Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1868

Frank's Appeal

Frank's Appeal
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania · Decided October 21, 1868 · Agnew, Read, Sharswood, Thompson
59 Pa. 190; 1869 Pa. LEXIS 9

Frank's Appeal

Opinion of the Court

The opinion of the court was delivered, January 4th 1869, by

Sharswood, J.

David Frank, on the 4th February 1861, executed a deed of assignment to Meyer Frank in trust for the benefit of creditors. On August 14th 1863 the account of the assignee was filed, and on exceptions was referred to an auditor. His final report was filed August 12th 1868, and to the decree confirming that report this appeal has been taken. It appears to be a joint appeal by M. & H. S. Frank, as creditors, and Meyer Frank, the assignee, which is certainly irregular. The record is presented to us in great disorder, but we shall endeavor to extract from it, by the aid of the oral and printed argument, the matter of which these appellants respectively complain.

The 1st assignment of error is, that the court erred in refusing to award an issue to try the validity of the Babeta Frank judgment.

A petition was presented to the court below by M. & H. S. Frank, two of the appellants, setting forth that they were creditors of David Frank at the time the note was given by him, on which there is a judgment entered in favor of Babeta Frank. The petition alleged that the said note was executed and delivered by David Frank to the plaintiff, Babeta Frank, as a bounty or gift, in case she should marry his son Henry Frank, and that David Frank was insolvent at the time. They therefore ask an issue to try the validity of the judgment. There is no Act of Assembly which makes an issue a matter of right in the settlement of the accounts of assignees or trustees, as there is in the distribution of the proceeds of sheriff’s sale. It is, a matter which rests in the sound legal discretion of the court. It is evident that the court exercised that discretion properly on the present occasion in refusing the prayer of the petition. Assuming all the facts alleged to be true, they did not impeach the validity of the judg*194ment. No actual fraud in Babeta Frank is pretended, and nothing is better settled than that marriage is a valuable consideration, and in the absence of actual fraud, prevails against creditors. “.There is no consideration,” says Lord Coke, “so much respected in law as the consideration of marriage in respect of alliance and posteritie:” Co. Litt. 9 b; 4 Kent’s Com. 465; Sterry v. Arden, 1 Johns. Ch. Rep. 271; Magniac v. Thompson, Bald. 344; Barr v. Hill, Addison’s Rep. 276.

The 2d error assigned is, that the court erred in dismissing the exceptions. This assignment of error might be disregarded as clearly contrary to the rule of this court which provides that each error relied on must be specified particularly and by itself. If any specification embrace more than one point, or refer to more than one bill of exceptions, or raise more than one distinct question, it shall be considered a waiver of all the errors so alleged: Reg. Gren. vi., 6 Harris 578; Bull’s Appeal, 12 Harris 286.

There have come up attached to this record three distinct sets of exceptions: 1. Eleven exceptions by the assignee. 2. Five exceptions by the assignee and creditors, appellants; and 3. Seven exceptions by the assignor. All the exceptions appear to have been dismissed. It is a clear case for the application of the rule. As, however, the exceptions insisted on under this head have on the argument been reduced to two, as a matter of grace and not of right, we proceed to consider them.

The auditor charged the assignee with the difference between the amount produced by the sheriff’s sale of the Sitz property to R. Arthurs, and the sum for which he afterwards sold it.' The Sitz property was a part of the assigned estate, and R. Arthurs was the attorney at law and counsel of the assignee. He bought at sheriff’s sale, on September 5th 1862, for $2111, and after-wards sold the same property at private sale, May 26th 1863, for $3300. It is strongly urged on the authority of Fisk v. Sarber, 6 W. & S. 18, that if the assignee could become a purchaser at a judicial sale of the assigned estate, á fortiori his attorney could. But the facts of this case, as reported by the auditor, which we must assume to be true, are peculiar and distinguish it clearly from Fisk v. Sarber. The auditor reports that Mr. Arthurs was virtually the assignee — that he had control of about twenty thousand dollars of assets of the assigned estate, a large amount of which could easily have been converted into money, if they were not at the time, and that if the assignee or his attorney had no means to pay the judgments on which the property was sold, it must have been their own fault. “ But if he had funds of assignee in his hands, and it is a fact that he mixed the assignee funds up with his own, and' if he bought with such funds it should be for the benefit of the creditors. Besides, R. Arthurs was reimbursed his outlay, if any, either in part or in whole, out of funds of the *195assignee, and finally settled with the assignee and D. Frank, giving them the benefit of the speculation.” Under these circumstances we cannot say that it was an error to charge the assignee with the amount of the sale. Though it may not have been his duty to have purchased the property on behalf of the estate, yet he would have been justified in doing so to save it from sacrifice, even if it had resulted in a loss. When having funds of the estate under his control he bought in his own name, and within little more than six months realized a considerable advance on the amount of his purchase, a case is presented in which a court of equity will decree that the profit shall be for the benefit of the cestui que trust. Mr. Arthurs and the assignee stand in the same position. Mr. Arthurs evidently intended no private speculation for his own gain ; he was acting in the matter for the assignee.

He said in his testimony, ■“ At the[time I settled I paid over to Meyer Frank $1173, and Davy was to have the be'nefit of the purchase of the Sitz property.”

This fact certainly does not help the case of the appellants. If the purchase was with' the funds of the estate, the advance should belong to the cestuis que trust, the creditors. “Where the debt,” says Kennedy, J., in Fisk v. Sarber, “for which the property in such cases is taken in execution is just, and the property liable to the payment .of it, and the trustee without funds in his hands or power to pay it, so as to relieve the property, what can he do ?”

We do not mean to question the authority of that case, or to hold that even where a trustee has funds in his hands or within his reach, it is in all cases .his duty to purchase at a sheriff’s sale for the estate; but that where having funds in his hands sufficient for the purpose, especially when they are mixed with his own, and which in the exercise of a fair and honest discretion he would be justified in so applying, then if he does purchase he shall account to the cestui que trust for any profit made on the transaction, in the same manner as if he had bought as trustee, and confessedly with the trust funds.

Another exception to the auditor’s report which has been relied on in this court is, that he credited the assignee only with an average of 45 per cent, of the debts of the estate settled by him. A considerable number of these debts were bought by Mr. Arthurs, and Sallade’s Appeal, 12 Casey 429, is cited, in which it was held that a person retained as attorney for an assignee in trust for the benefit of creditors occupies no such fiduciary relation towards the assigned estate as renders him incompetent to become the purchaser of a promissory note of the assignor, and to claim the amount of it out of the funds in the hands of the assignee. But in this case, be it observed, Mr. Arthurs did not claim to receive the full amount of the debts settled or bought by him. *196He admits that he used for the purpose the funds of the estate in his hands, and adds, I charged the assignee only with the amount. of money I paid out when Ij bought claims at a discount : when I had bought a claim at 33 cents- on the dollar, I charged him only 33 cents on the dollar.” Ho reflection, certainly, rests on the character or conduct of Mr. Arthurs throughout the whole of this transaction. But the specific complaint is, that the auditor credited the assignee with only 45 per cent, on all the claims, without any evidence, that those settled by himself were settled at a discount.

But Mr. Arthurs said in his examination, “ There was some we paid 33, some at 40, and several at 60 cents on the dollar, and none of them that I paid, I paid above that. I think we averaged 45 or 50 per cent.” And, again: “ I mean all the claims I paid would average 40 or 50 per cent., and some they paid (that is, the assignor* and assignee), would average about the same.” There was surely enough in this evidence to throw upon the accountant the burden of proving what he had paid for each particular claim, which it would not be difficult for him to do, and enough to justify the auditor on his failing to do so, in assuming the general average of 45 per cent, as the rate of percentage paid by him for all.

The 3d assignment of error is, that the court erred in confirming the report of the auditor excluding the McClurkin judgment. This judgment had been purchased and was held by Meyer Erank the assignee, and was represented before the auditor by Mr. Arthur. It was secured by a mortgage on property worth, as he testified, about the amount of the debt. He said: “ The Mc-Clurkin judgment is really contracted for ; bought by Meyer Erank the assignee. We claim no appropriation-at this time.” After this explicit disclaimer of coming on this fund, it was too late to except. It made no difference that the auditor, in reporting on the exceptions, saw fit, ex majore eauteld, to report an alternative distribution, including and excluding the McClurken judgment.

Decree affirmed and appeal dismissed, at the costs of the appellant.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.