| U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine | Oct 15, 1843
Two questions : are presented for the consideration of the court. (1). Whether the present mortgage created a valid lien, in favor of the mortgagee, upon the machinery, tools, and stock in trade, acquired by the mortgagors, and put into the factory after the execution of the mortgage, within the true' intent..and (meaning of the proviso in the second-section of the bankrupt act of 1841, c. 9. (2). Whether, admitting the stipulations of the mortgage might, as against the mortgagor, .be a -good and sufficient authority to the mortgagee to take possession of, and apply the - subsequently acquired machinery, tools, and stock, to the payment of the debt due to him, the mortgage is good, so as to protect the property against the claims of the other creditors of the bankrupts.
The proviso of the bankrupt act, above alluded to, is in the following words: “And provided, also, that nothing in this act contained, shall be construed to annul, destroy or impair any lawful- rights of married women, or any liens, mortgages or-other securities on property, real or personal, which may be valid by the laws of the states respectively, and which are not inconsistent with the provisions of the second and fifth sections of this act.” I am not aware, that the present mortgage has been contended to be inconsistent with any thing contained in any section of the act It was executed long before the bankrupt act was in existence;, and there is no pretence to say, that it is designedly fraudulent, or that the mortgagee has waived any of his rights under the mortgage.
The present is a mortgage of personal property, and has been duly recorded according to the act of 1839, c. 390, of the state of Maine, (which is substantially in the same • language as the act of Massachusetts on the same subject,) and no objection arises on this head. The question, therefore, in effect, resolves itself into this, whether the mortgage, quoad future machinery, tools, and stock in trade, is a valid mortgage or lien, by the laws of the state of Maine, as between the parties themselves, and also as between the mortgagee and the creditors of the mortgagors. If it be valid, either at law or .in equity, (it is wholly immaterial which,) then the decision must be in favor of the respondent; otherwise, it must be in favor of the assignee.
■It is material here to state, that the present is not a controversy between-a first and second mortgagee, as to property acquired -and in esse after the execution of the first mortgage, and before the time of the execution of the second mortgage, both the mortgagees being bona .fide purchasers for a valuable consideration, and the second mortgagee having no notice of the prior encumbrance. That might, at law, present a very •different question, and is precisely that which is understood .to -have been' decided in the case of Winslow v. Merchants’ Ins. Co. in Massachusetts; Neither is this a controversy between a mortgagee of a thing in building (as, for example, a ship in building) ■before it is completed, and a subsequent attaching creditor, or a subsequent purchaser, after it is completed, which seems to have' been the important .point in Goodenow v. Dunn, and Bonsey v. Amee, 8 Pick. 236, and which might, also, at law, admit of very different considerations. 'The present is-a question between the assignee of a bankrupt, acting for the benefit of all the creditors,- and the mortgagee, claiming title under his .mortgage; and it arises .'upon a petition, partaking of the character of a summary proceeding in equity, and.-not In a suit at the common law, or governed by its principles. Now, it is most material -to; bear in mind, under this aspect of the case, -that it is a well-established doctrine, that .(except in cases of fraud) assignees .in bankruptcy take only such rights and interests as the bankrupt himself had, and could himself claim and assert at the time of his bankruptcy; and, consequently, they are' affected with all the equities, which would affect the bankrupt himself, if he were asserting those rights and interests. This was expressly laid down by Lord Hardwicke in Brown v. Heathcote, 1 Atk. 160, 162, where he said: “The ground, that the court go upon, is this, that assignees of bankrupts, -though they are trustees for the creditors, yet stand in the place of the bankrupt, and they can take in no-, better manner than he could. - Therefore, assignments of choses' in action for a valuable consideration, have been heid -good against such assignees.” The same doctrine was' recog-nised by his lordship, in- Jewson v. Moulson, 2 Atk. 417; 420. Sir William Grant (M. R.), in Mitford v. Mitford, 9 Ves. 87, 100, said:
It may be admitted to be true, what, indeed, seems to be the result of the authorities cited at the bar, as well as of others equally entitled to respect, that to make a grant' or assignment valid at law, the thing,. which is the subject of it, must have an existence, actual or potential, at the time of such grant or assignment; and that a mere possibility is not assignable (Wood & Foster’s Case, 1 Leon. 42; Grantham v. Hawley, Hob. 132; Robinson v. Macdonnell, 5 Maule & S. 228; Com. Dig. “Assignment,” c. 3; Id. “Grant,” D); although, perhaps, the doctrine may require some qualifications under special circumstances, as for example, in cases of the assignment of freight in the course of earning at the time of the assignment, as is shown in the case of Leslie v. Guthrie, 1 Bing. N. C. 697, 708, 709. But this admission will carry us but a very little way in-the present case. Por here the true question is, not whether the assignment of the property to be acquired in futuro, is good at law, but whether it is-good in equity; for if. it be, then, independently of any fraud (which.is not pretended), as the assignee can take only what the bankrupt had a title to, subject to all equities, it follows, as a matter of course, that the petitioner (the assignee) has no claim, on which he can fouDd himself for relief under his petition. So that the question is, in reality, narrowed down to the mere consideration of this, whether the present mortgage as to the future machinery, tools, and stock in trade, to be put into the factory (for there is no controversy as to those in esse at the time of the assignment), is valid or not against the mortgagor.
Upon the best consideration, which I am able to give the subject, I think it is good and valid. Courts of equity do not, like courts of law, confine themselves to the giving of effect to assignments of rights and interests, which are absolutely fixed and in esse. On the contrary, they support assignments, not only of choses in action, but of contingent interests and expectancies, and also of things, which have no present actual or potential existence, but rest in mere possibility only. In respect to the latter, it is true, that the assignment can have no positive operation to transfer, in presentí, property in things not in esse; but it operates by way of present contract, to take effect and attach to the things assigned, when and as soon as they come in esse; .and it may be enforced as such a contract in rem, in equity. Lord Hardwicke, in Wright v. Wright, 1 Ves. Sr. 409, 411, expressly recognised this doctrine; and said, that an assignment of a contingent interest • or possibility of an inheritance was equally allowable with an assignment of a possibility of a personal thing or chattel real. And he added; “An„assignment always operates by way of'agreement or contract, amounting in the consideration of this court, to this, that one agrees with another to transfer, and make good that right or interest, which is made good here by way •of agreement.” In the very case, then before him, he admitted, that the assignor had no immediate claim or demand, but a mere possibility in the property assigned, and that it was; well: assigned by the word “claim,” which well described it, in presentí and in futura' He also relied on the case of Beckley v. Newland, 2 P. Wms. 182, which (he said) was an agreement on marriage to settle all such lands as came to the party by descent or otherwise from his father; and it was .carried into effect by the court, notwithstanding an expectancy of an heir at law is less than a possibility;
The same doctrine was maintained by Mr. Vice-Chancellor Shadwell in Douglas v. Russell, 4 Sim. 524; and his decree was after-wards affirmed by the Lord Chancellor (1 Mylne & K. 488), upon appeal, as to an assignment of freight earned and to be earned on an outward and homeward voyage, then about to be undertaken. And it was acted upon and supported in a like assignment of freight to be earned on a particular voyage in the case of Leslie v. Guthrie, 1 Bing. N. Cas. 697, 708, 709, where the whole subject was argued at large, in a suit of the assignees under a bankruptcy.
But the latest case,. and certainly one of the most important and satisfactory' in its reasoning, as well as its conclusion, is that of Langton v. Horton, 1 Hare, 549, before Mr. Vice Chancellor Wigram. There, a deed of assignment *by way of mortgage was made of a whale ship and her tackle and appurtenances, and all oil and head matter and other cargo, which might be caught and brought home in the ship on and from her then present voyage; and the question arose between an execution creditor of the assignor, and the assignee, whether the assignment was good as to the future cargo obtained in the voyage after the assignment The learned vice chancellor decided, that it was. Upon that occasion he said; “Is it true, then, .that a subject to be acquired after the date of a contract, cannot, in equity, be claimed- by a purchaser for value under that contract? It is impossible to doubt, for some purposes at least, that, by contract, an interest in a thing not in existence at the time of the contract may, in equity, become the property of a purchaser for value. The course to be taken by such purchaser to perfect his title, I do not now advert to; but-cases recognising the general proposition are of common occurrence. A tenant, for example, contracts that particular things, which shall be on -the prop-' erty when the term of his occupation- expires, shall be the property of the lessor at a certain price, or at a priceto""be determined in a certain manner. This, in fact, is a. contract to sell property not then belonging to the vendor, and a court of equity will enforce such contracts, where they are founded on valuable consideration, and justice requires, that the contract should be specifically performed. The same doctrine is applied in important cases of contracts relating to mines, where the lessee has agreed to leave engines and machinery not annexed .to the freehold which shall be on the property at the expiration of the lease, to .be paid for at a valuation. The contract applies, in terms, to implements, which shall be there at the time specified; and here neither construction nor decision has confined' it to those articles, which were on the property at'the time the lease was granted. But it is not necessary, that I should refer to such cases as these; for Lord Eldon, in the case of The Warre, 8 Price, 269, note, and in Curtis v. Auber, 1 Jac. & W. 526, has decided all, that is necessary to dispose of. the present argu- a ment. Admitting that those cases are not specifically, and in terms, like the principal case, they are not of the less authority for the present purpose; for they remove the difficulty, which has been raised in ‘argument, and decide that non-existing property may be the subject of valid assignment. I will suppose the case of the owner of a ship, which is going out in ballast, proposing to borrow of another party a sum of £5,000 to pay the crew and-furnish an outfit; and agreeing that, in consideration of the loan, the homeward cargo should be consigned to the party advancing the money. It cannot reasonably be denied, in the face of the authorities I have just referred to, that a court of equity,
Now, it seems to me, that this reasoning is exceedingly cogent and striking; and it-stands upon grounds entirely satisfactory and conclusive upon the whole subject. What, then, is there to distinguish tiie case-before the court from this reasoning? I confess myself unable to perceive any. It seems to me a clear result of all the authorities, that wherever the parties, by their contract, intended to create a positive lien or charge, either upon real or upon personal property, whether then owned by the assignor of contractor, or not, or if personal property, whether it is then in esse or not, it attaches in equity as a lien or charge upon the particular property, as soon as the assignor or contract- or acquires a title thereto, against the latter, and all persons asserting a claim thereto, under him, either voluntarily, .or with notice, or in bankruptcy. See 2 Story, Eq. Jur. § 1231, and tfie authorities there cited; Cross, Liens, pp. 187, 188, 191, 192, c. 12; Prebble v. Boghurst, 1 Swanst. 309; Needham v. Smith, 4 Russ. 318; Randall v. Willis, 5 Ves. 262, 274, 275; Simond v. Hibbert, 1 Russ. & M. 719.
But, then, it is argued, that here the possession of the property was during the whole period of four years to remain in the mortgagors, and they were to take the rents and profits thereof for their own benefit. Nay, that they had the power to dispose of the stock in trade and the other property by sale, and thus they acquired and retained the full dominion over the samé during that period which is inconsistent with the nature and objects of such a mortgage, and against the policy of the law. In short, that as to creditors, it operates a virtual constructive fraud upon their rights. As to the possession and use of the property, and taking the rents and profits thereof, there is nothing in that part of the objection, which will invalidate the mortgage. Nothing is- more common in mortgages of real estate than an agreement, that the mortgagor shall take the rents and profits until breach of the condition thereof. And as to chattels, there is as little question, that, where a mortgage or a lien is created on chattels by contract, it is entirely competent for the parties to agree that the possession and use thereof shall be retained by the mortgagor until the breach of the condition, or 'by the debtor until the creditor shall assert his rights against it as a security for the debt Even in cases of bankruptcy, a qualified possession of the property by the debtor will not oust the creditor of Ms rights, as leaving the property in the order and disposition. of the debtor under the statute of 21 Jac. I. c. 19, §§ 10, 11, or the statute of 6 Geo. IV. c. 16, § 72. That was expressly held in Crowfoot v. London Dock Co., 2 Cromp. & M. 637, where the possession of the debtor was not exclusive, but was mixed up with that of the creditor, the property (steam engines and other apparatus,) being employed by the debtor in operations, conducted by the company, the possession of the debtor being in pursuance of an arrangement, under which he had a right of user for the purposes of the contract The case of Hawthorn v. Newcastle & N. S. Ry, Co., reported in Cross, Liens, Append. 408, carried the doctrine a step farther; and decided, that a covenant in a contract to build a bridge for the company, made by the builders, that the company should have a lien upon the machines, implements, and materials of the builders, in or upon the land or grounds, where the bridge was to be built as a security for the completion of the works, was good in favor of the company, in the case of the bankruptcy of the builders, as a lien, in the nature of a shifting lien, upon such materials, as happened for the time being to lie upon the actual line of the railway, or upon the adjacent land in possession of the company. Under the statute of Maine for -the recording of mortgages of personal property (Act 1839, c. 390), where the mortgage is recorded, it is valid, without possession of the property mortgaged being delivered to the mortgagee;. and a stipulation, that it shall remain in possession of the mortgagor until breach of the condition, has been upheld as within the true spirit 'and intendment of the act Forbes v. Parker, 16 Pick. 462; Rev. St Me. (Ed. 1841) p. 558, c. 125, § 32; Abbott v. Goodwin. 20 Me. 408" court="Me." date_filed="1841-07-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/abbott-v-goodwin-4927536?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="4927536">20 Me. 408.
Then, as to the supposed right of sale, Of the .stock in trade and other mortgaged property. Admitting it to exist, and to be fairly deducible from the language of the instrument (which certainly is not a strained construction of its apparent object and intent), that right, conceded by the mortgagee, is not inconsistent with the validity of the mortgage; for still the proceeds, or other equivalent property may be substituted for it, and-if the parties consent to such an arrangement, there seems no legal objection -to it. The case of Abbott v. Goodwin, 20 Me. 408, manifestly proceeds .upon this ground. In that case, it was expressly decided, that if the mortgagor should, under a stipulation in the mortgage, giving him that authority, sell the goods mortgaged, and with the proceeds should purchase other goods, the latter goods would represent the first, and be substituted for them; and would be, equally with the first, subject to the lien of the mortgagee. Now, in effect, precisely what the court thus
This objection, then, falls to the ground, and leaves the case stripped of every other consideration, except the argument, that the mortgage is a virtual fraud upon the other creditors, and is against the policy of the law, and, therefore, cannot be protected against the claims of the other creditors, however it might stand valid as between the parties themselves. And this, in effect, is the remaining point arising upon the second question propounded at the hearing. Now, if the considerations already suggested '■ áre1 sound, they seem to dispose of this part of the controversy. There is no pretense of any • fraud, either actual or constructive, intended , by the mortgagor and mortgagee. So. far as their intentions are concerned, they were up: •right, and honest, and correct. The. mort-: gage was recorded, and there is no ground to suggest any intentional concealment. The. possession of the property by the mortgagors,: and the power to use it and dispose of it, was not only consistent with the deed, but was positively avowed and provided for by it The creditors, therefore, were not allured by any false colors or false credit held out to . mislead them. Now, I am not aware'of any policy of the law, -or of any principle of1 law; which makes any conveyance of this' • sort invalid as to creditors, if they have full notice, or may have full notice of it by the exercise of reasonable diligence. Indeed; the law makes the registration of the deed constructive notice of its contents to all persons; since it was required .to be registered, and was registered in conformity to law. What ground is there, then, to assert, that the conveyance was against the policy of the law? The phrase itself is somewhat indefinite, and in its actual application here, is difficult to be grasped and comprehended. .1 profess, that I am not able to perceive any; and, as far as authorities go, they point the other way. Besides; "the assignees here stand before the court affected with all the equities of the original debtors; and the creditors here assert their rights through and under the assignee and not by any paramount title.
In every view, therefore, which I am able, -to take of the case,_it seems to me, that the claim of the assignee is not maintainable, and that his petition ought to be dismissed;
Under all the circumstances, as the questions are of a somewhat novel character, I incline to think, that the respondents ought not to be allowed their costs; and that the costs of the assignee should be a charge on the bankrupts’ estate. But this is a matter.for.the consideration of the district judge.
I shall, accordingly, direct a certificate to be sent to the district court, answering both the questions adjourned into this court in . the affirmative.
The case of Beckley v. Newland, 2 P. Wms. 182. was not exactly as stated by Lord Hard-wicke. ■ But it was an agreement between two survivors, who had married two sisters, to divide equally between them whatever should be left .to -them by the father of their wives. But the .principle was the same. The case of Hobson v. Trevor, Id. 191. was that probably in Lord Hardwicke’s mind. See, also, 2 Story, Eq. Jur. § 1040b, and note. '