70 Vt. 320 | Vt. | 1898
The plaintiff holds .two mortgages against Bliss, the insolvent debtor; one dated Oct. 1, 1894, on the goods and fixtures then in the debtor’s store, and on all other goods that he thereafter bought to replenish his stock, ■conditioned for the payment of a thousand-dollar note at one day’s date; and the other dated June 1, 1896, on only ■the goods and fixtures then in the store, conditioned for the •payment of a five-thousand dollar note at one day’s date.
On Nov. 3, 1896, the debtor was adjudged an insolvent on his own petition, and on the same day the defendant was appointed assignee of his estate, which was then assigned to him by the judge of the court of insolvency according to the statute in such case made and provided; and thereupon the defendant as such assignee took possession of all and singular the goods and fixtures then in the debtor’s store. After-wards, and before the 10th of said November, the plaintiff •■demanded said goods and fixtures of the defendant, who refused to give them up, but on the contrary, on said last-mentioned day, applied to the court of insolvency under V. S. 2108, representing that the plaintiff claimed to have a prior lien on all of said property by virtue of certain chattel -mortgages executed to him by the insolvent debtor, and a
The defendant claims that the action cannot be maintained, for that the proceedings in the court of insolvency draw the matter into that court, and that the plaintiff must seek his remedy there, and cannot have it elsewhere.
The statute made it the duty of the debtor to schedule the property in question, and to state the liens existing thereon; and the assignment conveyed to the assignee the equity of redemption therein. The section of the statute under which the order of sale was made provides that when it appears to the judge that the title to any portion of an estate that has come to the possession of an assignee is in dispute, and that the property is of a perishable nature and likely to deteriorate in value, he may, on the petition of the assignee, and after such notice to the claimant as he deems reasonable, order it sold under the direction of the assignee, who shall hold the funds received in place of the property disposed of ; and that the proceeds of the sales shall be considered the value of the property in any suit or controversy between the parties; but that the provision shall not prevent the recovery of the property from the possession of the assignee by an action of replevin commenced before the judge orders the sale.
If this section applies to mortgages, it must be conceded that it gave the judge discretionary power to make the
Judge Lowell said in Foster v. Ames, 2 B. R. at p. 465, that he always doubted whether section twenty-five of the Bankruptcy Act of 1867 was intended to apply to mortgages ; that its language seemed better adapted to persons claiming by title paramount. That section is much like the one under consideration, but differs in not making it necessary to an order of sale both that the property should be perishable and the title in dispute; either was sufficient; whereas under our statute, both are necessary. But he did not decide the question, as he found warrant under another section for ordering a sale. Had he not found such warrant elsewhere, and had the property been perishable, which it was not, he might have found the warrant in the twenty-fifth section.
The order in question, then, being authorized, the sale under it was effective to pass title to the purchaser free and clear of the mortgage liens. The statute does not declare this to be so, but that is the construction we put upon it; for it cannot be supposed that the intention was that the purchaser should take subject to the mortgages, thus apply
The property, therefore, has been lawfully converted into money, the mortgage liens thereon are gone, and the money is in the court of insolvency, and subject to its control, and the question is, whether the plaintiff is remitted to that fund for his remedy. We think he is. He certainly could not now proceed against the purchaser to foreclose his mortgages. Can he proceed against the assignee any better? for this suit, in effect, is to foreclose. According to the analogies of the law, he should now pursue the fund, and the statute provides him ample remedy for pursuing it, for section 2143 provides for application to the court of insolvency for the appointment of commissioners to hear and determine the matter in dispute and report to the court their finding in the case; and either party can appeal from their decision to the county court, where a trial by jury can he had. Sowles v. Bailey, 69 Vt. 515.
It is true that the language of section 2108 affords some ground for saying that its only purpose is to provide a way for saving the property pending litigation, without intending to control as to the forum; but the word “suit” is a generic term of broad signification, and applies to any proceeding in a court of justice by which a person pursues the remedy that the law affords him. The modes of trial may be various; but if the right is litigated between parties in a court of law, the proceeding by which the decision of the court is sought is a suit. Upshur County v. Rich, 135 U. S. at p. 474. In Calderwood v. The Estate of Calderwood, 38 Vt. 171, the words, “suit or proceeding,” in the enacting •clause of the statute removing disqualification of witnesses by reason of interest, and the word “action” intheproviso, and the word “suit” in a subsequent act providing that the former should not affect suits pending at such a time, were ¿eld to mean the same thing; and proceedings before com
On the final determination of such a suit, if favorable to the plaintiff, he would be entitled to have the fund applied to the extent of his right therein, towards the payment of his debts; and if he had a right to prove the residue, if any, he could apply to the court of insolvency under section 2074 for leave to do so.
This view does not conflict with Eyster v. Gaff, 91 U. S. 521, and is favored by Lindemann v. Ingham, 36 Ohio St. 1, and Buschman v. Hanna, (Md.) 18 Atl. Rep. 962. In Eyster v. Gaff, the only holding was that the Bankruptcy Act did not, of its own force, on the adjudication of bankruptcy, nullify a proceeding in a territorial court to foreclose a mortgage against the bankrupt.
The mortgage of June 1, 1896, is not valid against creditors, and consequently not against the assignee, who stands in the place of creditors. Its purpose was to secure the plaintiff for $700 then recently advanced to the debtor, and perhaps to further secure him. for the thousand-dollar note secured by the first mortgage, and for future advances, and for past and future indorsement. To accomplish this, the plaintiff took the five-thousand-dollar note specified in the condition of the second mortgage, and the oath thereto appended is, that the mortgage was given to secure that debt, and for no other purpose, and that the same was a just debt, honestly due and owing from the mortgagor to the mortgagee, which was not true. The plaintiff was not
The oath must conform to the purpose of the mortgage, and verify the truth, justice and validity of the debt or other liability sought to be secured thereby; but this oath cannot be said to do that, for the true character of the note is not disclosed by the mortgage, and therefore the oath as drawn did not and could not verify it as required. Tarbell v. Jones, 56 Vt. at p. 317; Sherman v. Estey Organ Co., 69 Vt. at p. 358; Boice v. Conover, (N. J. Eq.) 35 Atl. Rep. 402.
This is not like Gilbert v. Vail, 60 Vt. 261, and Enright and Fitch v. Amsden, 70 Vt. 183, for there the mortgages disclosed the true character of the liabilities, and the oaths were conformable thereto.
Judgment affirmed.