Foster v. Goulding
Foster v. Goulding
Opinion of the Court
This is a case of novel impression, but to be decided by the application of familiar principles. Our system of insolvency is comparatively new, and new questions may well be expected to arise, questions to which the words of the statutes will not furnish a direct answer; but which are not difficult of solution in the light of the general principles upon which a system of insolvency proceeds, and which our statutes recognize and affirm. It was in view of this practical difficulty of foreseeing and providing for every exigency which might arise in the application of the system, that the eighteenth section of the statute of 1838, c. 163, was framed, giving to this court jurisdiction in equity over the subject, and “ power, in all cases which are not in the statutes otherwise specially provided for, upon the bill, petition or other proper process of any party aggrieved by any proceedings under the act, to hear and determine the case as a court of chancery, and to make such ordei and decree therein as law and justice shall require.”
This is a bill in equity brought under the provisions of this section. To this bill a general demurrer is filed. Upon this demurrer the facts well stated in the bill are to be taken as true.
They are, in substance and in their order, so far as they are material to this inquiry, that Goulding (Eli), Gregory and Clark, lumber merchants, doing business under the firm of Gregory & Clark, were on the 14th of August 1856 insolvent, and, being so insolvent, made a conveyance of-all the estate, real and personal,, and all the choses in action of every name and nature of said Gregory & Clark, to Henry Goulding and
The effect of this arrangement, if it can be successfully carried out by the defendants, is plain. No new petition could be-filed till more than six months after the alleged fraudulent conveyance. Upon such new petition the validity of that conveyance could not be tested under the statute of 1841, c. 124, § 3, although under this statute, upon the facts stated, the conveyance was clearly void, and the property purported to be conveyed by it would pass to the assignees in insolvency for the benefit of all the creditors, and the making of such conveyance would prevent the granting of a certificate of discharge to the insolvents, or, if granted, render it of no effect. By this arrangement, if valid between the petitioning creditor and the preferred creditors, his debt is paid and their debt is paid, the entire estate of the insolvents exhausted in so doing, and the entire purposes of the statute defeated.
Not only is this the effect of the arrangement; but it is alleged in the bill, and admitted by the demurrer, that such were the object and purpose of the parties in entering into it.
Two questions arise : can this thing be done; and if not, what was the remedy ? We think it cannot be done, because an act done in contravention of, and which manifestly tends to defeat the purposes and policy of the insolvent laws, is for that reason fraudulent and void. “ A fraudulent contrivance,” said Lord Mansfield in Rust v. Cooper, “ with a view to defeat the bankrupt laws, is void, and annuls the act.” Cowp. 632. This is well settled doctrine, and diligently and faithfully applied would defeat most of the contrivances and indirections by which the
If then the transaction between petitioning creditors and the preferred creditors was void, by what mode are the rights and interests of the other creditors to be protected ? What is the remedy ? It is said that their only remedy was the filing of other petitions by the other creditors, which would have been under their own control. It may be that more than one petition could be filed for the same act of bankruptcy, though the decision upon the existence of such cause in the hearing on one petition would probably be conclusive upon all parties in interest, as in the nature of judgment in rem. If however the failure to maintain the petition was for want of proof of the debt of the petitioning creditor only, there might be reason for hearing the petition of another creditor whose claim was susceptible of proof. But whether more than one petition could be filed or not, we think more than one is unnecessary, if under it all the essential facts can be proved.
The petition of a creditor under St. 1838, c. 163, § 19, is not a process for the enforcement of his individual claim. Its object is to put the estate of the debtor into the custody of the law for its division and distribution among all the creditors of the debtor. It avers and proceeds upon the existence and proof of acts done by the debtor, of which such division and distribution are the legal consequence. Indeed, so far from being brought to secure the payment of his own claim, it ordinarily supposes a state of things in which its payment would be a fraud upon the other creditors. Such payment, under the English bankrupt laws, is of itself an act of bankruptcy on the part of the debtor. Archb. Bankr. (11th ed.) 66. And so it was in this case, the facts showing that the debtors were at the time insolvent, and that the petitioning creditor had reasonable cause to believe it.
Such being the purposes' of the petition, when it is filed, and notice to the debtors has been issued upon it, we think that
If it be suggested that the debt is paid and can no longer be the basis of such petition, the answer is, that in equity it is not paid; that for the purposes of the hearing it is not paid, because the law will not permit the fraudulent arrangement so far to take effect as to defeat its own policy and purposes.
We are of opinion therefore that the demurrer must be overruled, and that a mandamus should issue to the judge of insolvency to hear the petitioners upon their petition, and, if the facts alleged in it shall be found to be true, to permit them to come in and prosecute the original petition of Dana.
No suggestion was made at the argument upon what terms or with what provisions as to costs the plaintiffs should be allowed to come in, and all questions on this point are reserved.
.Demurrer overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Calvin Foster & others v. Eli C. Goulding & others
- Status
- Published