. That act limited the remedy to particular cases, mostly those ■ tainted by fraud. And it made no distinction, any where, in regard to the person who owned the demand. Ho doubt it must be a demand of the description specified in the act, and if by assignment it can be shown to have lost its distinctive character, the remedies under that act are inapplicable. For example, the law authorized imprisonment in actions upon contract for moneys received in a fiduciary capacity. This was a peculiar relation,, implying personal trust and confidence. It attached to the debt a kind of sacredness or solemnity of obligation which did not belong to debts of an ordinary character. If the nature of the debt or of the relation was changed by the consent of the parties, then the remedy was changed also. If the creditor and the debtor, standing in such relation to each other, had a general statement or settlement of accounts, and a general balance was struck for which the debtor gave his note or his bond, or his paper secured by a third person, I think then it would be placed upon the footing of an *52ordinary debt—the relation of the. parties would be materially changed, and the right of imprisonment gone. A suit brought upon such a demand would not, in a proper sense, be an action upon contract for moneys received in a fiduciary capacity. It would embrace demands for which imprisonment was not allowed; the plaintiff would rely for his recovery upon the account stated, or on the new security guarantied by a third person. The cause of action would be materially different from what it originally was.

But I am not able to see that any such consequence legitimately follows from the mere assignment of a demand, otherwise within the protection of the act of 1831. The debt retains its original character. It has around it still all those fraudulent attributes, as regards the debtor, which it originally possessed. It is not blended with any other claim. The parties have not in any way agreed to place it on a different footing. It is precisely in its original position, except that through the act of the original creditor it now belongs to a third person. I do not think this should affect the remedy. I cannot think the legislature ever contemplated any such result. Before the act the remedy would have existed in favor of the assignee, and the act itself makes no limitation of the remedy to the original creditor. It has been the practice, I think, to construe the benefit of the provisions as attaching as well to the substituted as the original creditor. An eminent commentator gives it this construction.

The act gives the remedy to the plaintiff. The provisions of the act must receive a liberal and benign construction to favor the evident intent of the legislature. This was to give or retain certain remedies for the collection of debts. The remedy attaches to, and follows, the debt. It is one of the means of its enforcement. Why should there be a departure from the ordinary rule ? A party is entitled by law to an execution upon his judgment. He is no less so, though he may not be the. original creditor. Before 1831 in all cases, and after 1831 in certain cases, he was entitled to an execution *53against the body, upon his judgment—and I think no less so in the case of the assignee, than the primary owner of the demand. The reason is, that imprisonment is a mode of collecting the debt, and the policy of the law is to favor the collection of debts. It is no respecter of persons, and regards the assignee of a demand, provided he be in fact the owner, with the same favor as the original contractor. Were this not so, then any assignment of a demand, voluntary or involuntary, by operation of law or the act of the party, would defeat the remedy by imprisonment. Accident—bankruptcy—death— any event which put the assets of the original owner into the hands of his creditors or other persons, would liberate the debtor. I cannot believe such to have been the policy or intent of the law. I think the legal remedies are designed to be preserved in all cases where the relation of the parties remains the same, and the cause of action has not been substantially changed.

[Albany General Term, September 6, 1858.

Wright, Gould and Hogeboom, Justices.]

In this particular case, also, some of the acts of fraud were committed after the present plaintiff acquired the ownership of the demand. This circumstance must have escaped the attention of the learned judge. I am of opinion that the order should be reversed, and the debtor held liable to arrest and imprisonment.