G, being embarrassed, assigned his property, amounting in value
to more than $5,000, to S for the benefit of his creditors, with
preferences in favor of E to the amount of $10,000. B, an
unpreferred creditor, sued out a writ of attachment for $3,000,
which was followed by similar writs on behalf of other creditors. E
filed a bill in equity against G and S and B, and other attaching
creditors, to enjoin a sale under the attachments and to have the
assignment declared valid, but during the progress of the suit
dismissed the suit as to the other attaching creditors. The bill
was dismissed on the ground that the assignment was made to hinder
and delay creditors. E appealed to this Court. On a motion to
dismiss on the ground that the claim of B was not sufficient to
give this Court jurisdiction.
Held that the court had
jurisdiction, the suit being brought not simply to defeat B's
attachment, but to establish the assignment and make it available
for E's benefit.
Motion to dismiss. The case is stated in the opinion of the
Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a motion to dismiss, on the ground that the value in
dispute does not exceed $5,000. The record shows this:
On the 25th of March, 1882, S. H. Gunter, a merchant doing
business at Sardis, Mississippi, being unable to pay his debts in
full, made an assignment of his stock of goods on hand, and the
debts due him by note and book account, to S. G. Spain for the
benefit of his creditors, but with a preference in favor of Estes
& Doan to the amount of $10,000 on a debt due them of $12,000
or over. Other creditors to a much smaller amount in the aggregate
were also preferred. The
Page 121 U. S. 184
stock of goods was valued at over $12,000, and the notes and
accounts were nominally more than $25,000.
A day or two after the assignment, Bickham & Moore and three
other firms sued out writs of attachment on their respective claims
against Gunter, and seized the assigned property. The attachment in
favor of Bickham & Moore was first issued for a debt of $3,000,
and levied on a part only of the stock. The other creditors levied
on that taken under this prior attachment, and also on the rest.
The ground of the attachments was that the assignment had been made
to hinder and delay creditors, and was therefore void. While the
property taken under these attachments was in the hands of the
sheriff, Estes & Doan, on the 17th of April, brought this suit
against Spain, the assignee, the several attaching creditors, and
the other preferred creditors, to enjoin a sale of the property
under the attachments, to have a receiver appointed to take charge
of the property, and convert it into money pending the suit, to
have the assignment declared valid with its preferences, and for a
payment to Estes & Doan of the $10,000 to which they were
entitled according to its terms. To this bill none of the
defendants appeared except the attaching creditors, and they filed
a joint answer in which they set up the fraudulent character of the
assignment. Spain, the assignee, was served with process, but he
did not appear, and as to him the bill was taken for confessed.
Upon the filing of the bill, the injunction prayed for was
granted and a receiver appointed to take charge of the property and
convert it into money, the proceeds to abide the event of the suit.
From an affidavit of that receiver filed in support of our
jurisdiction, it appears that he has already realized more than
$5,300, which has been paid into the registry of the court, or for
which he is accountable. In the progress of the cause, Estes &
Doan voluntarily dismissed the bill as to all the attaching
creditors except Bickham & Moore, and from that time on they
and Spain, the assignee, were the only defendants in court. On the
3d of March, 1884, the court, after a hearing of the cause, "being
satisfied that complainants are not entitled to the relief sought,"
dissolved
Page 121 U. S. 185
the injunction and dismissed the bill. From the opinion of the
court, which has been sent up with the transcript, it appears that
this was done because the evidence showed that the assignment was
made to hinder and delay creditors, and was therefore void. This
was, of course, equivalent to a decision that Estes & Doan
could not be paid their preferred debt out of the fund in court in
accordance with the terms of the assignment. From that decree this
appeal was taken.
The suit was brought not only to defeat the attachment of
Bickham & Moore, but to establish the assignment and make it
available for the payment of the preference in favor of Estes &
Doan to the extent of $10,000, if the assigned property produced
that sum. It has produced $5,300, and there is nothing to show that
more may not be realized from it hereafter. Spain, the trustee, is
a party to the suit, and the effect of the decree is not only to
prevent him from paying to Estes & Doan the amount claimed by
Bickham & Moore under their attachment, but anything besides.
The decree is not that Bickham & Moore be paid their debt, but
that nothing be paid to the complainants. The distribution of the
fund in court is to be made hereafter as law and justice may
require. The effect of what has been done is to defeat the claim
which Estes & Doan have set up in their bill, and, so far as
now appears, it matters not to them what disposition is made of the
assigned property. That can be determined hereafter when the rights
of other parties shall be presented in proper form. The case is
therefore in principle like
Shields v.
Thomas, 17 How. 2,
58
U. S. 3;
Market Company v. Hoffman,
101 U. S. 112;
The Connemara, 103 U. S. 754;
The Mamie, 105 U. S. 773;
Davies v. Corbin, 112 U. S. 36.
The motion to dismiss is overruled.