2 N.E. 440 | NY | 1885
On the 15th day of October, 1881, Haynes Sanger, a firm doing business in the city of New York, having become insolvent, made a general assignment, for the benefit of their creditors, to Charles Waite, who was a member of the firm of Pendle Waite, and in their assignment preferred that firm as creditors for a large amount. Pendle Waite did business in New York and London, Waite being a citizen of this country residing in the city of New York and having charge of the business of his firm there, and Pendle being a citizen of England and having charge of the firm business there. That firm became insolvent and suspended business in England in February, 1882, and Waite then went to England, and there he and Pendle filed a petition in the London Court of Bankruptcy, in which they recited their inability to pay their debts in full, and that they were "desirous of instituting proceedings for the liquidation of their affairs by arrangement or composition with their creditors, and hereby submit to the jurisdiction of this court in the matter of such proceeding." Waite signed the petition in person, and through his counsel at once secured the appointment of Schofield as receiver, in bankruptcy, of the firm property.
Liquidation by arrangement or composition is a proceeding under the English Bankruptcy Act which provides that the filing of such a petition is an act of bankruptcy; that a compromise proposition may be made by a debtor, and that if such proposition shall be accepted by the creditors at a general meeting, and then confirmed at a second general meeting, and registered by the court, it becomes binding and may be carried out under the supervision of the court; that if it appears to *437 the court on satisfactory evidence that a composition cannot in consequence of legal difficulties, or for any other sufficient cause, proceed without injustice or undue delay to the creditors, or the debtor, the court may adjudge the debtor a bankrupt and proceedings may be had accordingly, and that the title of the trustee in bankruptcy, when appointed, relates back to the time of the commission of the act of bankruptcy.
For reasons which it is unnecessary now to consider or relate, the composition failed, and then upon the application of creditors, which was opposed by Waite, Pendle Waite were adjudged bankrupts, and Schofield was appointed trustee of the firm property. By the English law, the due appointment of a trustee in bankruptcy, under the English Bankruptcy Act, transfers to the trustee all the personal property of the bankrupt wherever situated, whether in Great Britain or elsewhere.
Notwithstanding his bankruptcy, Waite continued to act as assignee of Haynes Sanger and converted the assets of that firm into money, and under the preference given to his firm paid himself for the firm of Pendle Waite the sum of $14,333.70. He paid no portion of that sum to Pendle or to the creditors of his firm, the American creditors of such firm having been fully paid from other assets of the firm.
After all this, Waite filed his petition in the Court of Common Pleas of the city of New York for a settlement of his accounts as assignee, and citations were issued, served and published for that purpose, and a referee was appointed to take and state his accounts. In his accounts he entered and claimed a credit for the sum paid to himself as above stated. Schofield, through his attorney, appeared upon the accounting and as trustee objected to the credit and claimed that sum should be paid to him. The referee ruled that the law of this State does not recognize the validity of foreign bankruptcy proceedings to transfer title to property of the bankrupt situated here, and for that reason held that the payment by Waite, as assignee, to himself as a member of the firm of Pendle Waite, was valid, and that he was entitled to the *438 credit claimed. The same view of the law was taken at the Special and General Terms of the Common Pleas, and then Schofield appealed to this court.
We have stated the facts as found by the referee, and as the respondent did not and could not except to the findings, and is therefore in no condition to complain of them, we must assume that they were based upon sufficient evidence.
The transfer of the property of Pendle Waite to Schofield as trustee was in invitum, solely by operation of the English Bankrupt Law. While the proceeding first instituted by the bankrupts to arrange a composition with their creditors was voluntary, the final proceeding through which the adjudication in bankruptcy was had, and the trustee appointed was adversary and against their will, having no basis of voluntary consent to rest on. (Willitts v. Waite,
If the transfer effected by the bankruptcy proceedings is to have the same effect here as in England, then the title to the money due to the bankrupts from Haynes Sanger was vested in the trustee. Schofield was appointed receiver of the property of the bankrupts in March, 1882, and then the title passed out of them. That title continued in him as receiver until he was appointed trustee. After he was appointed receiver and before or after he was appointed trustee (which does not appear), Waite as assignee paid himself as a member of the firm of Pendle Waite the sum of money in controversy. He had notice of the bankruptcy proceedings and knew that the title to the money due from Haynes Sanger and from himself as their assignee had passed out of the bankrupts to Schofield, and hence he had no right to make payment to them. Schofield became substituted in their place, and Waite was bound to make payment to him, and cannot, therefore, have credit for a payment wrongfully made. And Schofield, standing in the place of the original creditors of Haynes Sanger, had the right to appear upon the accounting and object to the erroneous payment made in disregard of his rights. But the alleged payment was merely formal, not real. Waite, the assignee, still has the money and is accountable for it to the proper *439 party. It is not perceived how it can be claimed that Schofield was bound at any time before the accounting to make any demand upon the assignee. He was a creditor holding the claim originally due to Pendle Waite, and as such he could appear upon the accounting, with all the rights of any other creditor, to protect his interests, and he could not be prejudiced by a payment alleged to have been made by the assignee to himself. All this is upon the assumption that the transfer to Schofield as trustee is to have the same force and effect here as against the bankrupts as in England; and whether it must have, is the important and interesting question to be determined upon this appeal.
It matters not that Waite was a citizen of this country, domiciled here. He went to England and invoked and submitted to the jurisdiction of the Bankruptcy Court there and is bound by its adjudication to the same extent as if he had been domiciled there. The adjudication estopped him just as every party is estopped by the adjudication of a court which has jurisdiction of his person and of the subject-matter.
We have not a case here where there is a conflict between the foreign trustee and domestic creditors. So far as appears no injustice whatever will be done to any of our own citizens, or to any one else, by allowing the transfer to have full effect here. Indeed justice seems to require that this money should be paid to the foreign trustee for distribution among the foreign creditor of the bankrupts.
The effect to be given in any country to statutory in invitum transfers of property through bankruptcy proceedings in a foreign country has been a subject of much discussion among publicists and judges, and unanimity of opinion has not and probably never will be reached. We shall not enter much into the discussion of the subject and thus travel over ground so much marked by the foot-steps of learned jurists. Our main endeavor will be to ascertain what, by the decisions of the courts of this State, has become the law here.
In Bird v. Caritat (2 Johns. 342), it was held that a suit could be brought in this State in the name of a foreign bankrupt *440
by his assignees for their benefit as such, the name of the bankrupt being used, because by the common-law rule, now abrogated, a chose in action was not assignable so as to entitle the assignee to sue thereon in his own name. In writing the opinion Chancellor KENT, then chief justice, said: "The demurrer to the second plea raises the question whether the assignees under a commission of bankruptcy sued out in England can maintain a suit at law here in their own names. This is more a question concerning form than substance, for there can be no doubt of the right of the assignees to collect the debts due to the bankrupt either by a suit directly in their own names or as trustees using the name of the bankrupt. It is a principle of general practice among nations to admit and give effect to the title of foreign assignees. This is done on the ground that the conveyance under the bankrupt laws of the country where the owner is domiciled is equivalent to a voluntary conveyance by the bankrupt." In Raymond v. Johnson (11 Johns. 488), it was held that although the court will recognize and protect the right of an assignee under the insolvent law of another State, yet an action brought in this State must be in the name of the insolvent. In Holmes v. Remsen (4 Johns. Ch. 460), Chancellor KENT wrote an elaborate opinion holding that foreign assignees in bankruptcy took title to all the property of the bankrupt, wherever situated, with the same force and effect as if the bankrupt had made a voluntary assignment of his property, and that such a title was good even against subsequent attaching creditors in a country other than that where the bankruptcy adjudication was had and the statutory transfer was made, and he said: "It is admitted in every case that foreign assignees duly appointed under foreign ordinances are entitled as such to sue for debts due to the bankrupt's estate." In Holmes v. Remsen
(20 Johns. 229), the suit was between the same parties and involved the same questions, and the effect of the foreign bankruptcy proceeding was again elaborately considered by PLATT, J., and he gave expression to views in reference thereto differing from those of Chancellor KENT which have been followed in most of the subsequent cases in this State upon the *441
same subject. He held that a statutory assignment of a debtor's property under the laws of a foreign country is not equivalent to a voluntary assignment by the debtor, and that such an assignment will not hold good here to the prejudice of the rights of domestic creditors pursuing their remedy by attachment under our laws. But he admitted that foreign assignees appointed in bankruptcy proceedings could by the rules of international courtesy and comity come here and institute suits in our courts to recover the property of the bankrupt when the interests of creditors pursuing their remedy under the local laws were not brought in question or prejudiced. He adopted in substance the views of Mr. Caines, the learned lawyer who, arguing for the attaching creditors in both cases between the same parties, said: "We admit that the bankrupt assignment passes all the property of the bankrupt, here and everywhere, provided always that there are no creditors here having claims on that property. We admit the right of the assignees of the bankrupt to collect his property here and take it to England, if there are no creditors of the bankrupt here; but not otherwise. If there are creditors attaching here there is a conflictus legum and the foreign law must yield." The other judges declined to express any opinion upon the questions mainly considered by Judge PLATT, but concurred with him upon a minor point not involved here, and upon that point the case was decided. In Plestoro v. Abraham (1 Paige, 236), the facts were these: Abraham, a British subject domiciled in England, in July, 1828, left that country for the United States, bringing with him certain personal property, and arrived in New York about the 1st of September, when the goods were deposited in the public store under the charge of the defendant Thompson as collector of the port. Shortly after Abraham left England a commission in bankruptcy was taken out against him there by virtue of which he was duly declared a bankrupt; and on the 8th day of August, Johnson, one of the complainants, was appointed by the commissioners provisional assignee. On the 24th day of September, 1828, the complainants, the provisional assignee and the creditors of Abraham, all of whom were British *442
subjects and residents of England, filed their bill and obtained an injunction restraining the collector from delivering the goods to Abraham, and restraining the latter from receiving or prosecuting for the same. Abraham put in his answer neither admitting nor denying the proceedings under the commission, but alleging that he left England in the lawful pursuit of his business with a bona fide intention of returning, and denying that he was insolvent or had committed any act of bankruptcy. Chancellor WALWORTH denied a motion to dissolve the injunction, and held that the assignee could have maintained the action alone without joining the creditors; and in his opinion, referring to the decision of Chancellor KENT in Holmes v. Remsen, he said that it was "doubtful whether that decision to its full extent can be sustained," that "it was strongly questioned and ably opposed by PLATT, J.," in the subsequent case between the same parties, and that it stood opposed to the opinions of the State courts in various cases cited; but he held that the case before him steered clear of all the decisions cited, because in those cases the contest was between foreign assignors and domestic creditors, claiming under the laws of the country where the property was situated, and the suits were brought, while in that case the controversy was between the bankrupt and his assignee and creditors, all residing in the country under whose laws the assignment was made, and the property itself, at the time of the assignment, was constructively within the jurisdiction of that country being on the high seas in the actual possession of a British subject. That case was taken by appeal to the Court of Errors (3 Wend. 538), where the order of the chancellor was reversed. It is claimed by the counsel for the respondent and was so held by the court below in this case, that the Court of Errors held in that case that the statutory assignment in England was wholly inoperative here, and that the foreign assignee, therefore, was not vested with the title to the property here even as against the bankrupt. We are of opinion that it was not so held, and that the point was left undecided by that case. MARCY, J., writing an opinion for affirmance in which SUTHERLAND, J., concurred, expressed *443
views similar to those announced by PLATT, J., in Holmes v.Remsen, and held that the foreign assignee could sue in our courts, and that his title to the property was good as against the bankrupt. Senator ALLEN, writing an opinion, held that the order should be reversed on the ground that an injunction was not the proper remedy, and we cannot discover that he intimated any opinion as to the important question discussed by MARCY, J., and in Holmes v. Remsen by Chancellor KENT and PLATT, J.; and no definite views upon the same question were expressed by Senator MAYNARD in the opinion read by him. He said: "The cases, therefore, in which it has been held that an assignment did not transfer the property of a bankrupt in a foreign country appear to me not applicable to the case now under consideration." And further: "If the assignment in this case did operate a transfer of the property in question, what need is there of the aid of a Court of Chancery to enable the assignee to obtain possession of it? If by virtue of the assignment the assignee acquired a legaltitle to the property, the courts of law are abundantly competent to afford equitable relief." Senator OLIVER, also writing for reversal, said: "The question is not whether a foreign assignee shall be permitted to sue in our courts; in relation to that there can be but one opinion. Had the proceedings in bankruptcy in this case been perfected the bankrupt acquiescing in their justice and propriety, and the assignee substituted in his place, and a question had arisen between him and a debtor of the estate, no one would have doubted or questioned the right of the assignee to sue in our courts." But he held that the title of the foreign assignee was not good here as against the bankrupt himself unless he chose to acquiesce in it, and he also reached the conclusion that even if the title of the assignee were good here, an injunction was not a proper remedy. Senator STEBBINS writing for reversal held that the statutory transfer in England could have no operation here, and that, therefore, the foreign assignee did not have title to the property, and that even if he did have title an injunction was not the proper remedy. Senator THROOP wrote for affirmance holding that the title of the *444
foreign assignee was good as against the bankrupt, and that an injunction was a proper remedy. No other opinions were written. Justices MARCY and SUTHERLAND and Senators THROOP and WOODWARD voted for affirmance, and seventeen senators for reversal. It does not appear, and cannot be ascertained upon what ground the fourteen senators who voted for reversal, writing no opinions, based their votes. Some may have concurred in the result upon one ground and some upon another. The most obvious ground, in which all who voted for reversal seemed to concur, was that an injunction was not a proper remedy. That case has been much criticised by judges and text-writers, and the imposibility of determining what was adjudicated by it has frequently been recognized. In Johnson v. Hunt (23 Wend. 87), one Hollis and Johnson and Miller were residents of Chenango county in this State. Hollis absconded, and a warrant of attachment was issued against him as an absconding debtor. After notice of the attachment had been published Johnson and Miller, being creditors of Hollis, having separate demands against him, went in pursuit of and overtook him in Pennsylvania, where they respectively obtained process, from a justice's court and recovered judgments against him, on which executions were issued, by virtue of which he was arrested and taken into custody. To obtain his liberty he paid Johnson the amount of his judgment and turned out certain personal property to Miller in satisfaction of his judgment. The property thus turned out belonged to Hollis in Chenango county when he absconded, and it was brought back into that county where it was demanded of him by the plaintiffs in that action, who had been appointed trustees of the estate of Hollis. The demand not having been complied with, the action was commenced to recover the value of the property. Upon the trial of the action the court charged the jury that if the property was removed from this State, and the defendants knew that Hollis was an absconding debtor at the time when they received it from him in Pennsylvania, he and they being citizens of this State, and the property being received after the publication of the notice of the issuing of the attachment, *445
they were liable for it, whether it was removed from this State before or after the publication of the notice, and that the legal proceedings had in Pennsylvania were no protection to the defendants. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiffs, and the defendants took the case by writ of error to the Supreme Court, where the judgment was reversed, COWEN, J., writing the opinion. He held that the act under which the attachment against Hollis was issued was in the nature of a bankrupt law, and that the assignment of Hollis' property to trustees was in invitum, and therefore inoperative outside of this State; and he claimed that it was decided in the case of Abraham v. Plestoro that an assignment in invitum under the law of one State or nation has no operation in another, even with respect to its own citizens; that the bankrupt, a subject of the very country under whose laws he was proceeded against, may, on crossing the territorial limits of such country, dispose of the property which he has brought with him, and may withhold it entirely from the creditors who are proceeding against him in the foreign jurisdiction. We think we have already shown, that, at least, it cannot be known that such was the decision in Abraham v. Plestoro. As neither he nor either of his associates was a member of the court which rendered that decision, he had no better means of knowing what was decided thereby than we have, and we cannot concur in his views in reference thereto. But we are left by his opinion at a loss to determine whether he meant to deny all force and effect to the title of statutory trustees or assignees appointed in a foreign country, or merely as against creditors pursuing their debtor for the collection of their debts. From the fact that he cited, as authorities, Kent's Commentaries and Story on the Conflict of Laws, and from certain expressions and qualifications contained in his opinion we are inclined to think that he did not mean to lay down an unqualified and universal rule that an in invitum
title under bankruptcy proceedings in one country can have no force and operation whatever in another country. It was not necessary for the decision of that case to lay down such a rule, as the defendants there simply did what was lawful in the State of *446
Pennsylvania, under its laws, to procure payment of their debts. The point decided is properly stated in the head-note as follows: "The property of an absconding debtor taken by him from this State and transferred by him in another State in satisfaction of a judgment there rendered against him was not subject to the control of the trustees of his estate after the property was brought back to this State, although he and the creditor to whom the transfer was made were at the time residents of this State, and the transfer was made after the publication of the notice that an attachment had issued." The question we are now considering, therefore, still remained undecided, and again came under elaborate discussion in Hoyt v. Thompson (
From all these cases the following rules are to be deemed thoroughly recognized and established in this State: (1) The statutes of foreign States can in no case have any force or effect in this State ex proprio vigore, and hence the statutory title of foreign assignees in bankruptcy can have no recognition here solely by virtue of the foreign statute. (2) But the comity of nations which Judge DENIO in Petersen v. Chemical Bank (supra) said is a part of the common law, allows a certain effect here to titles derived under, and powers created by the laws of other countries, and from such comity the titles of foreign statutory assignees are recognized and enforced here, when they can be, without injustice to our own citizens, and without prejudice to the rights of creditors pursuing their remedies here under our statutes; provided also, that such titles are not in conflict with the laws or the public policy of our State. (3) Such foreign assignees can appear and, subject to the conditions above mentioned, maintain suits in our courts against debtors of the bankrupt whom they represent, and against others who have interfered with, or withhold the property of the bankrupt.
If it be admitted, as it must be under the authorities cited, that Schofield can, as assignee of Pendle Waite, have a standing *449 in our courts and that his title will be so far recognized here that he can sue the debtors of that firm to recover the amount owing to the firm, why may he not sue the bankrupts? If the assignee could sue Haynes Sanger to recover what they owed the bankrupts, why can he not be permitted to sue the bankrupts for money or property placed in their hands to pay the debt? If he could sue Haynes Sanger, why could he not sue their assignee, although a member of the bankrupt firm, to recover the money placed in his hands to pay their debt? No principle of justice, no public policy requires the courts of this State to ignore the title of this assignee at the instance of one of the bankrupts. No injustice will be done to Waite if this money be taken to pay his creditors, and public policy does not require that the courts of this State should protect him in his efforts either to cheat his creditors or his partner. If it be conceded, as it must be, that the title of a foreign statutory assignee is good in this State for any purpose against anybody, it seems to us that it ought to be held good against the bankrupt against whom an adjudication in bankruptcy has been pronounced which is binding upon him.
Before such an adjudication can be held to be efficacious in a foreign country to transfer title to property, the bankrupt court must have had jurisdiction of the bankrupt either because made in the country of his domicile or because he, although domiciled elsewhere, submitted to the jurisdiction or in some other way came under the jurisdiction of the bankrupt court. Here Pendle Waite did most of their business in England. Most of their assets and of their creditors were there, and while Pendle alone was domiciled there, Waite went there and submitted to the jurisdiction of the Bankrupt Court and exposed himself to the operation of the English law. He is therefore bound by the adjudication of the court as he would have been if domiciled there, and the judgment had been in a common-law court upon any personal cause of action.
The decisions in the Federal courts, and in most of the other States, are in harmony with the views we have expressed; and *450 so are the doctrines of all the great jurists who have written upon the subject of private international law. (2 Bell's Comm. 681, 687; Wheaton's Int. L. [8th ed., by Dana], §§ 89, 90, 91, 144 and note; 2 Kent's Comm. 405; Wharton's Confl. of Laws, §§ 353, 368, 391, 735, 736; Story's Confl. of Laws, §§ 403, 410, 412, 414, 420, 421.)
There are but two cases in this State which really hold any thing in conflict with these views, and they are Mosselman v.Caen (34 Barb. 66; N.Y. Sup. Ct. [4 T. C.] 171). In the first case the action was by foreign trustees, appointed in bankruptcy proceedings, to recover goods in the possession of the defendant in this country, and the plaintiffs recovered. The defendant appealed, and sought to reverse the judgment, upon the ground that the plaintiffs did not, as trustees, have any title to the property. The judgment was affirmed, on the ground that the defendant did not raise the question of title at the trial. But the judges writing were of opinion that the plaintiffs did not have any title to the bankrupt's property located here, and one of them (SUTHERLAND, J.) stated that the case of Abraham v.Plestoro (3 Wend. 538), confirmed by Johnson v. Hunt, "would seem to be conclusive upon the question, whether our courts will recognize or enforce a right or title acquired under a foreign bankrupt law or foreign bankruptcy judicial proceedings. The case of Abraham v. Plestoro was certainly very broad in its repudiation of foreign bankruptcy proceedings, and went much further than the case of Holmes v. Remsen (20 Johns. 229); but I think it must be deemed conclusive authority for saying, that had the defendant raised the question by demurrer, or on the trial, it must have been held that the plaintiffs could not maintain this action." In the second case DAVIS, P.J., writing the opinion of the court, said: "It seems to be the settled law of this State that our courts will not recognize or enforce a right or title acquired under a foreign bankrupt law, or foreign bankrupt proceedings, so far as affects property within their jurisdiction, or demands against residents of the State." These two cases are unsupported by authority, and are, we think, opposed to sound *451 principles, and are in conflict with the current of authority in this State.
We are, therefore, of opinion that Schofield was competent to appear upon the accounting to protect the interests of the bankrupt estate which he represented, and that, upon the facts as they appear in this record, his objection to the allowance of the payment made by the assignee to himself ought to have prevailed, and that he should be recognized as a creditor for the amount of such payment.
It follows that the orders of the General and Special Terms should be reversed, and, as the facts may be varied or more fully presented upon a new hearing, the matter should be remitted to the Special Term for further proceedings upon the same or new evidence, in accordance with the rules of law herein laid down, and that the appellant should recover from the respondent costs of the appeals to the General Term and to this court.
All concur.
Ordered accordingly.