Booth v. Clark

58 U.S. 322, 15 L. Ed. 164, 17 How. 322, 1854 U.S. LEXIS 520
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by250 cases

This text of 58 U.S. 322 (Booth v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Booth v. Clark, 58 U.S. 322, 15 L. Ed. 164, 17 How. 322, 1854 U.S. LEXIS 520 (1855).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

We learn from the record of this case that Juan de la Camara recovered a judgment in the supreme court of New York, against Ferdinand Clark, for $4,688 with interest at 7 per cent.; that a fieri facias was issued upon the judgment, and that there was a return upon it of “ no goods, chattels, or real estate of the de *328 fendant to be levied upon.” Upon this return, Camara filed a creditor’s bill, before the chancellor of the first circuit in the State of New York, setting out his judgment and the return upon the fieri facias, in which he seeks, under the-laws of that state, to subject the equitable assets and choses in action of Clark to his judgment; and he asks for a discovery of them from Clark, for an injunction, and the appointment of a receiver. Notice of this proceeding, and of the action upon it, were served upon the solicitor of Clark, and the bill of complaint was taken as confessed, upon the defendant’s default in not answering. Booth, the present complainant, was appointed, receiver on the 3d August, 1842. Clark had been previously enjoined under the proceeding from making any disposition of any part of his estate, legal or equitable. Thus matters stood from the time of the receiver’s appointment, in 1842, until June, 1851. Then Booth, as receiver, reports that no effects of Clark had come to his knowledge, except a claim upon Mexico, whish had been adjudged to Clark by the United States commissioners, under the" treaty with Mexico; and that, as receiver, he was contesting it; and he asks from the court authority to proceed for that purpose, which was granted. Such is an outline of the case in New York, containing every substantial part of it.

We will now state the proceedings of this suit at the instance of the receiver, in the circuit court of the United States for the District of Columbia, from the decision of which, dismissing the receiver’s bill, it has been brought to this court for revision.

On the 29th May, 1851, Booth, the receiver, filed his bill in the circuit court for the District of Columbia, reciting so much of the proceedings of the New York courts as was deemed necessary to support his suit. He declares that Clark, when the original suit was instituted against him by Camara, and from that time until after he had been appointed receiver, had resided in New York. That his effects consisted principally, if not wholly, of the claim upon Mexico, and that he claimed that fund as receiver for the purposes of that, appointment. Clark answered the biff. He denies that the proceedings against him in the courts of the State of New York created any Hen in behalf of Camara, or the receiver, upon the fund in controversy. He admits that no part of his property ever came into receiver’s hands, under those proceedings, and that he had the claim upon Mexico whilst the suits were pending against him, and when the receiver was appointed under Camara’s creditor’s bill; but that all the evidences and papers in support of his Mexican claim were then in the public archives at Washington. He also states, that the board of commissioners under the act of congress of March 3, 1849, entitled “ An act to carry into effect eer *329 tain stipulations of the treaty between the United States and the Republic of Mexico, of the 2d February, 1848,” had made an award in his favor for the sum of $86,786 , which sum was then in the hands of the secretary of the treasury of the United States. He then alleges that, being a resident of the State of New Hampshire, he filed in the clerk’s office of that district, on the 28th January, 1843, Ms petition to be declared a bankrupt. That- he had been declared a bankrupt on the 22d March following, pursuant to the act to éstablish an uniform system of bankruptcy throughout the United States,” passed August 19, 1841. He then recites that there had been attached to his petition in the bankrupt’s court, a schedule of his property, rights, and credits of .every kind and description, in which his Mexican claim had been stated; and that it wa s upon that claim the commissioners had awarded to him the sum ■ before mentioned. He declares that, under the decree of the court in' bankruptcy, one John Palmer had been appointed assignee; and that, having given his bond in compliance with the order- of the court, he was vested, as assignee, in virtue of the operation of the bankrupt law, of all the defendant’s property, for the benefit of his creditors, including the Mexican claim. It is also stated in his answer, that notice of all the proceedings in Ms matter of bankruptcy had been published in the leading newspapers of New Hampshire, and that the name of Juan de la Camara, and his residence, was placed among the list of Ms creditors attached to his petition to be declared a bankrupt. And he avers that all of his creditors had had notice of the proceedings in bankruptcy. That .neither Camara nor. any other creditor had filed or made any objections to those proceedings, or to the action of the assignee, until after the award had been made upon the Mexican claim.

It is not necessary, for the purposes of this opinion, to state' the defendant’s recital of the sale of Ms effects by Palmer, the assignee ; Ms purchase of them, including the Mexican claim, or the rights claimed by the defendant under Ms purchase, all relating to the same having been fully acted upon by this court at this term, in the case of Ferdinand Clark ?;. Benjamin C. Clark and W. H. Y. Hackett. We state, however, that Palmer, the original assignee in Clark’s bankruptcy, having died, he had beeij succeeded by the appointment of--Hackett as assignee. This suit, then, is substantially between Hackett, as the assignee of Clark in bankruptcy, and Booth, the receiver under Camara’s creditor’s bill; that it may be determined by this court which of them has the official right to the Mexican fund, for the distribution of it between the creditors of Clark, or whether Booth, as receiver, shall have from that fund a sufficient sum to pay *330 Camara’s entire debt, leaving the residue of it for distribution between Clark’s other creditors.

It appears also from the record that Booth, the receiver, took no steps to execute his official trust, from the time of his appointment in 1843, until 1851; after the award of the Mexican claim had been made in Clark’s favor. And, also, that the court of chancery, acting upon the creditor’s bill brought by Camara, had not been applied to, either by Camara or by the receiver, for any order upon Clark in personam, to coerce his compliance with its injunction and decree.

Upon this statement of the case we will now consider it. There is no dispute concerning the regularity or binding operation of the judgment obtained by Camara against Clark. None in respect to the proceedings under the creditor’s bill. The leading point in the case is the effect of the proceedings under the last, to give a right to the receiver, in virtue of a lien which he claims upon the property of the debtor, to sue for and to recover any part of it, legal or equitable, Without the jurisdiction of the State of New York.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 U.S. 322, 15 L. Ed. 164, 17 How. 322, 1854 U.S. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/booth-v-clark-scotus-1855.