92 Ala. 432 | Ala. | 1890
This case comes before us on an appeal from a decretal order overruling a demurrer to the bill filed by F. D. Armour and others, against Rochester, as their alleged debtor. In this condition of the record, we must treat
Rochester was a retail merchant in Birmingham, and the complainants, Armour and others, who were wholesale merchants, were creditors of his in various sums, aggregating about one thousand dollars, due for merchandise sold to him, and due before this bill was filed. All these debts were contracted before Rochester confessed the judgments and executed the assignment after noticed.
Rochester continued in business until September 13, 1889. On that day, without previous suit or process, he confessed two judgments in the City Court of Birmingham; one in favor of the First National Bank of Birmingham for over five thousand .dollars, and the other in favor of R. J. Terry, for near two thousand dollars. Said confessed judgments were immediately recorded in the office of the probate court of Jefferson county, the county in which Birmingham has its situs. Such registration, under our statute, gives to the judgment “a lien upon all the property of the defendant in the county, which is subject to levy and sale under execution.”—Code of 1886, pp. 635-6. note; Decatur Chemical Works v. Moses, 89 Ala. 538.
Attached as an “exhibit” to the bill in this case is a copy of a general assignment made by Rochester to Allen, as trustee, in which he conveyed all his property, less his exemptions of personal properly, for the equal benefit of all his creditors. This assignment describes neither the creditors provided for, nor the amount of their several claims. The assignment bears date September 12, 1889, the certificate of acknowledgment and certificate of registration September 13. We infer from the averments of the bill that the judgment creditors and trustee claim that the assignment was not completely executed by delivery until September 13, and after the judgments had been confessed and filed for record. The assignee converted the personal property into money, and recognizing the prior lien of the judgments, paid them infull, leaving of the assigned effects in his hands greatly less than enough to pay the other creditors in full. It is not charged that the sums for which jxidgmenls .were confessed were not real, hona flcle debts.
As we have said, this is a bill by creditors of Rochester. They are creditors at large, not having reduced their claims to judgments. The defendants are Rochester, Allen, the trustee, and the two confessed-judgment creditors. The theory of the bill is, that the confessions of judgment and the assignment are parts of one purpose and transaction, and that they col
Considered in its entirety, the bill and exhibit clearly show that, by the confessions of judgment and the assignment, Rochester confessed his insolvency, turned over his effects for t he benefit, of his creditors, and ceased to do business.
There was a demurrer to the bill, which the chancellor overruled, and from that decretal order this appeal is prosecuted.
In the case of Holt v. Bancroft, 30 Ala. 193, the statute we are considering for the first time came before this court for interpretation. The facts of that case were, that on May 9, 1854, ITolt & Chambers, merchants, made a deed of trust, and thereby conveyed about one third of their merchandise for the security of one of their creditors. “At the time this conveyance was executed, the debtors intended to make a general assignment of all their effects for the benefit of all their creditors, and so informed the trustee; but this intention was not communicated to the preferred creditor. In pursuance of this intention, on May 17, 1854 (eight days after the first deed),
In Crawford v. Kirksey, 55 Ala. 282, 301, we drew a distinction between that case and the case of Holt v. Bancroft. We do not think the later case is opposed to the former. We may add, that in the case of Crawford v. Kirksey, the main question was not whether the two deeds constituí ed a general assignment, but whether the deed to Crawford was fraudulent.
In 1877, the legislature of Illinois enacted what is there called the “Voluntary Assignment Act.” Its language is: “Every provision in any assignment hereafter made in this State, providing for the payment of one debe, or liability in preference to another, shall be void, and all debts and liabilities within the provisions of the assignment shall be paid pro rata from the assets thereof.” It will be observed that, in this statute, the word assignment is used, without the qualifying adjective, general, which is employed in ours. The interpretation, however, which the statute has received in that State, makes their assignment the synonym of our general assignment. And so far as the question we have in hand is concerned, their ruling is precisely in point in the construction of our statute. In Preston v. Spaulding, 120 Ill. 208; s. c. 10 N.E. Rep. 903, the debtors had preferred certain of their creditors by confes
“It is clearly shown by the record, that as early as September 80, 1S82, they began preparing for the failure by’a secret transfer of real estate; and on that day and during the twenty-five days following, four conveyances were made of their individual real estate to near relatives, none of which were, however, placed upon the record till the day before the assignment, and various payments of money were made, during the «ame time, to relatives, on alleged indebtedness. After these transactions, and with a full knowledge of their impending failure, a meeting wilh their legal advisers was arranged for the evening‘of October 31, for the purpose of determining the measures to be adopted, and the shape tlieir failure was to assume. The meeting took place, and the determination was then formed to make a voluntary assignment, and to prefer the banks by giving them judgment notes. The right of a failing debtor to sell his property for a valuable consideration, to mortgage his property as security for a bona fide, indebtedness, and in the disposition of his property to prefer one or more creditors, to the extent of the bona fide indebtedness, has been recognized in this State ; but since the Yoluntary Assignment Act of 1877 all preferences by voluntary assignment have been void.
“It is not contended that, here, in the single instrument declaring the debtors’ intention to make a voluntary assignment of all their estate for the benefit of creditors, and which they acknowledged and recorded,, an express preference was made in favor of the judgment creditors ; so that it we are to be confined to the express provisions of that writing, the question would have to be resolved in the negative. If then, these preferences are to be held to be within the ‘provisions’ of the assignment, or ‘comprehended within its general terms,’ it must be because they fall within the intent and spirit of the act.
“It will be observed, this act does not assume to interfere in the slightest degree with the action of a debtor while he re*438 tains the dominion of his property. Notwithstanding this act, lie may now, as heretofore, in good faith sell his property, mortgage or pledge it to secure a bona fide debt, or create a lien upon it by operation of law, as, by confessing a judgment in favor of a bona fide creditor. But when he reaches the point where he is ready and determines to yield the dominion of the property, and makes an assignment for the benefit of his creditors under the statute, this act declares that the effect of such assignment shall be the surrender and conveyance of all his estate, not exempt by law, to his assignee — rendering void all preferences, and bringing about the distribution of his whole-estate equally among his bona fide creditors; and we hold that it is within the spirit and intent of the statute, that when the debtor has formed a determination to voluntarily dispose of his whole estate, and has entered upon that determination, it is immaterial into how many parts the performance or execution of his determination may be broken — the law will regard all his acts, having for their object and effect the disposition of his estate, as parts of a single transaction; and on the execution of the formal assignment, it will, under the statute, draw to it, and the ,law will regard as embraced within its provisions, all prior acts of the debtor, having for their object and purpose the voluntary transfer or disposition of his estate to or for creditors; and if any preferences are shown to have been made or given by the debtor to one creditor over another in-such disposition of his estate, full effect will be given the assignment, and such preferences will, in a court of equity, be declared void, and set aside, as in fraud of the statute.
“The application of the law, as thus interpreted, to the facts of the case, is not difficult. The debtors, conscious of their hopeless insolvency, and determined to make disposition of their whole estate to and for their creditors, entered upon the execution and performance thereof. Claiming to be indebted to some of their immediate relatives, they made preferential payments and conveyances of real estate directly to such relatives in satisfaction of such alleged indebtedness; and then, with one hand, they proceeded to make and deliver a series of judgment notes, for the avowed purpose of preferring certain of their creditors, among whom were appellants, and, with the other hand, made a deed of assignment- for the-benefit of creditors generally, in form free from legal defect. Both these operations- — the making and delivering of the-judgment notes and the preparation of the deed of assignment- — are shown to have been carried on at one and the same time by different members of the debtor firm; but so-skillfully timed were these different steps, that the favored*439 creditors had just sufficient time to take their judgment notes into the different courts in Chicago, and there have judgments entered thereon, and executions issued, and placed in the hands of-the executing officers, to perfect a lien upon personal property of the debtors, before the deed of assignment was placed on file.’’
We have quoted thus largely from the Illinois case, because of the striking resemblance of many features of that case to those presented in the one we have in hand. Its moral tone is high, and the ruling fends to promote honesty and fair dealing, and to the healthful enforcement of beneficent, remedial legislation, called into existence by the behests of legitimate commerce. The world can not be too often told that in judicial administration, as in morals, that which can not be accomplished directly, can not be attained by indirect means.
In White v. Cotzhaven, 129 U. S. 329, the Illinois statute came before the Supreme Court of the United States, and in an able opinion by Harlan, J., the principles of the case of Preston v. Spaulding were not only followed, but were emphatically approved. In this case, we need not extend the principle as far as was done in the case last cited.
The following authorities assert substantially the same doctrine.—Kellogg v. Richardson, 19 Fed. Rep. 70; Clapp v. Ditman, 19 Ib. 15; Perry v. Corby, Ib. 737; Clapp v. Nordmeyer, 25 Fed. Rep. 71; Wilks v. Walker, 22 So. Car. 108; Appeal of Miners Nat. Bank, 57 Penn. St. 193.
In Mississippi it seems there is no such statute.—Estes v. Gunter, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1275.
In what ve -have said, it is not our intention to overrule or qualify our former rulings, in which we have held that a debtor, not able to pay ail his debts, may, by absolute sale, pay part of his debts, and leave himself unable io pay his other debts, provided the sale is for the reasonably fair value of the property sold, and the seller reserves no benefit to himself. Our statute does not interdict such sale.—Crawford v. Kirksey, 55 Ala. 282; Warren v. Jones, 68 Ala. 449; Heyer v. Bromberg, 74 Ala. 524; Hodges v. Coleman, 76 Ala. 103; Chipman v. Stern, 89 Ala. 207. If it be desirable to change this rule in the interest of commerce, the legislature alone has power to do it.
The confessions of judgment in favor of the bank and Terry were, in no sense, either an extinguishment of the debts, or a vesting of title to property in them. The debts remained. The only effect was to give them a better security; to give them a preference, if the liens be held good. To allow them to reap such advantage would destroy all that is useful in
Affirmed.