Almy v. Platt

16 Wis. 169
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 Wis. 169 (Almy v. Platt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Almy v. Platt, 16 Wis. 169 (Wis. 1862).

Opinion

By the Court,

Cole, J.

The appellant commenced this suit in equity for the purpose of setting aside certain transfers of property made by the defendant, Platt, to other of the defendants, on the ground that these transfers are fraudulent and void as to creditors; and likewise to restrain the assignees or purchasers from disposing of such property during the pendency of certain attachment' suits.

The appellants are all creditors of Platt, and have sued out attachments and levied upon real estate, some of which, it is claimed, Platt conveyed to the defendant Rice in trust, to prevent it from being applied in payment of his debts.

They have likewise instituted garnishee proceedings against Rice and the defendants Collins, Halverson, Benjamin Wellington and Henry W. Wellington.. It is alleged that these parties have in their possession, or under their control, by virtue of fraudulent transfers ; merchandise, notes, accounts and other property belonging to Platt, which the sheriff is unable to seize upon, under the attachments, and which 'may be lost to the creditors unless they are restrained upon from disposing of such property or its avails. There is an allegation that the defendants Rice, Collins, Halverson and Benjamin Wellington are insolvent, or in greatly embarrassed circumstances.

[171]*171There is however, no averment that Henry W. Wellington, who is alleged to be controlling, or about to control, the most of the personal property, is not abundantly able to respond to any claim of Platt's creditors. It is well deserving of consideration, whether an allegation that Henry W. Wellington is insolvent, or something equivalent to it, is not indispensable to warrant a court of equity in interposing and restraining him from disposing of the property, even if it be assumed that an attaching creditor is to be placed upon the same ground as a judgment creditor. But, for reasons which will subsequently appear, that question need not be further considered here.

The relief demanded in the complaint is, that these various transfers may be declared null and void, and that the parties having the property under their control may be restrained from disposing of it, to the end that the same may be applied to the satisfaction of any judgment which the plaintiffs or any of them may finally obtain in their attachment suits. From this statement, the substance and purpose ot the action will be understood.

The complaint was demurred to by the parties who were garnisheed in the attachment suits, for want of equity, and upon various other grounds, which it will not be necessary to notice. The circuit court sustained these demurrers, and this is an appeal from those orders. It is very far from being a settled principle, upon the authorities, that a court of equity will exert its jurisdiction in favor of an attaching creditor, to set a side a fraudulent transfer of property by the debtor, or enjoin any disposition which he may choose to make of it. Some courts have held that a creditor who has attached the property of his debtor, has a sufficient lien upon the same to entitle him to file a bill in equity to remove an incumbrance or obstruction to a levy or sale, placed upon the property by means of fraud. Tappan vs. Evans, et al., 11 N. H., 311; Kitteridge vs. Emerson, 15 id., 227; Stone vs. Henderson, 6 Foster, 506; Hunt vs. Field, et al., 1 Stock. Ch. R., 36, and some [172]*172oilier eases referred- to on the brief of counsel for the appellants.

But on the other band, other courts of equal respectability and learning have denied the power, and have refused altogether to exert any such jurisdiction before judgment. They have held that a creditor could not restrain or question the disposition of the debtor’s property until be had completed his title at law by judgment and execution. And the reason given for the doctrine is, that until the creditor has established his title and recovered judgment, it does not appear that he has any right to interfere with any disposition of property which the debtor may make; that although he may have commenced an attachment suit; and levied upon property, still the justice aid extent of his claim are to be settled by judicial investigation; that he may never recover judgment, and if he should not, his interference with the exercise of the debtor’s rights would be wholly unwarranted and oppressive ; that when he has recovered judgment and exhausted his legal remedies, he may then invoke the power of a court of equity to remove any embarrassments which may exist to the collection of his debt, but until he has done this, he has no concern with the debtor’s frauds, nor any grounds for controlling him in the exercise of his power of alienation. Wiggins vs. Armstrong, 2 Johns, Ch., 144; Brinkerhoff vs. Brown, 4, id., 671; Williams vs. Brown, id., 681; McDermott vs. Strong, id., 687; Day vs. Washburn, 24 How. (U. S.,) 352; Dodge vs. Griswold, 8 N. H., 425; Neustadt vs. Joel, 2 Duer., 530; Reubens vs. Joel, 3 Kernan, 488; Melville vs. Brown, 1 Harrison, 349; Mills vs. Black, 30 Bosw., 550, and cases referred to by these authorities.

It must be admitted that there is much force and reason in this latter view of the subject; but whether it is the sound and correct doctrine or not, we find it unnecessary to decide in this case. For, assuming that prior to the adoption of the code, a court of equity would inlerfere at the instance of an attaching creditor before judgment, and control the disposition of the property of the debtor oil the ground of fraud, yet we think [173]*173there is no longer any occasion or reason for doing this under onr .present practice. All the relief that a creditor can require, he can now obtain in the garnishee suit itself, and this does away with all necessity of resorting to a court of -equity.

Our statute authorizes the issuing of a temporary injunction in a case where it appears from the complaint that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief demanded, and where such relief consists in whole or in part, in restraining the commission or continuance of any act during the litigation which would produce injury to the plaintiff, or when it shall appear that the defendant is doing, or threatens to do, some act in violation of the plaintiff’s rights respecting the subject of action, and tending to render the judgment ineffectual. Section 2, chap. 129, R. S., 1858. We see no reason why the appellants may not avail themselves of the benefit of this provision of law, and obtain all the relief in the garnishee suits which they have demanded in the complaint. We have held that this statute was applicable to a garnishee, and that he was a “ defendant in the action,” within its spirit and meaning. Claflin v. Altman, 14 Wis., 22. In that case, the attaching creditor showed by affidavits that his debtor had made a fraudulent disposition of his property to a party whom he summoned as garnishee; and that this garnishee was insolvent, and that he would be in danger of losing his debt unless such garnishee was restrained from disposing of the property; and the court granted an injunction for that purpose. We thought the fraudulent vendor who had been garnisheed under our statutes, was to all intents a defendant, and that he might be restrained from disposing of the property to the injury of the attaching creditor.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Wis. 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/almy-v-platt-wis-1862.