24 Minn. 295 | Minn. | 1877
One Harare made, acknowledged, and, on August 14, 1876, filed in the office of the clerk of the district court in the county of Eice an assignment of his property to plaintiff, in trust for the benefit of his creditors. On the 21st, he filed the inventory required by the act of 1876; on the 30th, the bond of the assignee, required by the act, was approved by the judge of the court, and, on September 4th, was filed in the office of the clerk, and the plaintiff took possession of the property. After this the defendant, as sheriff of Eice county, took the property from plaintiff under an attachment and executions against Harare. Whereupon plaintiff brought this action in replevin and had judgment below, and defendant appeals.
Subdivision 6, § 2, of the act referred to (Laws 1876, c. 44) provides that within ten days after filing the assignment the assignor shall file with the clerk “a full, true and complete inventory of such debtor or debtors’ estate, both real and personal, in law or in equity, and the incumbrances existing thereon, and of all vouchers and securities relating thereto, and the value of such estate, and each item thereof, to the best knowledge, information and belief of such debtor or debtors.” This inventory is to be under the debtor’s oath.
Section 3, that "before any such assignee or assignees shall have power to take possession of any such estate so assigned, or any part thereof, or shall have any authority to sell, dispose of, or convert to the purposes of» the trust any part of such estate, and within five days after the filing of the inventory, ” such assignee or assignees shall execute and file
Section 6 subjects all the proceedings to the order and supervision of the district court. The proceeding is in the nature of a judicial proceeding. Clark v. Stanton, supra, 232.
We think the absolute title to the property assigned does not vest in the assignee until the bond required by section 3 is filed. Until then it is inchoate or conditional, depending for its continuing upon his filing the bond; but between the filing of the assignment and the filing of the bond the court would undoubtedly protect this inchoate or conditional title to the property, not only as against acts of creditors and third persons, but of the assignor. The intent of the legislature, unequivocally expressed, that the assignee shall have no power over the property until the bond is filed, goes far to show that it must be filed within the five days; for the filing of the assignment suspends the power of the assignor, for the time, to further dispose of the property, and of the creditors to proceed against it for satisfaction of their debts, without vesting in the assignee, until he files the bond, the power to dispose of or even take possession of the property. It is hardly to be supposed that the legislature intended this anomalous condition of things, perhaps temporarily necessary, but nevertheless hurtful, both to the assignor and the creditors, to be of long or indefinite continuance. On the contrary, we must presume that the time is inserted as a limit to the continuance of such condition, and, therefore, that the assignee, to perfect his title, must file the bond within the time. Further, the proceeding is in the nature of a judicial proceeding. By the filing of the assignment the court gets jurisdiction over the assignor and probably over the property; but it gets none over the assignee until he files his bond. That is in the nature of an acceptance of the trust, and an appearance in an.1 submission to the jurisdiction of the court,
Judgment reversed.