A bill to set aside a deed of assignment, made by an insolvent
debtor for the purpose of securing the payment of his debts to
certain enumerated creditors, to the exclusion of the complainant,
also a creditor of the assignor, and of others.
A debtor may lawfully apply his property to the payment of the
debts of such creditors as he may choose to prefer, and he may
elect the time when it is to be done so as to make it effectual,
and such preference must necessarily operate to the prejudice of
creditors not provided for, and cannot furnish any evidence of
fraudulent intention.
The case of
Marbury v.
Brooks, 7 Wheat. 556, and
24
U. S. 11 Wheat. 78 cited.
When a deed of assignment is absolute upon its face, without any
condition whatever attached to it, and is for the benefit of the
grantees, the presumption of law is that the grantees accepted the
deed.
The delivery of a deed of assignment for the benefit of
creditors to the clerk to be recorded may be considered as a
delivery to a stranger for the use of the creditors, there being no
condition annexed to the assignment making it an escrow.
After the assignment, the creditors for whose benefit the same
was made neglected to appoint an agent or trustee to execute it,
and the property assigned remained in the hands of the assignor.
The property consisted principally of chosen in action, which the
assignor went on to collect, and divided the proceeds among the
creditors under the assignment. No one of the creditors was
dissatisfied, and at any time the creditors could have taken the
property out of the hands of the assignor.
Held that
leaving the property in the hands of the assignor under these
circumstances, did not affect the assignment or give a right to a
creditor not preferred by it to set it aside.
In the circuit Court of Kentucky a bill was filed on the equity
side of the court for the purpose of setting aside a deed of
assignment or mortgage made by Leonard Wheeler for the purpose of
securing certain of his creditors in preference to the complainant,
who was also a creditor.
At the November term, 1837, of the circuit court, the
complainants had obtained certain judgments against the defendant
Wheeler, and on the application of the defendant it was agreed that
no executions should be issued upon those judgments until February,
1838. The debt on which the judgments had been
Page 41 U. S. 107
obtained amounted to $12,000, which had been purchased by the
plaintiffs for $1,000, the defendant having failed in 1814 and this
being one of the debts due by him at the time of his failure. He
afterwards entered into business in Kentucky, contracted a large
amount of debts, and obtained some property.
Five days before the time when the complainant had a right to
issue execution on the judgments, Leonard Wheeler executed a
general assignment or mortgage of all his property. The assignment
provided for the payment, in the first place, of all his debts
contracted since his failure in 1814, giving to them a priority or
preference, "as all his means and effects had been accumulated by
the credit given to him in Kentucky, the same being divided into
two classes." It provided that among his old debts out of the
surplus of his estate which was expected to remain after the first
and second class of preferred debts had been satisfied certain
debts due by him in 1814, the judgments in favor of the plaintiffs
not being among them, should be paid, and not believing the effects
assigned would extend beyond the payment of these debts, no others
were designated. The assignment then proceeded to assign and
transfer all the property and effects to the creditors of the first
and second class in trust to pay the debts according to the
preference and classification in the same, giving to the said
creditors, or a majority of them, power to nominate and appoint an
agent, attorney, or trustee to carry the purposes of the instrument
into full effect.
On 15 February 1838, writs of
fieri facias were issued
on the judgments, which were returned by the marshal "
nulla
bona." The appellant filed a bill in the circuit court praying
that the deed of assignment executed by Wheeler should be decreed
fraudulent and void as it regarded the complainant. The bill also
alleged acts done by the defendant, Wheeler, for the concealment of
property, and also the nominal creation or increase of debts which
were included in the preferences made by the assignment, and other
acts of fraudulent collusion, and also, it alleged, that the
property assigned had been left in the hands of the assignor, and
the creditors had never appointed an agent or trustee, who had
taken charge or direction of the property assigned. In the
Page 41 U. S. 108
opinion of the Court, delivered by MR. JUSTICE THOMPSON, other
facts are stated which were taken notice of by the Court. The
circuit court made a decree dismissing the bill, and the
complainants prosecuted this appeal.
Page 41 U. S. 113
THOMPSON, JUSTICE, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The bill filed in the court below was for the purpose of setting
aside a certain deed of assignment made and executed by the
defendant, Wheeler, for the purpose of securing to certain
enumerated creditors the avails of his property to the exclusion of
the complainant, and that the complainant may be decreed to have
satisfaction of his judgments set out in the bill out of the
property conveyed by the deed.
The bill sets out, that at the November term of the Circuit
Court of the United States in Kentucky in the year 1837, the
complainant recovered two judgments against Leonard Wheeler, one
for the sum of $4,000, with interest, from 21 February 1814, and
the other for $891.53, with interest for the same time, upon which
judgments executions were not to issue until 1 February 1838, at
which time executions were duly issued and put into the hands of
the marshal of the district to be executed, upon which the marshal
returned that he found no property of which to make the money on
the executions. The bill further states that on 27 January 1838,
the said Leonard Wheeler, by deed of trust or assignment, made a
conveyance to certain of his preferred and specified creditors
(of
Page 41 U. S. 114
which the complainant was not one) of certain property therein
specified, to pay and discharge certain specified debts, which deed
was duly acknowledged and recorded in the proper county, and the
bill charges generally that this deed is fraudulent and void. It
particularly charges that the deed was made without the knowledge,
privity or assent of the creditors named therein, and who are the
parties to whom the deed is given; that the deed was never
delivered to nor accepted by the grantees; that it was made with
intent to deceive and defraud his just creditors, who were not
included in its provisions; that the possession of the property
conveyed by said deed was retained by the said Wheeler, and never
delivered to the parties of the second part or any one of them;
that the deed was lodged in the clerk's office for record after the
rendition of the complainant's judgments and but a short time
before he was authorized to issue execution upon his judgments. It
further charges that the sale of the goods to Joseph Putnam, one of
the creditors named in the deed of trust, was fraudulent and
without any valuable consideration, and that the business was
afterwards conducted in the name of the said Putnam, but for the
use, in whole or in part, of the said Wheeler. It further charges
that Joseph Swift, another defendant, has for several years past
been employed in carrying on the grocery business, in which the
said Wheeler was interested, and that the said Swift is now in
possession of goods or money or other property belonging to the
said Wheeler, or is indebted to him for the same. It also charges
that Norman Porter, another of the preferred creditors, had money
in his hands belonging to the said Wheeler, and to be used for his
benefit, and that the note mentioned in the said deed of $3,170 was
purchased by said Porter for Wheeler's benefit and with his money.
The bill likewise prays that Abel Wheeler, one of the preferred
creditors, may answer and state particularly whether he has at any
time lent and advanced to Wheeler money or other property and
whether he now holds any note or memorandum or other evidence of
debt against him. The bill prays that the said Leonard Wheeler and
the above-mentioned
Page 41 U. S. 115
preferred creditors may answer specially and particularly to the
several interrogatories put in the bill, in reference to the
transactions between them severally and respectively.
The several answers of Leonard Wheeler, Porter Putnam, Swift and
Abel Wheeler, contain a full and explicit of all the charges
contained in the bill tending in the least manner to sustain the
allegations of fraud or collusion or any secret or unfair
transactions between them or either of them with Leonard Wheeler.
And there is no proof offered to sustain these allegations; they
may therefore be dismissed as wholly unsupported.
The bill calls upon the said Leonard Wheeler to state how and to
whom he delivered the deed of trust, in answer to which he states
that every creditor provided for by the deed was a real and
bona fide creditor. That he consulted with a number of his
creditors, naming them, before making the deed, all of whom
approved of it, and that he knows of none who disapproved of it or
rejected the benefit of its provisions, and some of them have
accepted of it in writing, which appears by the exhibits annexed to
the answer. That being satisfied with the propriety of the measure,
he made and executed the deed and left it in the proper office to
be recorded for the use of his creditors. He admits that the funds
mentioned in the deed of trust remained in his possession, and that
the creditors have never availed themselves of the privilege of
appointing a trustee, having confidence, as he presumes, in the
correctness of his management of the business. And he further
states that he has gone on in collecting the choses in action and
paying over the proceeds to the creditors according to the
provisions of the deed of trust. The answer of Wheeler with respect
to the delivery of the deed and the possession and management of
the funds is corroborated by the answers of a number of the
creditors who are made parties and called upon to answer on these
points. They say that they were consulted before the deed was
executed, and approved of it then and accepted it when made. That
no trustee has been appointed, because they had full confidence in
Wheeler and desired him to continue in the management of the
business.
There are several amended bills, with the answers thereto,
Page 41 U. S. 116
bringing up some new matters, but not of sufficient importance
to require any special notice. The above statement of the bill and
answers presents all the material questions which arise upon the
merits of this case. It is deemed unnecessary to notice the
objections made to the jurisdiction of the court below either on
the ground that Elisha I. Winter, the real party in interest,
should have been made the party complainant in this suit or that
there is a want of proper parties, defendants, to enable the court
to make a decree upon the merits. The conclusion to which we have
arrived supersedes the necessity of considering these
questions.
Although the right and power of a debtor to give a preference to
some of his
bona fide creditors to the exclusion of other
has not been denied on the part of the complainant, yet it has been
urged in argument that such preferred creditors are no favorites in
a court of chancery, where, it is said, equality is equity, and
that a court of chancery will look narrowly into all the
circumstances, and if it be found that the deed is tainted in the
smallest degree with fraud, it will be declared void. And it has
been insisted that in the present case there are strong
circumstances to show that in making this deed of trust, the
defendant Wheeler did not act in good faith towards the
complainant. That he obtained from him an agreement to postpone
issuing executions upon his judgments until after the first of
February, and that a few days before that time, he made the
assignment in question, so as to put all his property out of the
reach of the executions, and that this was in bad faith, which
ought not to receive the sanction of a court of equity.
It may be observed in the first place that there is no evidence
of any deception practiced by Wheeler to lull him to sleep or
procure any delay in issuing executions on the judgments. It was
done in the ordinary course in judicial proceedings. And if the
principle be sound that a debtor may lawfully apply his property to
the payment of the debts of such creditors as he may choose to
prefer, he may certainly elect the time when it is to be done, so
as to make it effectual. And such preference must necessarily
operate to the prejudice of creditors not provided for, and cannot
furnish any evidence of a fraudulent intention. But the
circumstances of the present case are such as not only to remove
all ground for any charge of fraud,
Page 41 U. S. 117
but even of injustice or unfairness in the conduct of Wheeler.
Although it may be admitted that John Tompkins is properly made
complainant, yet it is manifest from the record that he is a mere
nominal party and that Elisha I. Winter is the real party in
interest. This is shown by the answer of Wheeler and proved by the
testimony of William Fellows, who swears that in the latter part of
1836 or the beginning of 1837, Winter, through his agent, applied
to him to purchase the claim of Tompkins, which had been sent to
him for collection. That he offered $1,000 for it, which was not at
that time accepted. That in the summer of 1837, Winter himself made
the same offer which his agent had made, and again in the fall of
1837 he renewed the offer of $1,000 and expressed his opinion of
Wheeler's condition when, with the opinion of some others, who he
supposed knew Wheeler's circumstances, he in the month of October
1837 sold the claim to Winter for $1,000, believing that he was
purchasing it for the benefit of Wheeler. That a few days after the
sale, he received a written request from Winter not to let it be
known that he had the control over the claim.
Thus we see great anxiety in Winter to purchase a claim against
a man embarrassed and in failing circumstances, and the
consideration paid for it shows that the claim must have been
considered almost desperate. Only $1,000 given for a claim which,
by the judgments stated in the complainant's bill, including
interest, amounted to between $11,000 and $12,000. These
circumstances, independent of the statements in Wheeler's answer,
are calculated to cast some suspicion upon the conduct of Winter
and to justify the inquiry whether he comes into court with clean
hands and can justly reproach Wheeler with bad faith and unfairness
towards him. Wheeler's circumstances were extremely embarrassed, if
not desperate, and he found impending over him two judgments
amounting to nearly $12,000 in the hands and under the control of
Winter, who he had certainly no reason to believe was friendly to
him, and which judgments, if they could have been enforced to their
full amount, would have swallowed up a great proportion of his
property. Was he not, under such circumstances, authorized by every
principle of justice and honesty to secure, so far forth as he
could, his
bona
Page 41 U. S. 118
fide creditors? That the debts of all the creditors
preferred in the deed of trust are
bona fide debts is
fully established not only by the proofs, but is admitted on the
record by an agreement which, among other things, states "that the
genuineness of the debts provided for in Wheeler's assignment will
not be contested or called in question on the argument."
That a debtor has a legal right to prefer one or more of his
creditors over others when the transaction is
bona fide is
not an open question in this Court. That point was settled in the
case of
Marbury v. Brooks, which came twice before the
Court under circumstances somewhat different, and is reported in
20 U. S. 7 Wheat.
556 and in
24 U. S. 11 Wheat.
78. That this assignment was a
bona fide transaction
between Wheeler and his preferred creditors is clearly established
by the proofs. Every allegation in the bill suggesting fraud or
collusion is fully met and denied by the several answers and is
wholly unsupported by any proofs.
But several objections have been taken to the legal effect and
operation of this deed on other grounds that that of fraud. That it
was made by Wheeler without the knowledge or consent of the
creditors therein named; that it was never delivered to nor
accepted by the creditors; that possession of the fund was retained
by Wheeler, and no trustee appointed according to the provisions of
the deed.
Some of these objections are not founded in fact. It is true
that it does not appear that all the creditors had any knowledge of
the deed before it was executed. But it does appear from the answer
of a number of the creditors named in the deed that they were
advised of the necessity of Wheeler's securing them, and informed
of his intention to secure them, before the deed was executed, and
approved of it, and accepted the benefits of its provisions, and
since that time have been paid their debts in full. And there is no
evidence that anyone dissented. F. S. Fuller says he was never
consulted with about making the deed or informed of it before its
execution, and that he has never accepted of its provisions. But he
does not say that he has ever refused to accept of the provisions
in his favor, and he may not, therefore, have precluded himself
from still accepting. This deed is absolute upon its face, without
any condition whatever attached to it, and being for the benefit of
the grantees, the presumption
Page 41 U. S. 119
of law is, in the absence of all evidence to the contrary, that
the grantees accepted the deed. In the case of
Marbury v.
Brooks it is said by the Court that an assignment for the
benefit of preferred creditors is valid although their assent is
not given at the time of its execution if they subsequently accept
in terms or by actually receiving the benefit of it. Deeds of
trust, said the Court,
24 U. S. 11
Wheat. 96, are often made for the benefit of persons who are
absent, and even for persons who are not in being, whether they are
for the payment of money or for any other purpose, and no
expression of the assent of the persons for whose benefit they are
made has been required, as preliminary to the vesting of the legal
estate in the trustee; such trusts has always been executed on the
idea that the deed was complete when executed by the parties to it.
The omission of creditors to assent to the deed or to claim under
it may, under suspicious circumstances, afford some evidence of
fraud. But real
bona fide creditors are rarely unwilling
to receive their debts from any hand that will pay them.
It is not true that the deed remained in the possession of
Wheeler; it was sent to the clerk's office to be recorded. It was,
of course, placed in the hands of the clerk to be recorded for the
uses and purposes expressed in the deed, and of course for the
benefit of the creditors named in it. It was put out of the
possession and control of the grantor. The grantees in the deed are
numerous, and all could not have the actual possession of it. It is
laid down in Sheppard's Touchstone 58 that if a deed be delivered
to a stranger for the use of the grantee without any condition
annexed making it an escrow, it is a delivery to the grantee. The
delivery to the clerk to be recorded may well be considered as
falling within this rule. This principle is fully recognized in the
case of
Garnons v. Knight, 5 Barn. & Cres. 471, that a
delivery of a deed to a third person for the use of the party in
whose favor it is made, where the grantor parts with all control
over the deed, is effectual and operates from the instant of such
delivery.
If the fund had remained in the possession of Wheeler for his
own benefit, it might have cast a suspicion upon the fairness of
the transaction; but there is no proof of any such object or
design, nor of any fact from which an inference of
mala
fides can be drawn, but on the contrary the object of his
continuing in the possession of the property is satisfactorily
accounted for by the
Page 41 U. S. 120
circumstances of the case. It consisted principally of unsettled
accounts and choses in action which he was much more competent to
settle than a stranger could have been. It was therefore for the
benefit of the creditors that he continued to settle up these
accounts and pay over the money to his creditors, as the proofs
show that he did. This was by the express consent of some of the
creditors and the presumed consent of all, as no dissent or
complaint appears to have been made by any, and no one had any
right to complain but the parties who were to receive the benefit
of the assignment. This possession was held at the will and
pleasure of the creditors, which they could have withdrawn at any
time if dissatisfied with the management of Wheeler, and this was a
substantial compliance with that part of the assignment which
relates to the appointment of an agent or trustee for the purpose
of executing and fulfilling the trusts and purposes of the
assignment. The creditors were, of course, to be the judges of the
fitness and competency of such agent or trustee, and they were the
only parties interested in the faithful discharge of his duties. No
formal appointment was necessary; an express or implied assent of
the creditors to Wheeler's acting as agent or trustee, was all that
could be required according to the fair interpretation of the
assignment.
We are accordingly of opinion that the decree of the circuit
court dismissing the bill without prejudice be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.