With regard to the operation of a voluntary or common law
assignment of his property by an insolvent debtor for the benefit
of his creditors upon property situated in other states, there is a
general consensus of opinion that it will be respected, except so
far as it comes in conflict with the rights of local creditors, or
with the laws or public policy of the state in which it is sought
to be enforced.
Page 173 U. S. 625
With respect to statutory assignments of the property of an
insolvent debtor, the prevailing American doctrine is that a
conveyance under a state insolvent law operates only upon property
within the territory of that state, and with respect to property in
another state it is given only such effect as the laws of that
state permit, and in general must give way to claims of creditors
pursuing their remedies there.
The execution and delivery by Merrill & Company to the
Security and Trust Company in Minnesota of an assignment of their
property for the benefit of their creditors, made under the
insolvent laws of that state, and the acceptance thereof by the
assignee and its qualification thereunder, and the notice thereof
to Mudge & Sons in Massachusetts, who held personal property
belonging to the said assignors, did not vest in the assignee such
a title to that property that it could not, after such notice, be
lawfully seized by attachment in an action instituted in
Massachusetts by creditors of the insolvents who were citizens of
New York, and who had notice of the assignment, but had not proved
their claims against the assigned estate, nor filed a release
thereof.
This was an action originally instituted in the District Court
for the Second Judicial District of Minnesota by the Security Trust
Company, as assignee of the D. D. Merrill Company, a corporation
organized under the laws of Minnesota, against the firm of Dodd,
Mead & Co., a partnership resident in New York, to recover the
value of certain stereotyped and electrotyped plates for printing
books, upon the ground that the defendants had unlawfully converted
the same to their own use. The suit was duly removed from the state
court to the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Minnesota, and was there tried. Upon such trial, the following
facts appeared:
The D. D. Merrill Company having become insolvent and unable to
pay its debts in the usual course of business, on September 23,
1893, executed to the Security Trust Company, the plaintiff in
error, an assignment under and pursuant to the provisions of
chapter 148 of the Laws of 1881 of the Minnesota, which assignment
was properly filed in the office of the clerk of the district
court. The trust company accepted the same, qualified as assignee,
took possession of such of the property as was found in Minnesota,
and disposed of the same for the benefit of creditors, the firm of
Dodd, Mead & Co. having full knowledge of the execution and
filing of such assignment.
Page 173 U. S. 626
At the date of this assignment, the D. D. Merrill Company was
indebted to Dodd, Mead & Co. of New York, in the sum of
$1,249.98, and also to Alfred Mudge & Sons, a Boston
co-partnership, in the sum of $126.80, which they duly assigned and
transferred to Dodd, Mead & Co., making the total indebtedness
to them $1,376.78.
Prior to the assignment, the D. D. Merrill Company was the owner
of the personal property for the value of which this suit was
brought. This property was in the custody and possession of Alfred
Mudge & Sons at Boston, Massachusetts, until the same was
attached by the sheriff of Suffolk County, as hereinafter
stated.
The firm of Alfred Mudge & Sons was, prior to March 8, 1894,
informed of the assignment by the Merrill Company, and at about the
date of such assignment a notice was served upon them by George E.
Merrill to the effect that he (Merrill) took possession of the
property in their custody for and in behalf of the Security Trust
Company, assignee aforesaid.
On March 8, 1894, Dodd, Mead & Co. commenced an action
against the D. D. Merrill Company in the Superior Court of the
County of Suffolk upon their indebtedness, caused a writ of
attachment to be issued, and the property in possession of Mudge
& Sons seized upon such writ. A summons was served by
publication in the manner prescribed by the Massachusetts statutes,
although there was no personal service upon the Merrill Company.
The Security Trust Company, its assignee, was informed of the
bringing and pendency of this suit and the seizure of the property,
prior to the entering of a judgment in said action, which judgment
was duly rendered August 6, 1894, execution issued, and on
September 27, 1894, the attached property was sold at public
auction to Dodd, Mead & Co., the execution creditors, for the
sum of $1,000.
Upon this state of facts, the circuit court of appeals certified
to this Court the following questions:
"First. Did the execution and delivery of the aforesaid deed of
assignment by the D. D. Merrill Company to the Security Trust
Company, and the acceptance of the same by
Page 173 U. S. 627
the latter company, and its qualification as assignee
thereunder, vest said assignee with the title to the personal
property aforesaid, then located in the State of Massachusetts, and
in the custody and possession of said Alfred Mudge & Sons?"
"Second. Did the execution and delivery of said assignment and
the acceptance thereof by the assignee, and its qualification
thereunder in the manner aforesaid, together with the notice of
such assignment which was given, as aforesaid, to Alfred Mudge
& Sons prior to March 8, 1894, vest the Security Trust Company
with such a title to the personal property aforesaid on said March
8, 1894, that it could not on said day be lawfully seized by
attachment under process issued by the superior court of Suffolk
County, Massachusetts, in a suit instituted therein by creditors of
the D. D. Merrill Company, who were residents and citizens of the
State of New York, and who had notice of the assignment, but had
not proven their claim against the assigned estate nor filed a
release of their claim?"
82 F. 1005.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case raises the question whether an assignee of an
insolvent Minnesota corporation can maintain an action in the
courts of Minnesota for the conversion of property formerly
belonging to the insolvent corporation which certain New York
creditors had attached in Massachusetts and sold upon execution
against such corporation. The question was also raised upon the
argument how far an assignment executed in Minnesota, pursuant to
the general assignment law of that state by a corporation there
resident is available
Page 173 U. S. 628
to pass personal property situated in Massachusetts as against
parties resident in New York who, subsequent to the assignment, had
seized such property upon an attachment against the insolvent
corporation.
The assignment was executed under a statute of Minnesota, the
material provisions of which are hereinafter set forth. The
instrument makes it the duty of the assignee
"to pay and discharge, in the order and precedence provided by
law, all the debts and liabilities now due or to become due from
said party of the first part, together with all interest due and to
become due thereon, to all its creditors who shall file releases of
their debts and claims against said party of the first part,
according to chapter 148 of the General Laws of the Minnesota for
the year 1881, and the several laws amendatory and supplementary
thereof, and if the residue of said proceeds shall not be
sufficient to pay said debts and liabilities and interest in full,
then to apply the same, so far as they will extend, to the payment
of said debts and liabilities and interest, proportionately on
their respective amounts, according to law and the statute in such
case made and provided, and if, after the payment of all the costs,
charges, and expenses attending the execution of said trust, and
the payment and discharge in full of all the said debts of the
party of the first part, there shall be any surplus of the said
proceeds remaining in the hands of the party of the second part,
then, third, repay such surplus to the party of the first part, its
successors and assigns."
The operation of voluntary or common law assignments upon
property situated in other states has been the subject of frequent
discussion in the courts, and there is a general consensus of
opinion to the effect that such assignments will be respected
except so far as they come in conflict with the rights of local
creditors or with the laws or public policy of the state in which
the assignment is sought to be enforced. The cases in this Court
are not numerous, but they are all consonant with the above general
principle.
Black v.
Zacharie, 3 How. 483;
Livermore
v. Jenckes, 21 How. 126;
Green v.
Van Buskirk, 5 Wall. 307;
Hervey v. R.I.
Locomotive Works, 93 U. S. 664;
Page 173 U. S. 629
Cole v. Cunningham, 133 U. S. 107;
Barnett v. Kinney, 147 U. S. 476.
But the rule with respect to statutory assignments is somewhat
different. While the authorities are not altogether harmonious, the
prevailing American doctrine is that a conveyance under a state
insolvent law operates only upon property within the territory of
that state, and that with respect to property in other states, it
is given only such effect as the laws of such state permit, and
that, in general, it must give way to claims of creditors pursuing
their remedies there. It passes no title to real estate situated in
another state. Nor, as to personal property, will the title
acquired by it prevail against the rights of attaching creditors
under the laws of the state where the property is actually
situated.
Harrison v.
Sterry, 5 Cranch 289,
9 U. S. 302;
Ogde v.
Saunders, 12 Wheat. 213;
Booth v.
Clark, 17 How. 322;
Blake v. Williams, 6
Pick. 286;
Osborn v. Adams, 18 Pick. 245;
Zipcey v.
Thompson, 1 Gray 243;
Abraham v. Plestoro, 3 Wend.
538,
overruling Holmes v. Remsen, 4 Johns.Ch. 460;
Johnson v. Hunt, 23 Wend. 87;
Hoyt v. Thompson, 5
N.Y. 322;
Willetts v. Waite, 25 N.Y. 577;
Kelly v.
Crapo, 45 N.Y. 86;
Barth v. Backus, 140 N.Y. 230;
Weider v. Maddox, 66 Tex. 372;
Rhawn v. Pearce,
110 Ill. 550;
Catlin v. Silver Plate Co., 123 Ind. 477. As
was said by Mr. Justice McLean in
Oakey v.
Bennett, 11 How. 33,
52 U. S. 44:
"A statutable conveyance of property cannot strictly operate
beyond the local jurisdiction. Any effect which may be given to it
beyond this does not depend upon international law, but the
principle of comity, and national comity does not require any
government to give effect to such assignment when it shall impair
the remedies or lessen the securities of its own citizens. And this
is the prevailing doctrine in this country. A proceeding
in
rem against the property of a foreign bankrupt, under our
local laws, may be maintained by creditors, notwithstanding the
foreign assignment."
Similar language is used by Mr. Justice Story in his Conflict of
Laws, § 414.
The statute of Minnesota under which this assignment was made
provides in its first section that any insolvent debtor
Page 173 U. S. 630
"may make an assignment of all his unexempt property for the
equal benefit of all his
bona fide creditors, who shall
file releases of their demands against such debtor as herein
provided;"
that such assignments shall be acknowledged and filed, and, if
made within ten days after the assignor's property has been
garnished or levied upon, shall operate to vacate such garnishment
or levy at the option of the assignee, with certain exceptions. The
second section provides for putting an insolvent debtor into
involuntary bankruptcy on petition of his creditors upon his
committing certain acts of insolvency, and for the appointment by
the court of a receiver with power to take possession of all his
property not exempt, and distribute it among his creditors. Under
either section, only those creditors receive a benefit from the act
who file releases to the debtor of all their demands against him.
This statute was held not to conflict with the federal Constitution
in
Denny v. Bennett, 128 U. S. 489.
The construction given to this act by the Supreme Court of
Minnesota has not been altogether uniform. In
Wendell v.
Lebon, 30 Minn. 234, the act was held to be constitutional. It
was said that "the act in its essential features is a bankrupt
law;" but it was intimated that it included all the debtor's
property, wherever situated,
"and while other jurisdictions might, on grounds of policy, give
preference to domestic attaching creditors over foreign assignees
or receivers in bankruptcy, yet, subject to this exception, they
would, on principles of comity, recognize the rights of such
assignees or receivers to the possession of the property of the
insolvent debtor."
In
In re Mann, 32 Minn. 60, the act was in effect again
pronounced "a bankrupt law, providing for voluntary bankruptcy by
the debtor's assignment," and in this respect differing from a
previous assignment law.
See also Simon v. Mann, 33 Minn.
412, 414.
In
Jenks v. Ludden, 34 Minn. 482, it was held that the
courts of that state had no right to enjoin the defendant, who was
a citizen of Minnesota, from enforcing an attachment lien on
certain real property in Wisconsin owned by the insolvent debtors,
although the execution of the assignment might, under
Page 173 U. S. 631
the Minnesota statute, have dissolved such an attachment in that
state, and that even if they had the power to do so, they ought not
to exercise their discretion in that case, where the only effect
might be to enable nonresident creditors to step in and appropriate
the attached property. The court repeated the doctrine of the
former case -- that the act was a bankrupt act, the assignee being
in effect an officer of the court, and the assigned property being
in custodia legis, and administered by the court or under
its direction. The court added:
"We may also take it as settled that the question whether
property situated in Wisconsin is subject to attachment or levy by
creditors, notwithstanding any assignment made in another state, is
to be determined exclusively by the laws of Wisconsin."
To same effect,
see Daniels v. Palmer, 35 Minn. 347;
Warner v. Jaffray, 96 N.Y. 248.
Upon the other hand, in
Covey v. Cutler, 55 Minn. 18,
an insolvent debtor who had made an assignment under this statute
had a certain amount of salt in Wisconsin, which the defendants had
attached in a Wisconsin court. The salt was sold upon the judgment,
bid in by them, and the assignee in Minnesota, brought an action to
recover the value of the salt. Defendants answered, claiming that
the assignee never took possession of the salt, and that the
Minnesota assignment was ineffectual to transfer the title to
property in Wisconsin as against attaching creditors there.
Plaintiff was held entitled to judgment upon the ground that a
voluntary conveyance of personal property, valid by the law of the
place, passed title wherever the property may be situated, and that
such transfers, upon principles of comity, would be recognized as
effectual in other states when not opposed to public policy or
repugnant to their laws. It is difficult to reconcile this with the
previous cases, or with that of
Green v.
Van Buskirk, 7 Wall. 139. The assignment was
apparently treated as a voluntary or common law assignment. This
ruling was repeated in
Hawkins v. Ireland, 64 Minn. 339,
in which an assignment under this statute was said not to be
involuntary, but voluntary, and that a court of equity had the
power to, and would, restrain one of its own citizens, of whom it
had jurisdiction,
Page 173 U. S. 632
from prosecuting an action in a foreign state or jurisdiction
whenever the facts of the case made it necessary to do so to enable
the court to do justice and prevent one of its citizens from taking
an inequitable advantage of another. This accords with
Dehon v.
Foster, 4 Allen 545, and
Cunningham v. Butler, 142
Mass. 47,
s.c., sub nom. Cole v. Cunningham, 133 U.
S. 107.
The earlier opinions of the Supreme Court of Minnesota to the
effect that the statute in question was a bankrupt act were
followed by the Supreme Court of Wisconsin in
McClure v.
Campbell, 71 Wis. 350, in which it was held that the
assignment could have no legal operation out of the state in which
the proceedings were had, and that the decision of the Supreme
Court of Minnesota that the act of 1881 was a bankrupt act was
binding. The contest was between the assignee of the insolvent
debtor and a creditor who had attached the property of the
insolvent in Wisconsin. The court held that the plaintiff, the
assignee, took no title to such property, and was not entitled to
its proceeds. In delivering the opinion, the court said:
"We think the question is not affected by the fact that the
property, when seized, was in possession of the assignee, or that
the attaching creditor is a resident of the state in which the
insolvency or bankruptcy proceedings were had. . . . While some of
them [the cases] may, under especial circumstances, extend the rule
of comity to such a case, and thus give an extraterritorial effect
to somewhat similar assignments, we are satisfied that the great
weight of authorities is the other way. The rule in this country
is, we think, that assignments by operation of law in bankruptcy or
insolvency proceedings, in which debts may be compulsorily
discharged without full payment thereof, can have no legal
operation out of the state in which such proceedings were had."
In
Franzen v. Hutchinson, 62 N.W. 698, the Supreme
Court of Iowa had this statute of Minnesota under consideration,
and held that as the creditors received no benefit under the
assignment unless they first filed a release of all claims other
than such as might be paid under the
Page 173 U. S. 633
assignment, it would not be enforced in Iowa. It was said that
the assignment, which was that of an insurance company, was
invalid, and that in an action by the assignee for premiums
collected by the defendants, who were agents of the company, the
latter could offset claims for unearned premiums held by policy
holders at the time of the assignment, and by them assigned to
defendants after the assignment to plaintiffs.
Notwithstanding the two later cases in Minnesota above cited, we
are satisfied that the supreme court of that state did not intend
to overrule the prior decisions, to the effect that the act was
substantially a bankrupt or insolvent law. It is true that in these
cases, a broader effect was given to this act with respect to
property in other states than is ordinarily given to statutory
assignments, though voluntary in form. But the court was speaking
of its power over its own citizens, who had sought to obtain an
advantage over the general creditors of the insolvent by seizing
his property in another state. There was no intimation that the
prior cases were intended to be overruled, nor did the decisions of
the later cases require that they should be.
So far as the courts of other states have passed upon the
question, they have generally held that any state law upon the
subject of assignments which limits the distribution of the
debtor's property to such of his creditors as shall file releases
of their demands is to all intents and purposes an insolvent law,
that a title to personal property acquired under such laws will not
be recognized in another state when it comes in conflict with the
rights of creditors pursuing their remedy there against the
property of the debtor, though the proceedings were instituted
subsequent to, and with notice of, the assignment in insolvency.
The provision of the statute in question requiring a release from
the creditors in order to participate in the distribution of the
estate operates as a discharge of the insolvent from his debts to
such creditors -- a discharge as complete as is possible under a
bankrupt law. An assignment containing a provision of this kind
would have been in many, perhaps in most, of the states void at
common law.
Grover v. Wakeman, 11 Wend. 187;
Ingraham
Page 173 U. S. 634
v. Wheeler, 6 Conn. 277;
Atkinson v. Jordan, 5
Ohio, 293; Burrill on Assignments 232-256. As was said in
Conklin v. Carson, 11 Ill. 508:
"A debtor in failing circumstances has an undoubted right to
prefer one creditor to another, and to provide for a preference by
assigning his effects, but he is not permitted to say to any of his
creditors that they shall not participate in his present estate
unless they release all right to satisfy the residue of their debts
out of his future acquisitions."
In
Brashear v.
West, 7 Pet. 608, an assignment containing a
provision of this kind was upheld with apparent reluctance, solely
upon the ground that in Pennsylvania, where the assignment was
made, it had been treated as valid. If the assignment contain this
feature, the fact that it is executed voluntarily, and not
in
invitum, is not a controlling circumstance. In some states, a
foreign assignee under a statutory assignment, good by the law of
the state where made, may be permitted to come into such state and
take possession of the property of the assignor there found, and to
withdraw it from the jurisdiction of that state, in the absence of
any objection thereto by the local creditors of the assignor; but
in such case, the assignee takes the property subject to the equity
of attaching creditors and to the remedies provided by the law of
the state where such property is found.
A somewhat similar statute of Wisconsin was held to be an
insolvent law in
Barth v. Backus, 140 N.Y. 230, and an
assignment under such statute treated as ineffectual to transfer
the title of the insolvent to property in New York as against an
attaching creditor there, though such creditor was a resident of
Wisconsin. A like construction was given to the same statute of
Wisconsin in
Townsend v. Coxe, 151 Ill. 62. It was said of
this statute (and the same may be said of the statute under
consideration):
"It is manifest from these provisions that a creditor of an
insolvent debtor in Wisconsin who makes a voluntary assignment
valid under the laws of that state can only avoid a final discharge
of the debtor from all liability on his debt by declining to
participate in any way in the assignment proceedings. He is
therefore compelled to consent to a discharge as to so much of his
debt
Page 173 U. S. 635
as is not paid by dividends in the insolvent proceedings, or
take the hopeless chance of recovering out of the assets of the
assigned estate remaining after all claims allowed have been
paid."
To the same effect are
Upton v. Hubbard, 28 Conn. 274;
Paine v. Lester, 44 Conn.196;
Weider v. Maddox,
66 Tex. 372;
Catlin v. Silver Plate Co., 123 Ind. 477;
Boese v. King, 78 N.Y. 471.
In
Taylor v. Columbia Insurance Co., 14 Allen 353, it
is broadly stated that
"when, upon the insolvency of a debtor, the law of the state in
which he resides assumes to take his property out of his control,
and to assign it by judicial proceedings, without his consent, to
trustees for distribution among his creditors, such an assignment
will not be allowed by the courts of another state to prevail
against any remedy which the laws of the latter afford to its own
citizens against property within its jurisdiction."
But the weight of authority is, as already stated, that it makes
no difference whether the estate of the insolvent is vested in the
foreign assignee under proceedings instituted against the insolvent
or upon the voluntary application of the insolvent himself. The
assignee is still the agent of the law, and derives from it his
authority.
Upton v. Hubbard, 28 Conn. 274.
While it may be true that the assignment in question is good as
between the assignor and the assignee, and as to assenting
creditors, to pass title to property both within and without the
state, and, in the absence of objections by nonassenting creditors,
may authorize the assignee to take possession of the assignor's
property wherever found, it cannot be supported as to creditors who
have not assented, and who are at liberty to pursue their remedies
against such property of the assignor as they may find in other
states.
Bradford v. Tappan, 11 Pick. 76;
Willetts v.
Waite, 25 N.Y. 577;
Catlin v. Silver Plate Co., 123
Ind. 477, and cases above cited.
We are therefore of opinion that the statute of Minnesota was in
substance and effect an insolvent law; was operative as to property
in Massachusetts only so far as the courts of that state chose to
respect it, and that, so far as the plaintiff,
Page 173 U. S. 636
as assignee of the D. D. Merrill Company, took title to such
property, he took it subservient to the defendants' attachment. It
results that the property of the D. D. Merrill Company found in
Massachusetts was liable to attachment there by these defendants,
and that the courts of Minnesota are bound to respect the title so
acquired by them.
The second question must therefore be answered in the negative,
and, as this disposes of the case, no answer to the first question
is necessary.