The case of Sloane against Chiniquy was originally an attachment against Chiniquy, levied on his property by an order from this court. It seems that the defendant availed himself of the statute of Minnesota, which enacts that in such a ease the debtor in attachment may mаke an assignment of all his effects, subject to execution, for the benefit of all his creditors who will execute and file releases of their claims against him, and that the assignment shall be filed in the district court of the state, and that the parries shall proceed about as in bankruptcy proceedings, dividing the property among those who should prove their debts, and release him from further liability. The hill in the present case is filed against the as-signee by the original plaintiff in this court, to restrain any further proceedings under that аssignment, and to declare the assignment void. The main argument in favor of declaring it void is that ‘the statute itself is void; that the act of the legislature of the state of
It is urged that this is a state insolvent law, and that by many decisions of the federal courts such insolvent laws are inapplicable to contracts made outside of the state where the law is to be enforced, and does not bind a party living outside of the state. The decisions to this effect аre not to be controverted. But they are limited to the
It is a well-recognized principle, among other things, thаt a state, if it does not impair the obligation of a contract, may provide for the distribution of the property of a debtor within the limits of the state. It is a very common tiling in a good many of the states, and it is according to the common law, apart from any stаtute, in the administration of a dead man’s estate, that all the creditors of that man living within the state should bo paid before a dollar of this money bo sent to a foreign administration. That is the principle so far as an insolvent corporation in one state is bеing pursued with regard to its assets in another state. We have been troubled in the states of my
A question was discussed, which is not before us, but about which I will express no opinion, which was decided by the supreme court of this state, that however fraudulent the purposes of the assignor may have been, or however he may have designed to conсeal his property, no attempt at impeachment of the assignment can be made, because, whether it is a good or bad assignment, it puts the matter into the hands of the court for administration, and when it gets into court it will administer the property as it ought to, notwithstanding any fraud or concealment that there might have been in the instrument of assignment. On that subject I desire to express no opinion, because it is not in this ease. There is an allegation in the bill of some defect in that respect, but that is denied, and there is no рroof properly before us that.it was not a fair and honest assignment.
The bill, therefore, to set aside the assignment is dismissed.
There is аnother question that comes up by the case before us: whether the circuit court of the United States should discharge this attachment, or whether it should go on and render a judgment. There is no question but that it has power to render a judgment, because the statute does not discharge a debt unless the party discharges it himself by means of releasing the debtor. As long as the plaintiff in the case chooses to stay out, and say, “I will not release,” he has a right to take a judgment which may at some time be effectual against the defendant.
There may be another question in case no creditor, or only two or three of them, release under the assignment, and a fund is left in the hands of the assignee. The supreme court of this state have held that such a fund may be arrested when proper рroceedings are had before it goes to the debtor. I don’t know exactly what order should be appropriately made to keep this plaintiff in a condition to seize that fund. Certainly, he has a right logo as far as a judgment; but whether that court can makе any other order, conditioned upon which it turns over the property to the assignee, or not, 1 am not prepared to say. That is a matter for future consideration.
The bill in this ease is dismissed, and the motion to discharge the garnishee in the other case is overruled.
