49 P. 61 | Okla. | 1897
"An insolvent debtor may, in good faith, execute an assignment of property to one or more assignees, in trust, towards the satisfaction of his creditors in conformity to the provisions of this title, subject, however, to the provisions of this code, relative to trusts and fraudulent transfers, and to the restrictions imposed by law upon assignments by special partnerships, by incorporations, or by other specific classes of persons: Provided, however, that such assignment shall not be valid if it be upon, or contain any trust or condition, by which any creditor is to receive a preference or priority over any other creditor; but in such case, the property of the insolvent shall become a trust fund to be administered in equity, in the district court, and shall inure to the benefit of all the creditors in proportion to their respective claims or demands."
The contention of counsel for defendants in error being, that the two instruments, the bill of sale and chattel mortgage, and all the transactions connected with them, were contemporaneous, and the firm being in failing circumstances, amounted to an assignment within the purview of this statute. That when an insolvent debtor makes a general distribution of all his property and effects, whether to all or only a part of his creditors, thereby abandoning his business or putting himself in such situation that it is impossible for him to continue it, he has made a voluntary assignment, in effect, under the assignment law; and this, whether the instrument by which the operation is effected be denominated an assignment, or mortgage, or bill of sale, or whether by several of either or both, so long as the instrument or instruments *332 employed by the debtor, whatever called, works an absolute transfer, substantially, of all the property and effects of an insolvent, to another or others, with a design on his part that it shall do so, and that his connection with the business shall cease, it is an assignment under the statute.
Is this the meaning of our voluntary assignment law, if interpreted by the usual rules and canons of interpretation, and was such the intention of the legislature in enacting it? Unenlightened and unembarrassed by somewhat conflicting judicial decisions, we would have no difficulty in determining the meaning and effect of our assignment laws, or in answering the above question, involving the rights of the parties in this controversy; as we should conclude that, unless the position of defendants in error be untenable, there could be no conditions surrounding an insolvent debtor or his estate upon which the provisions of § 4, ch. 27, of the statutes could operative. That section puts no limitation on the amount of property, which a debtor may use in payment, or as security for the payment, of a debt to one creditor in preference to another.
It does not limit its operation to those only who, making such payment, or giving such security, continue or intend to continue in business, nor does it prohibit such payment or security, by way of preference, where the debtor thereby puts himself in such situation that it is impossible for him to continue his business; nor can it be said that it was not intended to include or apply to insolvent debtors, for none but insolvent debtors would need to make preferences or require the sanction of law therefor.
The general scheme and plan of our assignment law, *333 as we would deduce the same from the plain language of its various provisions, would seem to comprehend no change as to the right of the debtor to control and dispose of his property, directly, for the payment, or in security, of his debts; but that under § 4, ch. 27, he might, as theretofore, in good faith, sell his property, mortgage or pledge it, to secure abona fide debt. That it recognized the rights of creditors to result from their vigilance, and that by being vigilant they might require the debtor, whose estate would not be sufficient to pay all his debts in full, to satisfy or secure their particular demands, in full, though it should result in reducing the pro rata amount which other creditors might be able to acquire, out of the estate, and that such debtor might lawfully satisfy in full the debts and demands of such vigilant creditors; but that when such debtor reached the point where he was ready and determined to yield the dominion of his property, and did not desire to make preference of one creditor over another, but did desire that his entire estate should be equally distributed for the benefit of all his creditors, he might avail himself of the provisions of the assignment law, and by placing his entire estate in trust for the benefit of all his creditors, prevent any of such creditors from acquiring a preference, by attachments, executions or other processes of law.
It would seem to have been the intention of the legislature not to take away any right which the debtor had at the common law, but to extend his dominion over his estate and to provide a means whereby he might voluntarily protect such assets from enforced preferences, by any of his creditors, and save the same for equal distribution among all. In no sense, does the language of *334 the statute indicate an intention to compel an involuntary or compulsory distribution of the insolvent's estate. An absolute conveyance, or a mortgage, does not come within the requirements of the instrument by which it provides that the estate shall be transferred. It requires the transfer to be in trust, and that it shall be to one or more assignees, who may execute the trust. It provides when a court of equity may take charge of the insolvent estate and distribute it among all his creditors, viz: when under the instrument of assignment, for which it provides, "any creditor is to receive a preference or priority over any other creditor." Construing this statute in connection with § 4, ch. 27, and giving to each the natural and plain meaning of the language employed, and that it was the intention of the legislature that both should run together and be operative, and this we must do, we could not construe them to mean otherwise than that an insolvent debtor has two ways in which he may dispose of his estate, first, under § 4, ch. 27, by using the same to pay or secure his debts due to one or any number of his creditors; but if he shall choose or desire to distribute his estate equally to all his creditors, he may do so under the assignment law; and that if he so elects, he must distribute the same equally to all and cannot create preferences in favor of any.
We are not, however, left to depend upon our own reasonings and conclusions, as to the meaning of the language of the statute. This, and analogous statutes, have received the interpretation of nearly every court in the country, and the great weight of authority is in accord with the views herein expressed. It fact, the authorities would seem to be practically unanimous in holding that, notwithstanding such assignment law, an *335
insolvent debtor may dispose of his estate by other modes of conveyance than by the assignment therein provided for, and may make preference of certain of his creditors to the exclusion of others. The course of decisions, and the discussion therein of this question, is so familiar to the bench and bar, that a review of the authorities herein could serve no useful purpose, and we content ourselves with simply citing a few of the most recent decisions. (Union Bank Chicago v. Kansas City Bank,
In this last case, the present learned chief justice, speaking for the court, used this language:
"After a careful review of all the authorities at our disposal, while we find that some of the courts have so construed the assignment laws of the several states, as being against the proposition that a creditor may in good faith transfer all his property for a payment of a part of *336 his indebtedness, yet we are of the opinion that such construction is strained and not in harmony with the intention of the law makers who enacted the statute. * * If the legislatures of the several states, which have enacted assignment laws, had intended to prevent a person in failing circumstances from using his property in the payment of such of his bona fide debts as he might desire, they could easily have found language to express such intention. The very fact that the statutes are not clearly susceptible of such construction is a good reason for not so interpreting them."
The rule contended for by defendants in error has been upheld in the case of Straw v. Jenks, 6 Dak. 414. In that case, the direct opposite of what we have shown to be the general rule, was sustained, and it was there held, under a statute identical in language with our own, that: "Where an insolvent debtor mortgages all his property to one creditor and puts the mortgagee in possession, he divests himself of all title therein, but the mortgage becomes, in effect, an assignment for the benefit of all the creditors," and counsel for defendants in error contend that our statute, in relation to assignments, was adopted from the statutes of the territory of Dakota, after the decision in Straw v. Jenks; that such adoption carried with it the construction placed upon it by the decision in that case, and made such construction a part of the statute, and that such construction should be followed by this court; that upon the authority of that case, the conclusion of this court and the rule established in Jaffray v. Wolf, supra, must be overruled and reversed. If the rule, thus contended for, that the previous construction of an adopted statute is a part of the statute, must prevail, then it would not avail to show that the authorities upon which that case was based did not support its conclusion; or that the conclusion of the *337 court resulted from a clear misinterpretation of the authorities, which it cited, and upon which it relied. That its conclusion has been almost universally condemned as unsound; that nearly every court whose decision was cited therein, has since repudiated the interpretation placed upon such decision therein. It would be a sufficient answer to the position of defendants in error, to say, that no decision is conclusive anywhere, except as to its application of the law to the facts in the particular case before it, and that the principle of the case of Straw v. Jenks, applicable to the facts therein stated, is clearly distinguishable from the case at bar. In this case, there is no element of trust. In Straw v. Jenks there were several mortgages to different mortgagees, and the property was placed in the hands of an agent or trustee in trust for the purpose of selling and dividing the proceeds among the several mortgagees. In Sandwich Manufacturing Co. v. Max, 58 N.W. 14,supra, the supreme court of South Dakota, in expressly overruling Straw v. Jenks, says:
"It is quite probable that the opinion of the learned judge, which was elaborate and instructive, laid down some propositions not necessary to a decision of that case upon the facts presented, and that the law which might perhaps have properly decided that case, does not, necessarily, this. In that case, the mortgagors made several chattel mortgages at practically the same time, to as many different creditors. They were all immediately placed in the hands of an agent or trustee for enforcement. The acts were all so nearly simultaneous, and so closely related to each other, as to suggest the deliberate intention of the mortgagor to thus create a trust in such agent, or trustee, for the benefit of such preferred creditors."
Conceding that the case of Straw v. Jenks is applicable and in point upon the main question involved in this *338
case, we are not prepared to say that the doctrine of adoption sought to be invoked by defendents in error can be successfully invoked in this case. We cannot say, judicially, that the statute of assignment of this territory was, in a legal sense, adopted from the statute of the territory of Dakota. It is true that it is the exact transcript of the Dakota statute, but there is nothing in the legislative enactments of this territory which affirmatively shows a legislative intent of adoption from that territory; and as the statute is substantially that of many of the older states, and accurately the same as that of some, having no legislative action or declaration to inform us, we cannot say that the legislature of this territory intended to adopt it from the territory of Dakota, with the construction that might there have been given to it. Nor can the doctrine apply in this case for the reason that the essential elements upon which it is based are here totally wanting. The doctrine itself is but founded upon a presumption, that is, that where one state or sovereignity adopts a statute of another state or sovereignity, which has already received a known and definite construction in its courts, it is presumed to adopt the construction thus given. (Ballance v. Rankins, 54 Amer. Decis. 414). The essential elements upon which the presumption is based is, that it has already received a known and definite construction. The construction must have been fixed and uniform and must have been so long established as to have been known, or so that it reasonably might have been known, to the legislature adopting it. (Hunter v. Truckee Lodge,
As the legislature has, by an act approved March 8, 1895, (Session Laws 1895, p. 106), removed all occasion for future controversy over the question involved in this case, and as the rights of all the parties to this controversy and of all other parties to matters pending in litigation, arising out of like transactions, have attached since the decision of this court inJaffray v. Wolf was rendered, and such rights involved in pending litigation may be presumed to have been acquired or to have attached on the faith of that decision, we would, though much less satisfied than we are, of the correctness of the views and conclusions herein stated, hesitate long before adopting contrary views, which could result only in the divesting of rights and interests acquired in good faith and for valuable considerations.
For the reasons stated, we are of the opinion that the law of this case was correctly stated by the chief justice inJaffary v. Wolf, supra, and it therefore follows that the judgment of the court below was erroneous and should be reversed.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the court below be reversed and judgment is herein rendered in *340 this case for the defendants and against the plaintiffs, and it is further ordered that all funds derived from the sale of the property taken possession of by the receiver appointed by the court below in this action, and now in the possession of said receiver, or the clerk of said court, be immediately turned over to the defendant, Rebecca A. Smith.
Keaton, J., who was of counsel, not sitting; Dale, C. J., and McAtee, J., concurring; Bierer, J., dissenting.