71 Conn. 345 | Conn. | 1899
The judgment recovered by default in the Supreme Court of the State of New York cannot found a claim against the estate in the hands of the receiver. The only service of process upon the defendant having been made out of that State, there exists no personal obligation on its part to pay it.
The right of the Davies & Thomas Company, however, to present its original account against the defendant for allowance in the receivership proceedings in this State, was not prejudiced by its having put it into judgment in New York. That was necessary to secure the benefit of the attachment which had been lawfully made before those proceedings were commenced. Lawrence v. Batcheller, 131 Mass. 504. Our statute dissolving attachments made within sixty days before the appointment of a receiver of a corporation (Public Acts of 1895, p. 491), has no application to legal proceedings in other States.
There is no ground for the claim that the Davies & Thomas Company, after receiving notice of the appointment of the receiver in Connecticut, was put to an election whether to pursue its remedy in the New York courts or in those of this State. Whatever might be true, had it been a citizen of Connecticut, it had a right, as a citizen of Pennsylvania, to avail itself of the security which it had already obtained by attachment, as fully as if it had come by a mortgage, and should it prove insufficient to satisfy its demand, to maintain
The property thus attached naturally brought less than its fair market value at the sale on execution. Being, however, in the custody of the New York court, and a forced sale being the only legal mode of disposing of it to satisfy the judgment, the net proceeds were all for which the execution creditor was accountable in reduction of its demand.
Different considerations apply to the second attachment, and govern its consequences. It was made after the appointment of the receiver, and with notice of that fact. The decree under which he derived his title required the defendant to execute conveyances of any of its property which might be necessary and proper by way of further assurance. It did execute forthwith a conveyance to him of all its property in New York. The Davies & Thomas Company had notice of the decree, and therefore equitable notice that such a conveyance might have been made, a month before it made its second attachment.
An assignment of personal property, not followed by a change of possession, is voidable by attaching creditors, unless the assignee can give a satisfactory excuse for the want of delivery. Swift v. Thompson, 9 Conn. 63. The defect of title is due to a presumption of fraud derived from the consent of the assignee to a continuance of the appearance of ownership in the assignor. An assignment by an insolvent debtor for the benefit of his creditors generally is not within the reason of the rule. He cannot be presumed to intend to defraud any of them by a conveyance made in the interest of all. Nor is it certain that everything that is assigned will be accepted. The representative of the creditors is entitled to a reasonable time within which to decide whether any particular item of the property is worth taking, or not.
The suit now before us is one brought by a majority of the defendant’s stockholders for its dissolution, and counts upon a vote of the directors that its affairs ought to be wound up and a receiver appointed. The receiver’s failure to take possession of the goods upon which the second attachment was
The effect of such a transfer on goods in another State is not to be determined simply by the rule of comity which is applicable to extra-territorial assignments by operation of law; but rests on the general principles of jurisprudence as to the right of every one to dispose of what he owns. Egbert v. Baker, 58 Conn. 319; First National Bank v. Walker, 61 id. 154.
The Davies & Thomas Company has come into this State
The benefit of the first attachment can be lawfully retained. That of the second must be renounced, and the property taken upon it considered, as between the receiver and the Davies & Thomas Company, as assets of the estate which it has wrongfully converted, and for which it must account, before it can be allowed to share as a creditor in the estate. The measure of liability is the fair value of the goods at the date of the attachment, with interest. Oviatt v. Pond, 29 Conn. 479. As it had no equitable right to levy on them, it is immaterial that they brought less than their value at the sheriff’s sale.
If the Davies & Thomas Company pays the amount above stated to the receiver, it should be admitted to prove its claim upon its original account against the defendant, less the net proceeds of the goods sold under the first attachment. In ascertaining such proceeds, no deduction from the gross amount received from their sale should be made on account of fees or costs accruing under the second attachment. If it does not make such payment, its claim should be wholly disallowed. In re Greeley & Co., 70 Conn. 494; Cockerell v. Dickens, 3 Moo. P. C. C. 98, 132.
The Superior Court is advised that the Davies & Thomas Company is not entitled to prove its claim against the estate in the hands of the receiver, unless it first pays him the
No costs will be taxed in this court in favor of any party.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.