1. A person having made an assignment in favor of his creditors,
one of them in behalf of himself and such others as would unite
with him, filed his bill to set aside as fraudulent a previous
conveyance in favor of A. and to exclude from the benefit of the
assignment A. who, he alleged, was not a creditor. Several
creditors united as complainants. The bill was dismissed, and they
appealed.
Held that the matter in dispute is not the
entire fund, but their distributive shares thereof, and the amount
being less than $5,000, this Court has no jurisdiction.
2.
Terry v. Hatch, 93 U. S. 44, cited
and approved.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Boyle & Co., a mercantile firm doing business at Memphis,
Tenn. being insolvent, made, on the 17th of November, 1876, a
general assignment to J. A. Omberg for the benefit of all their
creditors. A deed of trust, in the nature of a mortgage, had been
previously executed, conveying some of the property of the firm as
security for a debt said to be owing to Jefferson Davis. At the
time of this assignment, the total indebtedness of the firm to
creditors other than Davis and another person who has since been
paid out of securities he held at the time,
was . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $17,233.63
The debt claimed to be due Davis was. . . 25,000.00
----------
Making a total of . . . . . . . . . . $42,233.63
Chatfield and Woods creditors of the firm to the amount of
$3,440.37, filed a bill in equity in one of the state courts of
Tennessee, on the 13th of January, 1877, against Boyle, Davis, and
others, the object of which was to set aside the deed of trust in
favor of Davis, and also to prevent him from participating in the
benefits of the general assignment, on the ground
Page 105 U. S. 232
that he was not in reality a creditor of the firm, but one of
the partners. This suit was brought, as alleged, in aid of the
assignment and in behalf of all the creditors of the firm who might
be entitled to come and join therein. Omberg, the assignee, was
also joined as a complainant. As to him, the allegations in the
bill are as follows:
"Complainant J. A. Omberg, as the assignee in said deed of
assignment, comes at the request of the creditors as aforesaid, and
claims the benefit of all the matters and circumstances in this
bill set up in behalf of all the creditors of Boyle & Co., and
especially in behalf of all those creditors who may be hereafter
made parties hereto, and may by proper averments and proof make
good their claim, to be paid out of the proceeds of the property
hereby proceeded against, and asks for them, and each of them, all
the relief, under and by virtue and in aid of said assignment, to
which they or either or each of them may as creditors by entitled
as against defendant Davis or other defendants."
During the pendency of the suit in the state court the property
held under the trust for the benefit of Davis was sold with the
consent of all parties, and realized $2,951.10, which is now in
court subject to any decree that may be finally rendered. The
assignee has also disposed of all the remaining property embraced
in the assignment, and in the distribution that has been made of
the proceeds, $3,403.81 was set apart for Davis, if he shall be
adjudged to be a creditor of the firm and not a partner. These two
sums, amounting in the aggregate to $6,354.91, constitute the
entire fund about which the dispute in the case arises.
On the 16th of March, 1877, the Powers Paper Company, Edwin
Hoole, and L. Snider & Sons, also creditors of the firm, were,
on their own petition, admitted as parties complainant. Their
claims were respectively as follows:
Powers Paper Company . . . . . $2,689.60
Edward Hoole . . . . . . . . . 1,232.61
L. Snider & Sons . . . . . . . 1,103.76
On the 23d of March, 1877, the following order was entered in
the suit:
"In this cause it appearing to the court by a statement of J. A.
Omberg that all the creditors who have demanded
Page 105 U. S. 233
of James A. Omberg, the assignee, to join in this litigation,
have come in and had themselves made parties therein, it is
therefore on motion, ordered that this bill be dismissed, so far as
said Omberg is concerned, and he go hence without day."
On the next day, March 24, S. A. Tower & Co. and H. B.
Graham & Brothers were, on their petition, made parties. Their
claims are as follows:
S. A. Tower & Co. . . . . . . . $887.68
H. B. Graham & Brothers. . . . 318.41
No other parties have ever appeared to claim the benefit of the
suit. The aggregate of all the several claims represented by all
the complainants is $9,672.43.
On the 4th of April, 1877, after Omberg had been dismissed from
the case, the remaining complainants united in a petition for the
removal of the suit to the Circuit Court of the United States for
the Western District of Tennessee, which was afterwards effected.
Answers were filed and testimony taken in the Circuit Court. Upon
final hearing the bill was dismissed. From the decree to that
effect all the complainants united in this appeal. The appellees
now move to dismiss because the matter in dispute does not exceed
the sum of $5,000. In support of this motion two grounds are relied
on. They are:
1. That the claims of the several complainants are separate and
distinct, and cannot be united for the purpose of making up the
amount necessary to give us jurisdiction. The effort in this
connection is to bring the case within the operation of the
principle under which motions to dismiss were granted in
Seaver v.
Bigelows, 5 Wall. 208;
Rich v.
Lambert, 12 How, 347;
Oliver v.
Alexander, 6 Pet. 143;
Stratton v.
Jarvis, 8 Pet. 4, and
Paving Co. v.
Mulford, 100 U. S. 147.
2. That the matter in dispute is not the whole amount of the
fund in court which is claimed by Davis, but only so much as would
be distributable to the complainants under the assignment, if Davis
is adjudged to be a partner and not a creditor. For this
Terry
v. Hatch, 93 U. S. 44, is
relied on.
Without considering the first of these propositions, we think it
clear the case comes within the last. These appellants on this
appeal represent no one but themselves. Their rights
Page 105 U. S. 234
here are just what Omberg asked for himself, that is to say,
such as belong to creditors who in this suit make good their claim
to be paid under the assignment out of the fund proceeded against.
The complainants do not necessarily represent all the creditors
entitled to the benefits of the assignment, neither have they
assumed anything of the kind. They ask only for such relief as
belongs to those who actually come in according to their
invitation. They are in no situation to appropriate to themselves
the whole of the fund. The other creditors may certainly abandon
their interest and permit it to go to Davis if they choose. The
complainants cannot compel them to take it whether they want it or
not. By not coming into the suit they, in effect, have elected not
to contend with Davis for their share, and to treat him as a
creditor, rather than a partner. When Omberg went out of the suit
all the creditors had come in who wanted him to proceed. Under
these circumstances, if the bill had been sustained, no opportunity
need have been given other creditors to come in. The court might
very properly have said that, as they had stayed out until all
risks of liability for costs and expenses were gone, they should
not then be admitted. Such being the case, a decree would have been
entered in favor of the complainants for their distributive shares
of the fund, and no more. The rest would have remained for Davis,
the same as though no suit had been begun. The fund is $6,354.91,
and the debts entitled to the benefit of the assignment,
$17,233.63, of which the complainants represent only $9,672.43.
Under this state of facts, the whole of the distributive shares of
the complainants, if they are successful, will be less than five
thousand dollars, not enough to give us jurisdiction. Upon an
appeal we will not consider whether others may come in if we
reverse the decree. We look only to the parties who are actually
before us. The case is therefore within the rule stated in
Terry v. Hatch, supra, and the motion to dismiss is
Granted.
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS, having been of counsel in the court below,
took no part in the decision of this motion.