3 Wash. 734 | Wash. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The decision of this case seems to be left by the parties to depend upon a single question, viz., whether in this state a common-law assignment, made May 22,1890, hy an insolvent corporation, of all its property, to a trustee for the benefit of all its creditors, was valid and sufficient
The inquiry here is, then, simply whether the insolvent law of the code applied to a corporation. This law was a state voluntary bankruptcy act, and resulted, in the absence of fraud, in the final discharge of the debtor, which is not usual as applied to insolvent corporations. “ Every insolvent debtor may be discharged from his debts,” is the provision of the first section. The reason for this arbitrary release of debtors is, that it is not deemed good public policy that men who, while they have failed in business, have dealt honestly should be kept in perpetual fear in their future efforts to recover themselves financially by the threats of unsatisfied creditors. But this reason has no application to a corporation, the existence of which is based upon capital and property, and has no future when these are swept away by insolvency and the surrender of its assets for distribution to creditors. It may live for some purposes, but there is no object in keeping it alive and freeing it from
The view we here take is, we think, supported somewhat by the fact that both in the national bankruptcy acts, and in many, if not all, of the state insolvent laws, corporations are specifically mentioned, as coming within their provisions, the requirements as to debtors, and their duties, examinations, penalties, etc., being made applicable to the officers of the corporations. The statute of Nevada, en
As acts of this kind are in derogation of the' natural right of the owner of property to dispose of it as he sees fit, in the absence of fraud, they are to be construed strictly, and unless the intention to include a certain class of owners is clear they should not be held to apply.
It follows that the judgment is affirmed.
Anders, O. J., and Hoyt, Dunbar and Scott, JJ.,. concur.