Where creditors who were so upon simple contract debts filed a
bill in chancery to set aside a deed made by the debtor as being
fraudulent against creditors, and other creditors came in as
parties complainants, the court below was right in ordering a
pro rata distribution amongst all the creditors, none of
them having a judgment or other lien at law.
The complainants who first filed the bill have no preference
thereby over the other creditors.
Washburn made an assignment of his property to Keith for the
benefit of his creditors.
Day and Matlock and Frothingham and Warner, citizens of Ohio and
New York, filed a bill in the circuit court of the United States to
set aside this deed as fraudulent. They alleged, as a reason for
not suing him at law, that he had no property upon which a judgment
would be a lien nor any that an execution would reach.
Other creditors of Washburn upon simple contract debts came in
by a supplemental bill and applied to be admitted to a distributive
share of the assets.
Page 65 U. S. 353
The court ordered them to be distributed equally amongst the
parties to the record, from which decree Day &c. appealed to
this Court.
Page 65 U. S. 354
MR. JUSTICE NELSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of Indiana.
The bill was filed in the court below by two mercantile firms,
creditors of Washburn, against him and the assignee of his property
for the purpose of setting aside the assignment as fraudulent
against creditors and that the property might be applied in
satisfaction of the complainants' demands. These demands were
simple contract debts, not reduced to judgment.
The defendants demurred to the bill and assigned as the ground
of the demurrer the want of equity.
The court overruled the demurrer, and the defendants answered
separately, among other things denying all fraud in the assignment.
Replications were filed to the answers.
In this stage of the case, the other creditors of Washburn
applied by petition to the court to be made parties to the
bill,
Page 65 U. S. 355
charging fraud in the assignment and praying that it might be
set aside, and the property and effects of the debtor be subjected
to the payment of all his debts, and be divided equally among all
the creditors.
The court ordered that these petitioning creditors become
co-complainants, and referred the case to a master to take an
account of what was due to each of the complainants, which account
was duly taken and a report made to the court, and afterwards the
defendant, Keith, was ordered to bring into court the amount of
moneys admitted by him to be in his hands, made out of the assigned
property, amounting to the sum of $2,437, and then, at a subsequent
day in the term, the court overruled a motion made, on behalf of
the two firms who filed the bill, to have the moneys in court
applied to the payment of their debts in preference to the other
creditors, and adjudged the assignment fraudulent as to creditors,
and directed that the whole fund be distributed ratably among all
of them according to their respective demands, and referred the
case to a master to make the distribution, and, on his report,
confirmed the same.
The case is before us on appeal by the two firms who filed the
bill, alleging for error the refusal of the court to give them
preference in the distribution of the assets.
The proceedings in the case have not been conducted with much
regularity, but the principles of equity governing the rights of
the parties concerned are very well settled, and the application of
them to the facts as presented will satisfactorily dispose of
it.
The court of chancery does not give any specific lien to a
creditor at large, against his debtor further than he has acquired
at law, for, as he did not trust the debtor on the faith of such
lien, it would be unjust to give him a preference over other
creditors, and thus defeat a
pro rata distribution, which
equity favors, unless prevented by the rules of law. It is only
when he has obtained a judgment and execution in seeking to subject
the property of his debtor in the hands of third persons, or to
reach property not accessible to an execution, that
Page 65 U. S. 356
a legal preference is acquired, which a court of chancery will
enforce. 2 John.Ch. 283; 4
ib. 691
The two firms, therefore, who filed the bill, the appellants
here not having reduced their demands to judgment and execution
before seeking relief against the fraudulent assignment of the
debtor, are not in a situation to set up any claim to a preference
over the other co-complainants, or to object to an equitable
distribution of the assets among all the creditors.
Indeed, the principle upon which the bill seems to have been
drawn, and is now sought to be sustained, would preclude any
preference in favor of the appellants -- which is that the debtor's
property, in the hands of the assignee, constituted a fund for the
benefit of creditors, which a court of equity only could reach, and
hence that the creditor had a right to the interposition of the
court, without first obtaining a judgment and execution. It is
true, where a specific fund has been assigned or pledged for the
benefit of creditors and it is necessary to go into a court of
chancery to make a distribution among them, the equitable lien of
each creditor upon the fund lays a sufficient foundation for the
interposition of the court. It will enforce this equitable lien
thus arising out of the assignment or pledge for the benefit of the
creditors, in the exercise of its own appropriate jurisdiction. But
in all these cases, chancery, upon its own principles, distributes
the fund
pro rata among all the creditors unless
preference in given in the pledge or assignment of the fund. In the
present case, as the assignment was made to Keith, in trust for the
benefit of creditors, if the bill had been filed to enforce the
trust, no judgment or execution would have been necessary, as
preliminary steps to the interposition of the court; but in that
case, the appellants would not have been entitled to a preference,
as none was given to them in the trust deed, but the contrary.
For this reason, doubtless, the bill was filed to set aside the
deed as fraudulent, with a view to defeat the preferences given
therein to other creditors. The objection that the demands of the
appellants had not been reduced to judgment and execution before
filing the bill, would have been fatal to the relief sought, if
taken in time by the defendants. It was waived,
Page 65 U. S. 357
however, both as respected the appellants and the other
co-complainants; and, as the court was left unembarrassed by the
objection, it was right in proceeding to dispose of the property
and effects of the debtor, and to make the proper application of
them; and, as we have seen neither of the creditors had acquired a
preference at law, the application in chancery, upon its own
principles, was a ratable distribution among all the creditors as
decreed by the court below.
Decree affirmed.