Another branch of the cases arising under the Mexican company of
Baltimore, formed in 1816.
Page 65 U. S. 318
This Court decided, in
58 U. S. 17 How.
274, that the interest in one of these shares did not pass to a
trustee in insolvency in 1819, the contract with Mina having been
declared by the Court of Appeals of Maryland to be utterly null and
void, so that no interest could pass to the trustee of an in
solvent.
But in 1824, Mexico assumed the debt as one of national
obligation, and the United States made it the subject of
negotiation until it was finally paid.
A second insolvency having taken place in 1829, there was a
right of property in the insolvent which was capable of passing to
his trustee.
The claim of the latter is therefore better than that of the
administrator of the insolvent.
This was a branch of the cases relating to the shares of the
Mexican Company of Baltimore, so often reported in the preceding
volumes of Howard and which are referred to in the opinion of the
Court. The opinion contains also a statement of the facts in the
present case.
The bill was originally filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore
County (state court) by Charles F. Mayer and John Barney, trustees
of John Gooding, under his insolvency in 1829, against John
Gooding, Jun., Charles Oliver, and Robert M. Gibbes. It was removed
into the circuit court of the United States, upon the application
of John Gooding, junior, who alleged that he was a citizen of
Virginia. An answer was filed by Gooding, who afterwards died, and
White became administrator
de bonis non of the first John
Gooding. A bill of revision was filed and other proceedings took
place, amongst which was a suggestion of the death of John Barney,
so that Mayer became the surviving trustee. Gibbes and Oliver
answered, and in May, 1858, Judge Giles, then holdings a circuit
court, dismissed the bill, from which order Mayer appealed to this
Court.
It is proper to mention that when the mandate of this Court,
Page 65 U. S. 319
in the case of
Gooding, 17
How. 274, went down, the executors of Oliver paid into court the
money and stocks sued for, and afterwards, in pursuance of an order
of the court, passed on the 28th June, 1858 (after the dismissal of
the bill, as above mentioned), the same stocks and money were paid
out of court to White. It was agreed by the counsel that the claim
of Mayer was exclusively against White as administrator.
MR. JUSTICE NELSON delivered the opinion of the court.
The bill was filed in the court below by Charles F. Mayer, the
surviving trustee of John Gooding, appointed under certain
proceedings instituted by Gooding before the commissioners of
insolvent debtors for the City and County of Baltimore, for the
benefit of the insolvent laws of Maryland, in October, 1829.
Gooding was an original owner of a share in what is known as the
Baltimore Mexican Company, which, in 1816, furnished General Mina
with the means to fit out a warlike expedition against Mexico, then
a province of Spain. The expedition failed, and Mina perished with
it soon after he landed. Mexico having subsequently achieved her
independence, the company made application to the new Government to
assume the debt, which it did by a decree of the 28th June, 1824,
but payment was delayed, from time to time, until this, with other
claims against the Government, were adjusted and discharged, under
the convention between this Government and Mexico, of April, 1839.
The share of Gooding, which was oneninth of the interest in the
contract of Mina, amounted, at the time of its allowance by the
commissioners under this convention, to the sum of $39,381.82. The
complainant claims this amount, with interest, under the insolvent
assignment made by Gooding for the benefit of all his creditors, as
already stated, under the insolvent laws of Maryland, in 1829.
The defendant, White, the administrator
de bonis non of
Gooding, sets up a title to the fund as the personal representative
of the estate, and claims it as part of the assets which belong to
the heirs and distributees.
Page 65 U. S. 320
The history of the litigation among the several claimants to the
money, awarded to the Baltimore Company by the commissioners, under
the convention with Mexico (amounting to the sum of $354,436.42),
of which the fund in controversy is a part, will be found in
52 U. S. 11 How.
529;
53 U. S. 12 How.
111;
55 U. S. 14 How.
610;
58 U. S. 17
How. 234; and
61 U. S. 20 How.
535.
In the case of
Gooding v.
Oliver, 17 How. 274, the present fund was in
controversy between the administrator of the estate, claiming it as
assets, and the representatives of Robert Oliver, claiming it by
virtue of a purchase from an insolvent trustee, under proceedings
instituted by Gooding for the benefit of the insolvent act of
Maryland in 1819. As between these parties, the court held that the
administrator was entitled to the fund as assets of the estate. The
reasons for this decree will be found in the report of the case
referred to.
Gooding, as has been already stated, again took the benefit of
the insolvent act in 1829, and the question now is between the
trustee appointed under these insolvent proceedings, as assignee of
his estate for the benefit of creditors, and the present
administrator
de bonis non, the personal
representative.
The executors of Oliver, who claimed under the trustee in the
first insolvent proceedings in 1819, failed to hold the fund
against the personal representative in the case referred to, upon
the ground the courts of Maryland had decided that the contract of
the Baltimore Company with General Mina, which had been made in
violation of our neutrality laws, was so fraught with illegality
and turpitude and so utterly null and void that no claim to or
interest in it passed under their insolvent laws to the trustee,
and such being the construction of a statute of Maryland by her own
courts, this Court, according to the established course of
decision, felt bound by it, and consequently the insolvent trustee
took no interest in the Mina contract, nor Robert Oliver, or his
personal representatives, who claimed under him.
The case now comes before us between the trustee in the
Page 65 U. S. 321
insolvent proceedings of 1829, under the assignment for the
benefit of creditors, and the present personal representative of
the estate of Gooding, the former in the meantime having died, and
the principal question is whether or not this trustee took the
interest of the insolvent in the Baltimore Company in 1829, by
virtue of these proceedings. If the interest is to be regarded in
the same condition as it stood according to the judgment of the
Maryland courts at the time of the former insolvent proceedings,
our conclusion must be the same as in the case of
Gooding v.
Executors of Oliver. The personal representative would be
entitled to the fund.
It is insisted, however, by the learned counsel, on behalf of
the trustee that the state and condition of this interest had in
the meantime changed, and had become and admitted legitimate demand
or debt against the Mexican Government wholly exempt from any taint
of illegality or turpitude, and hence to be regarded as property of
the insolvent, to be devoted to the benefit of his creditors.
This interest or demand, as it stood in 1819, at the time of the
first insolvent assignment, as we have seen, arose out of a
contract between the Baltimore Company and General Mina which, as
admitted, was illegal, being in violation of our neutrality laws.
Whether that constituted a valid objection to the assignment under
the insolvent laws of Maryland for the benefit of creditors is not
a question now before us. The affirmative was held by a court
having jurisdiction to decide it. If an original question, we
should not have had much difficulty in disposing of it. This
contract, then, stood simply upon the personal obligation of Mina,
and as between the parties it was void and of no effect if Mina or
his legal representatives chose to avail themselves of its
illegality. But Mexico, after she had gained her independence in
1824, assumed the debt due to the Baltimore Company as one of
national obligation, which had been contracted for the service and
benefit of the nation by a general declared
bene meritors de la
patria. The assumption was the free act of a sovereign power,
and wholly independent of the question as to the legal qualities or
character
Page 65 U. S. 322
of the debt, as viewed under the statute or common law of the
country in which it originated. It was assumed by the Congress of
Mexico, upon public political considerations, in favor of persons
who had contributed their means in support of the struggle which
resulted in the achievement of her independence, and the obligation
rests not upon the contract of General Mina, or municipal
regulations, but upon the decree of the sovereign power and public
law of the nation.
We may add that after the recognition and adoption of this claim
by the Mexican authorities, the Government of the United States,
through its minister to that country, made it the subject of
negotiation on behalf of the parties in interest, who were
citizens, for the purpose of procuring indemnity for the same, and
which resulted, as has been already stated, in its satisfaction
under the convention of 1839.
We have no difficulty, therefore, in holding that the demand in
1829 constituted a right of property or interest in Gooding, the
insolvent, that passed to the plaintiff as trustee by virtue of the
assignment under the insolvent proceedings of 1829. The case of
Comegys v.
Vase, 1 Pet. 193,
26 U. S. 216,
26 U. S. 218,
26 U. S. 220,
is a full authority upon this point.
As to the objection that the plaintiff is concluded by the
decision of this Court in the case of the former,
Administrator of Gooding v.
Executors of Oliver, reported in the 17 How. 274,
one of the questions decided in that case furnishes a conclusive
answer to it. We need not repeat the reasons or authority which led
this Court to its conclusion, which are there stated at large.
The decree of the court below reversed and remanded with
directions to enter a decree for the plaintiff against the
administrators of Gooding, deceased, in pursuance of above opinion
and stipulations of parties.