78 Mass. 365 | Mass. | 1859
Many of the questions raised in the argument of the present case were decided by the court in the case of Silloway v. Columbia Ins. Co. 8 Gray, 199, in which the construction given to the St. of 1851, c. 206,was, that the remedy under the statute might be by a bill in equity, and that it might be instituted by a creditor for himself alone, in this respect differing from what is usually termed a creditors’ bill. It was also held that the purpose, as directly expressed, was by this process to reach property, and rights to property, legal or equitable, that were .not attachable by previous existing laws. Hence in that case it was held that where a foreign corporation was a debtor to a creditor residing in this commonwealth, and had no property in this commonwealth which could be attached, but had in the hands of their agent here a large amount of promissory notes payable to them, their property in these notes might be reached by a proceeding in equity, making the debtor a party and compelling him to retain the property of the foreign corporation in his hands to be applied to the discharge of their debt due to a creditor here. It was not considered necessary that the claim of the creditor should have been reduced to a judgment, or that an execution should have been issued and a return of nulla bona indorsed thereon. The view which the court has taken of this statute has been that it was more in the nature of an extension of the trustee process, or attachment of property not previously attachable by an individual creditor to secure his debts, than of the proceedings known as a creditors’ bill.
The further inquiry is, whether there was any property or interest so situated here that it could be reached by this process. The party sought to be charged as a trustee holding property or interest of the foreign debtor, in the present case, is not an agent of such debtor holding notes of other persons belonging to him, as was the case of Silloway v. Columbia Ins. Co. The relation of Brigham to the debtor is, taking the case most favorably for the plaintiff, that of a debtor to the debtor of the plaintiff on a negotiable note held by the payee, or by some third person; and by which is left uncertain. We may at once lay out of