47 F. 99 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Illnois | 1891
The bill in this case alleges that John Meyer and Moses Bachrach owned property, real and personal, describing it, and carried on the business of wholesale liquor dealers at Quincy, 111., till on or about Monday, October 25, 1886. “That at the date and time last aforesaid the said firm of John Meyer & Go., and the individual members so aforesaid composing said company, were, and for some time prior thereto had been, insolvent.” That the stock of goods had been purchased partly within 30 days, and almost entirely within 90 days, of the day mentioned in said mortgages and transfers, the indebtedness amounting to some $22,000. Complainants, Moore, Sceliger & Co., sold defendants John Meyer & Co., September 10, 1886, goods to the amount of $2,905.75, and look acceptances, payable in four months; and the Sour Mash Distilling Company, on September 18,1886, sold thorn goods amounting to $1,083 taking an acceptance running the same time. That about the date of the chattel mortgages the defendants made divers and sundry
There is no allegation or proof that the defendants Meyer and Bachrach, or either of them, ever made what purported to be or was intended ' for a deed of assignment under the voluntary assignment laws of Illinois. The prayer of the bill is that each of the chattel mortgages above mentioned, and each assignment, transfer, and conveyanceof accounts and warehouse receipts and stock of goods in trade and other property mentioned and referred to may be set aside as in fraud of the creditors of the said John Meyer & Co. and of the individual members of said firm; that said chattel and real-estate mortgages, and each of them, and said assignments and conveyances of property and warehouse receipts, transfer of accounts, stocks of goods, and property made, be adjudged to constitute an assignment for the benefit of all the creditors of said John Meyer & Co. and the creditors of the individual members of said firm, and that the preferences by said mortgages, transfers, conveyances, and assignments given may be declared and decreed to be null and void, and the property thereby conveyed be adjudged to be held under said respective mortgages and transfers in trust by the respective grantees and transferees or assignees, for the general creditors and all the creditors of said firm of Meyer & Co., pro rata, equally; as also, if the facts make it proper, the individual members of said firm. Subsequently a number of other creditors intervened and became parties. A demurrer to the amended bill was argued and overruled by the court, April 1, .1889. Answers and replications being filed, much testimony was taken, tending on one side to support the bill, and on the other to disprove the charges of fraud it contained.
The theory on which the bill was filed is that the several transfers and mortgages, real and chattel, made by John Meyer & Co. in October, 1886, when the firm was in failing circumstances, amounted to an assignment within the purview of the statutes of Illinois and the decisions
“Every provision in any assignment hereafter made in this state providing for the payment of one debt or liability in preference to another shall be void, and all debts and liabilities within the provisions of this act shall be paid pro rata from the assets thereof. ”
This section must be construed liberally for the accomplishment of the object or purpose in view on the part of the legislature at the time of the passage of the law; and what this object or purpose was is probably the underlying question in this case. It is proper to inquire, then, does the act contemplate the regulation of the conduct, for the benefit of creditors, of insolvent debtors, treating everything preferential as void; or is its scope limited to assignments not only contemplated, but executed? The latter view would seem to be the sound one, and to be upheld by authority. This section 13 of the Illinois assignment Ia,w is copied from, or at least is in the precise words of, section 39 of the statutes of Missouri concerning assignments, passed in 1855, and remaining on the statute-books of that state until 1865. The supreme court of Missouri in Shapleigh v. Baird, 26 Mo. 322, and Crow v. Beardsley, 68 Mo. 435, construing the section, reach conclusions in harmony with the one expressed in this case. Numerous decisions of the several states to the same effect upon analogous statutes might be cited, going in the direction- — indeed, to the extent--that legislative acts, such as the one now being considered, contemplate no such thing as a constructive assignment. It is important, however, to push the inquiry into the state of Illinois, and ascertain the holding of the highest judicial tribunal of this slate in construing the particular section of the assignment law in question; for the states must be permitted to construe their own constitutions and statutes. In cases where no construction has been given to a statute by the state courts, and the federal courts aro first called upon to interpret it, a subsequent and different construction by the stale court would not necessarily cause the construction first given by theUnitedBtates court tobeabandoned, and that of the state court adopted or acquiesced in. In such a case, however, the desire for harmony and the strong feeling of comity would generally induce a disposition on the part of tire federal courts, to avoid conflict with well-considerod decisions of the state courts, and acquiesce in them if there are lair and reasonable grounds for doing so. The supreme court of Illinois'has in a number of cases had this voluntary assignment law under consideration, and has repeatedly passed upon this identical thirteenth section. One of the beat considered of these eases is Preston v. Spaulding, 120 Ill. 208, 10 N. E. Rep. 903. In this case, which was decided March 22, 1887, it was held that, after the debtors had made up their minds to make an assignment of their prop-" erty for the benefit of their creditors, all conveyances, transfers, and other dispositions of their property or assets, made in view of their intended gen
“The subject-matter of the act was limited to ‘ voluntary assignments,’ and even if it had contained express provisions attempting to deal with or regulate involuntary assignments, or any subject other than the one embraced in the title, such provisions would have been void under section 13, art. 4, of the constitution. Por the same reason it must be held that every attempt to apply the act, or any of its provisions, by construction to any subject other than voluntary assignments, must be wholly unavailing.”
In speaking of chattel mortgages executed by the failing debtor, the same court proceeds to say:
“It is clear, then, that they [the chattel mortgages] did not constitute valid assignments for the benefit of creditors within the meaning of the statute; * * * that they were merely chattel mortgages executed for the sole benefit of the mortgagees, and creating no trust in favor of any of the creditors of the mortgagor. ”
And in Farwell v. Nilsson, 133 Ill. 45, 24 N. E. Rep. 74, where the supreme court of the state adopts the opinion filed in the case by Judge Moran of the appellate court, it is said:
“We have no involuntary assignment, and we know of no principle of law operative in this state that limits or controls an insolvent debtor in the distribution of his assets, provided they are applied in discharge of bona fide debts. ”
And, again, the court says:
“The statute relating to the assignment by debtors for the benefit of creditors, prohibiting preferences in such assignments, has no application to a case of this kind. Notwithstanding that statute, a debtor may pay one creditor in full, either in money or by sale of his property. That act applies only to conveyances of property to an assignee oi- trustee, in trust, to convert the same into money for the benefit of the creditors of the assignor, which can now only be made under that law.”
And further:
“To give to this act the scope and effect' here contended for would be to far exceed the legislative intent. The act contemplates no such thing as a con' structive assignment; and that, before the county court gets jurisdiction, an actual assignment must be made and recorded, as required by the act.”
Counsel for complainants have pressed upon this court with much earnestness and confidence the case of White v. Cotzhausen, 129 U. S. 329, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 309. That ease is not regarded as decisive of this. It was there held, referring to the Illinois voluntary assignment act, that the surrender by an insolvent debtor of the dominion over his entire estate, wdth an intent to avoid the operation of the act, and the transfer of the whole, or substantially the whole, of his property to a part of his creditors, in order to give them a preference over other creditors, whether made by one instrument or more, or w'hatever their form might be, operated as an assignment under that act, the benefit of which might be claimed by any unpreferred creditor who would take the proper steps in a court of equity to enforce the equality contemplated by it. And Preston v. Spaulding, supra, is cited as “ the leading case on this subject in the supreme court of Illinois.” That case-has already been referred to in this opinion as a well-considered one. It held:
“If one intends to make a conveyance of all his property for the benefit of his creditors convey a part one day, a part the next, and so proceed until all his property is appropriated according to the original intention, precisely the same end is accomplished as if a genera! assignment, had been made at the outset; and the law must visit the same penalty upon preferences in an assignment accomplished by these successive acts as if it had been done by a single deed.”
It will ’be remembered that in the Preston-Spauldiug Case there was finally a general assignment by deed, and it was because of this consummation that the court made the previous transfers and conveyances a part of the completed transaction. Probably nothing beyond this was