Bradley v. Kroft

19 F. 295
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin
DecidedDecember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 F. 295 (Bradley v. Kroft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley v. Kroft, 19 F. 295 (circtwdwi 1883).

Opinion

Bunn, J.

This action is brought by David Bradley & Co., a corporation existing under the laws of Minnesota, and a citizen of Min[296]*296nesota, against the defendants, who are citizens of Wisconsin, upon certain promissory notes not due; and an attachment accompanying the summons was issued against defendants’ property, under the provisions of chapter 233 of the General Laws of Wisconsin for the year 1880, and garnishee proceedings commenced against William J. Cowen, who, it is claimed, has property in his hands belonging to the defendants, and liable for their debts. The garnishee answers, denying all liability, or that he has any property in his hands belonging to the defendants. He also sets up facts showing that previous to the commencement of this action on November 14, 1883, to-wit, on November 5, 1883, the defendants, who were partners doing business at Menomonee, in Dunn county, under the firm name of Kroft & Severson, made a general assignment of all their stock and effects to the garnishee defendant in trust and for the benefit of their creditors, .under the insolvent laws of Wisconsin; and that the said garnishee holds the property which it is sought by the garnishee proceedings to reach, under such assignment. The plaintiff moves for judgment against the garnishee upon his answer, and attacks the validity of the assignment. The" question is, whether the assignment is valid under the laws of Wisconsin ? If it is, then the motion must be denied.

The principal objections urged against the assignment are: (1) That it contains a preference in favor of creditors, which the statute forbids; (2) that it is conditional and does not appropriate the property of the assignors absolutely to the payment of their debts. If the assignment is justly obnoxious to these objections, or to either of them, it cannot be maintained.

By chapter 349, Laws 1883, § 1, it is provided that “any and all assignments hereafter made for the benefit of creditors, which shall contain or give any preferences to one creditor over another creditor, except for the wages of laborers, servants, and employes earned within six months prior thereto, shall be void. ”

The assignment is somewhat voluminous, and, in order to a proper understanding and construction of it, it is necessary that all the provisions should be considered together. The substance of those material to the inquiry is as follows :

The assignment recites that whereas the said assignors are indebted to divers persons in divers sums, which, by reason of difficulties and misfortunes, they have become unable to pay, and they being desirous of providing for the payment thereof by an assignment of their property and effects for that purpose, not exempt from execution, in consideration of the premises, etc., they do assign, convey, arid set over to the assignee- all their real estate and personal property, whether held by them as partners or individuals, except such as is exempt from execution; to have and to hold the same in trust that the assignee shall take possession of the partnership property, and, with all convenient'diligence, sell and convert the same into [297]*297money, at public or private sale, as may be deemed for the best interest of the creditors, collect all the debts, ahd, out of the proceeds of such sales and collections, make such payment or payments to the partnership creditors, pro rata, and without preference, except as to laborers and servants, as is provided by law, subject to the orders and directions of the circuit court of said county, or the judge thereof, as provided by law; and that if, after the payment of all costs, and all partnership debts in full, as have been proved against them as sucli partnership or firm, as provided in chapter 80 of the Revised Statutes of Wisconsin, and the several acts amendatory thereof, any portion of such proceeds remain in the hands of such assignee, he shall pay and discharge all the private and individual debts of the assignors, or either of them, whether due or to grow due, provided the respective amounts of the individual debts of each does not exceed his portion, being one-half thereof of the surplus that may remain, after paying all of the said partnership debts, and, if it should, then his interest in such surplus to be divided, pro rata, among his individual creditors in proportion to their respective demands, which shall have been proved and filed as required by said chapter 80, Rev. St., and amendatory acts. There is a like provision in regard to the separate property of the individual partners, assigning it (all that is not exempt) -to the assignee, without preference, for the benefit of (1) the private and individual creditors that have proved their claims, and (2) when they are satisfied, then to their partnership creditors, share and share alike, who shall have proved their claims, as before provided. Then follows a provision that “if, after payment in full, as aforesaid, there should remain in the hands or possession of the assignee, in trust, any portion of the proceeds of said sale and collections of said partnership property, or of said individual property, or of both, he shall return, reassign, and deliver the same to the assignors, according to their several rights.”

The foregoing is a condensed statement of the provisions bearing upon the question of a preference in favor of creditors, and also upon the question of whether the assignment is conditional or absolute, these objections both turning upon the same question of construction.

The question is as to the proper construction to be placed upon them, and whether the effect of the provisions, taken as a whole, is to prefer one creditor to another, or to make the assignment conditional instead of absolute for the benefit of creditors. There is no claim that the assignment, in terms, prefers any creditor or creditors by name, over others. But the plaintiffs’ contention is that the assignment only provides for the payment of such creditors as shall prove their claims within three months from the time of publication of notice to them by the assignee; and that the creditors who do not file affidavits of their claims within that time can not be paid at all under the assignment, hut the property, after that, is to he returned to the assignee. And if this be the proper meaning of the assign[298]*298ment, I think the contention must be sustained. But after a careful consideration of all its provisions, and in the light of the statute, I must say this seems to me a rather straitened construction, and that I find no such meaning in the assignment. The intention to be gathered from the whole instrument would clearly seetn to be to provide for the payment of all who are entitled to be paid under the statute, share and share alike, whether partnership or individual creditors, and equitably according to their respective rights, as against the partnership and individual effects, and whether the claims are proved within three months or afterwards, under the statute, except as to such preference as the statute itself gives to those who prove their ' claims within three months. But to judge properly of the weight to be given the objection it will be necessary to refer to some provisions of the statute.

Section 1693, chapter 80, of the Revised- Statutes, provides that “the circuit court, or the judge thereof, in vacation, shall have supervision of the proceedings in all voluntary assignments made under the provisions of this chapter, and may make all necessary orders for the execution of the same.”

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3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 45 (Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F. 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-kroft-circtwdwi-1883.