10 N.J. Eq. 13 | New York Court of Chancery | 1854
If the legality of this transaction can be maintained, then it follows that after a bank has become so hopelessly insolvent that the directors have been forced to the conclusion that it is incumbent upon them át once to close the doors of the bank, and abandon the
The object of “ the act to prevent frauds by incorporated companies” is to secure to the creditors of such institutions an equal distribution of its assets. This is the primary object of the statute. Any act done with the view and for the purpose of defeating this object, is a fraud upon the act, and is illegal.
The primary object of this act being the same as that of the bankrupt laws, in giving a construction to it we may properly examine those general principles which have been established by the courts in reference to trans
Let us see, then, how the transaction in question will bear the test of those general principles which the courts have applied to like acts under bankrupt laws.
In the case of Ogden and Thomas v. A. Jackson, 1 Johns. Rep. 378, Spencer, J., delivering the opinion of the court, says, “ Courts of law consider the properly of the bankrupt completely at his disposal before the act of bankruptcy committed, so far as to protect a creditor in the receipt of money or the acquisition of goods, if done in the usual course of business indeed, if money be obtained, or security given, when a bankruptcy is inevitable, and even contemplated by the bankrupt, such acts are valid, if the effect of measures taken by the creditor. It will not, however, be permitted that a person, insolvent at the time, and contemplating an act of bankruptcy, should parcel out his estate to such creditors as he may see fit to prefer; this is opposed to the very genius of the bankrupt laws, which proceed upon a principle of equality and a just distribution.” Also Harrison v. Sterry, 5 Cranch 301.
These decisions were made in reference- to the bankrupt
In Alderson and others’ Assignees v. Temple, 4 Burr. 2240, Lord Mansfield says, “ if a bankrupt in course of payment pays a creditor, this is a fair advantage in the course of trade; or if a creditor threatens legal diligence, and there is no collusion, or begins to sue a debtor, and he makes an assignment of part of his goods, it is a fair transaction, and what a man might do without having any bankruptcy in view.” But it never entered into the head of any judge to say, “ that a man, in contemplation of an act of bankruptcy, could sit down and dispose of all his effects to the use of different creditors, for that would be a fraud upon the acts of bankruptcy. But if done in a course of trade, and not fraudulent, it may be supported.”
How can it be said, that this was a payment made in the usual course of dealing 1 It was the case of an ordinary deposit in the bank. No demand was made by the creditor. It was not made in the ordinary way. The payment was not in money, but in promissory notes. It was not made to the creditor, or to his authorized agent. It was this, and nothing more or less,—one of the directors of the bank put the note in his pocket to deliver to the creditor, for the purpose of giving him a preference, to which he was not entitled by any diligence of his own.
See, also, Linton, assignee, v. Bartlet, 8 Wil. 47; Harman v. Fisher, Cowp. 124.
But it appears to- me that the transfer of these notes was in direct violation of the second section of the act.
Again. It was asked, in argument, where was the necessity of the act providing that an injunction should be issued to restrain the company, its ofiicers and agents, from paying out, selling, assigning, or transferring any of the estate, moneys, funds, &c., of the said company, if such transfers were void without the injunction ? The answer, I think, is obvious. The injunction prohibits all payments and transfers. Without the injunction, they were all valid, except such as were fraudulent; and all were fraudulent which were made in contemplation of bankruptcy, and for the purpose not of paying their debts in the ordinary course of business, but to defeat the object of the act, and, in view of insolvency, giving an undue preference to particular creditors. It is very plain to be seen that a bank may be in such a condition as to render it very proper for the court to interfere by injunction under the act; and yet, without such interference, the directors might go on bona fide in the ordinary transaction
The complainants are entitled to a decree in their favor.