Where a creditor, whose debt was not yet due at the time of
bringing the action,
Page 65 U. S. 408
brought a suit against his debtors and two other persons, for a
conspiracy to enable the debtors to dispose of their property
fraudulently so as to hinder and defeat the creditors in the
collection of their lawful demands, the action will not lie.
The debtors were the lawful owners of the property at the time
the suit was commenced. They had the legal right to use and enjoy
it to the exclusion of others, and no one had any right to
interfere with their use or disposition; none unless there be a
right conferred by the law upon a creditor to prevent the
accomplishment of fraud by his debtor, and to pursue him, and
others assisting him, for a revocation of acts done to hinder,
delay, or defraud him, in the collection of his demands.
The authorities examined to show that this cannot be done.
In this case, the creditor, by suing and levying an attachment
upon the property of the debtor for such parts of the debt as had
then become due, had waived the alleged fraud in the contract of
sale and confirmed the sale.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE CAMPBELL delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was instituted by the defendants in error in the
district court, as creditors of two of the plaintiffs in error,
Adler and Schiff, upon the complaint, that this firm had combined
and conspired with their co-defendants in the court below, to
dispose of their property fraudulently, so as to hinder and defeat
their creditors in the collection of their lawful demands. By means
of which fraudulent acts, they affirm they suffered vexation and
expense, and finally incurred the loss of their debt.
The defendants pleaded the general issue. Upon the trial,
Page 65 U. S. 409
the plaintiffs proved that Adler and Schiff were traders in
Milwaukee, and to carry on their business, in August, 1857,
purchased of the plaintiffs, and other merchants in New York, upon
credit, a large quantity of merchandise which, with their other
property, shortly after its delivery at Milwaukee, was assigned to
one of their co-defendants for the ostensible purpose of paying
their debts, but really with the purpose of more effectually
concealing it from the pursuit of their creditors.
There was testimony conducing to convict all the defendants of a
common design to accomplish this purpose. The plaintiffs had
extended a credit to Adler and Schiff of two, four, and six months.
They caused an attachment to issue against this firm upon all their
debt which had become due at the time these transactions occurred,
which was levied upon sufficient property to satisfy it, and
afterwards, and before the maturity of their remaining demand, this
suit was commenced. At the time of the trial, this demand was their
only claim against Adler and Schiff.
The defendants requested the court to instruct the jury
"that a creditor at large, as such, has no legal interest in the
goods of his debtor, and cannot maintain an action for any damages
done to such property, and that if the defendants had been guilty
of a conspiracy to remove the property of a debtor and thereby to
defraud his creditors, a creditor at large, not having a present
right of action against such debtor, has not such an interest in
the subject of the fraud as to enable him to maintain an action for
damages against the defendants, and that the declaration discloses
no cause of action against the defendants."
The court declined to give this instruction, but charged the
jury
"that the plaintiffs sold their goods to Adler and Schiff on
credit; they had no interest in the goods sold, or in the other
property of these defendants, but an interest in the debt owing for
the goods so sold on credit. And if the defendants have been guilty
of a conspiracy to remove the property of Adler and Schiff, and
they did so remove their property with intent to defraud the
plaintiffs in the collection of their debt when it should become
payable, even though it was not payable when such removal was
effected, the plaintiffs have
Page 65 U. S. 410
a cause of action after the debt became payable."
To enable the plaintiffs to sustain an action on the case like
the present, it must be shown that the defendants have done some
wrong -- that is, have violated some right of theirs -- and that
damage has resulted as a direct and proximate consequence from the
commission of that wrong. The action cannot be sustained, because
there has been a conspiracy or combination to do injurious acts. In
Savile v. Roberts, 1 Lord R. 374, Lord Holt said,
"It was objected at the bar against these old cases that they
were grounded upon a conspiracy which is of an odious nature, and
therefore sufficient ground for an action by itself. But to this
objection he answered that conspiracy is not the ground of these
actions, but the damages done to the party, for an action will not
lie for the greatest conspiracy imaginable if nothing be put in
execution."
There are cases of injurious acts for which a suit will not lie
unless there be fraud or malice concurring to characterize and
distinguish them. But in these cases, the act must be tortious and
there must be consequent damage. An act legal in itself and
violating no right cannot be made actionable on account of the
motive which superinduced it. It is the province of ethics to
consider of actions in their relation to motives, but jurisprudence
deals with actions in their relation to law, and for the most part
independently of the motive. In
Hutchins v. Hutchins, 7
Hill N.Y. 104, the defendants had successfully conspired to induce
a testator by fraudulent representations to alter a will he had
made in favor of the plaintiff.
The court said,
"For injuries to health, liberty, and reputation, or to rights
of property, personal or real, the law has furnished appropriate
remedies. The former are violations of the absolute rights of the
person, from which damage results as a legal consequence. As to the
latter, the party aggrieved must not only establish that the
alleged tort or trespass has been committed, but must aver and
prove his right or interest in the property or thing affected
before he can be deemed to have sustained damages for which an
action will lie."
And because the plaintiff had a mere possibility of benefit, and
was deprived only of hopes and expectations, it was decided
Page 65 U. S. 411
that the action in that case would not lie. In
Stevenson v.
Newnham, 13 C.B. 285, it was determined, that when the act
complained of is not unlawful
per se, the characterizing
it as malicious and wrongful will not be sufficient to sustain the
action. In the present suit, the plaintiffs do not allege that they
were defrauded in the contract of sale of their merchandise,
although there is abundant testimony to show that the purchases
were made by Adler and Schiff with the intention of defrauding
their vendors. But the plaintiffs, by electing to sue for the
price, have waived that fraud and confirmed the sale. Adler and
Schiff were the lawful owners of the property at the time this suit
was commenced. They had the legal right to use and enjoy it to the
exclusion of others, and no one had any right to interfere with
their use or disposition -- none unless there be a right conferred
by the law upon a creditor to prevent the accomplishment of fraud
by his debtor and to pursue him and others assisting him for a
revocation of acts done to hinder, delay, or defraud him in the
collection of his demand.
The authorities are clear that chancery will not interfere to
prevent an insolvent debtor from alienating his property to avoid
an existing or prospective debt, even when there is a suit pending
to establish it. In
Moran v. Dawes, Hopkins' Ch. 365, the
court said:
"Our laws determine with accuracy the time and manner in which
the property of a debtor ceases to be subject to his disposition
and becomes subject to the rights of his creditor. A creditor
acquires a lien upon the lands of his debtor by a judgment, and
upon the personal goods of the debtor by the delivery of an
execution to the sheriff. It is only by these liens that a creditor
has any vested or specific right in the property of his debtor.
Before these liens are acquired, the debtor has full dominion over
his property; he may convert one species of property into another,
and he may alienate to a purchaser. The rights of the debtor, and
those of a creditor, are thus defined by positive rules, and the
points at which the power of the debtor ceases and the right of the
creditor commences are clearly established. These regulations
cannot be contravened or varied by any interposition
Page 65 U. S. 412
of equity. There are cases in which the violation of the rights
of a creditor within these limits has formed the subject of an
action at law against third persons.
Smith v. Tonstall,
Carth. 3;
Penrose v. Mitchell, 8 S. & R. 522;
Kelsy v. Murphy, 26 Pen.R. 78;
Yates v. Joyce, 11
John. 136. But the analogies of the law, and the doctrine of
adjudged cases, will not allow of an extension by the courts of the
remedy employed in those cases in favor of a general creditor. This
subject was discussed much at large in
Lamb v. Stone, 11
Pick. 527."
"The plaintiff complained of the fraud of the defendant in
purchasing the property of his absconding debtor, in order to aid
and abet him in the fraudulent purpose of evading the payment of
his debt. The court asks what damage has the plaintiff sustained by
the transfer of his debtor's property? He has lost no lien, for he
had none. No attachment has been defeated; for none had been made.
He has not lost the custody of his debtor's body; for he had not
arrested him. He has not been prevented from attaching the
property, or arresting the body of his debtor, for he had never
procured any writ of attachment against him. He has lost no claim
upon, or interest in the property, for he never acquired either.
The most that can be said is that he intended to attach the
property, and the wrongful act of the defendant has prevented him
from executing this intention. . . . On the whole, it does not
appear that the tort of the defendant caused any damage to the
plaintiff. But even if so, yet it is too remote, indefinite, and
contingent to be the ground of an action."
The same court reaffirmed this doctrine in
Wellington v.
Small, 3 Cushing 146.
Unquestionably the claims of morality and justice, as well as
the legitimate interests of creditors, require there should be
protection against those acts of an insolvent or dishonest debtor
that are contrary to the prescriptions of law, and are unfaithful
and injurious. But the legislature must determine upon the remedies
appropriate for this end, and the difficulty of the subject is
evinced by the diversity in the systems of different states for
adjusting the relations of creditor and
Page 65 U. S. 413
debtor, consistently with equity and humanity. Bankrupt and
insolvent laws, laws allowing of attachment and sequestration of
the debtor's estate, and for the revocation of fraudulent
conveyances, creditors' bills, and criminal prosecutions for fraud
or conspiracy, are some of the modes that have been adopted for the
purpose. In the absence of special legislation, we may safely
affirm, that a general creditor cannot bring an action on the case
against his debtor, or against those combining and colluding with
him to make dispositions of his property, although the object of
those dispositions be to hinder, delay, and defraud creditors. The
charge of the district judge is erroneous, and the judgment of that
court is
Reversed, and the cause remanded for further
proceedings.