Abraham v. Plestoro

3 Wend. 538
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 3 Wend. 538 (Abraham v. Plestoro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abraham v. Plestoro, 3 Wend. 538 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1829).

Opinion

The following opinions were delivered on the decision of this case:

By Mr. Justice Marcy.

There are several objections to the proceedings in this cause in their nature preliminary, which lie in our way to that mainly relied on for the reversal of the chancellor’s order. It is said that if the alleged proceedings against the appellant as a bankrupt vested in the provisional assignee the property in question, then the other respondents are improperly joined with him in this suit; and if it is a proceeding on the part of the creditors to obtain a discovery to aid them in their suits at law, then J ohnstone, the assignee, should not have been a party. If it should be conceded that there is a misjoinder of complainants in the [547]*547bill, a motion to dissolve the injunction issued thereon is not the proper proceeding on the part of the defendant to obtain * the benefit of that objection. It should have been presented to the court below by a demurrer to the bill. If it appear that any party to the bill has a right to retain the injunction, this right is not impaired because he is joined with others who have no such right.

But the right of Johnstone, the provisional assignee, to sustain this suit, is called in question. His power, it is said, is only temporary, and lasts only until the creditors make an appointment; and by the course of proceedings in bankruptcy, the creditors must have met and superseded him before this suit was commenced. The provisional assignee has as ample powers as the assignee appointed by the creditors, and he retains his trust until he is “ removed at a meeting of the creditors for the choice of assignees, if they shall think fit.” (6 Geo. 4th, ch. 16, § 45.) There is not the slightest intimation that Johnstone has been removed ; we must therefore consider him invested with all the rights and authority of a duly constituted assignee. The 88th section of the British bankrupt acts prohibits the bringing of suits in equity by the assignees, without the assent of the major part of the creditors. An objection founded on this section of the statute is made to the proceedings in this case, because the assent of the creditors does not appear. In Watkins v. Fry, (1 Merivale, 255,) it was admitted by the counsel, who raised a similar objection in that case, that the court always presume an assent where a dissent is not shewn. If this suit was subject to the regulations prescribed by that act of parliament, our courts would infer, as the English courts do, that the assignee acts with the assent of the creditors if the contrary does not appear. Another objection to the bill, or rather to the right of the complainants named in it to have the relief they ask for, is founded on its multifariousness. I think there would be no use in stopping to ascertain whether this objection exists in point of fact, because if the bill was beyond all doubt • multifarious, this fact could not properly have any influence upon our decision as to the order from which this appeal is [548]*548brought. This is also an objection that should have been presented on demurrer.

The creditors distinctly as such, without judgments, and ' unconnected with the assignee, have not probably a right to the injunction; but the more serious enquiry is, whether John-stone, as assignee, either alone or in conjunction with the creditors, has this right. In pursuing this enquiry, we shall be naturally led to consider, 1. What claim or title he derives to the property stayed by the injunction in the custody of the collector of New-York? and 2. If he has any claim to it, has he a right to resort to the proceedings which have been had in this case to enforce that claim ?

What is the extent of the operation of an assignment under a bankrupt law of a foreign country, and what right the assignee thereby acquires here, is a grave question, which has called forth much profound learning and able discussion from the late Chancellor Kent in the court of-chancery, and Mr. Justice Platt in the supreme court. This question has also been much considered in other tribunals of our country. Some of the controverted points may now be- regarded as settled and “ laid up among our acknowledged rules of jurisprudence but this case shews that there are some things on this subject -that remain to be settled.

Chancellor Kent, influenced by a spirit of liberality which he indulges to a greater degree, perhaps, than almost any other enlightened jurist, and wishing that all the commercial nations of the world might become a confederacy, recognizing and observing in relation to the transactions of the citizens and subjects of each the great principles of justice, adopted in the case of Holmes v. Remsen, (4 Johns. Ch. R. 460,) not only the doctrine that the succession to and distribution of personal property is regulated by the owner’s domicil, and not by the lex loci rei sitce, but he also laid down what, I believe, was then a novelty here, the rule that our courts were called on in the spirit of comity to give, as the English courts profess to do, effect to the title of a foreign assignee, to the prejudice of rights acquired by our own- citizens under our own laws, to the property and debts of the bankrupt in this country, provided the foreign asgignment, in point of time, [549]*549preceded the attachment or lien acquired here. This doctrine gives to the proceedings under foreign bankrupt laws an operation extra' territorium, and transfers, by virtue of the assignment, all the property and all the choses in action of the bankrupt in whatever country they are. By this decision, mere municipal regulations, (for such undoubtedly is the character of acts relative to insolvents and bankrupts,) are undisguisedly turned into international laws. Judge Platt, in a suit between the same parties in the supreme court, (20 Johns. R. 227,) comparatively confined within very narrow limits the operation of assignments under a foreign commission of bankruptcy. He denies the existence of any international law on the subject; he admits, however, that there is a comity, which is always to be exercised with a just' regard to the.rights that our citizens have acquired under our laws to the property of a foreign bankrupt situated in this country? and to the choses in action due to him here. The associates of the learned judge forbore to express their concurrence in this view of that case. If, therefore, we were not to look beyond the decisions of our own state tribunals, there would seem to be a serious conflict of opinion for us to settle.

The highest courts in several of the states distinguished for their enlightened jurisprudence have entertained views similar to those of Judge Platt. In Massachusetts, (13 Mass. R. 146,) in Connecticut, (Kirby’s R. 313,) in Pennsylvania, (6 Binney, 353,) in Maryland, (1 Harris & McHenry 236,) in North and South Carolina, (2 Hayward, 24, Const. R. 283,) the extra-territorial operation of statutory assignments has been denied. If more was wanting to incline the balance- against the opinion of the late chancellor, enough is found in two decisions of the supreme court of the U. States, one before and the other since the cases of Holmes v. Remsen were discussed and decided here. In the case of Harrison v. Sterry, 5 Cranch, 298,) Ch. J. Marshall says: “ The bankrupt law of a foreign country is incapable of operating a transfer of property in the United States.” That court reiterated the same doctrine in the case of Ogden v. Saunders,

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Bluebook (online)
3 Wend. 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abraham-v-plestoro-nycterr-1829.