191 Mass. 361 | Mass. | 1906
The plaintiff corporation became financially embarrassed, and made an assignment to the defendants as trustees for the benefit of its creditors. This conveyance included “ all and singular the real and personal property and estate and claims of every kind and wheresoever situated belonging to said party of the first part, including all claims, debts, demands and choses in action owing to it, whether now or hereafter payable, and all evidence thereof, always excepting therefrom such property as is exempt by law from attachment or from
We are of opinion that the property in the books passed to the assignees. The conveyance was in the broadest terms, including all the property and assets of the corporation except any that was expressly exempted from attachment. In order to make this property available, especially in case of litigation, the defendants would be likely to need the records to establish their rights. The existence of the corporation, if put in issue in a suit brought by the assignees, would be provable, in part at least, by its records. The validity of the assignment to the assignees could not be established without evidence from the records. Presumably there were numerous transactions in the course of the corporation’s business whose legality the defendants might find it necessary to prove in the enforcement of their rights. Ordinarily such proof would require the production of the records.
In this assignment the plaintiff’s president did not leave to implication the right of the defendants to have and control these records, but, after mentioning different binds of property and claims, he included in terms “all evidence thereof ”, with a recital of his authority to make the conveyance. We are of
If, upon the execution of the defendants’ trust in other particulars without payment of the plaintiff’s debts in full, the right to these books would revert to the plaintiff, which we do not intimate, the general averment “ upon information and belief, that the affairs of the assigneeship under the assignment annexed to the said bill have been so far completed that the respondents have no just claim or right to retain the said books,” does not show facts which entitle the plaintiff to relief. The statement is rather a conclusion of law than an averment of a fact. It is coupled with a statement that the defendants “ never had any right whatever to retain the same,” and that “the record books ... at no time passed by the assignment.” It does not show that anything has occurred which makes the defendants’ rights any less than they were when the books were first delivered to the defendants.
If the plaintiff needed to use the books as evidence in any matter affecting its interests, it may be assumed that it could obtain the aid of the courts to compel the production of them for that purpose.
Demurrer sustained; bill dismissed.