Buschman v. Hanna

18 A. 962, 72 Md. 1, 1889 Md. LEXIS 74
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 18, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 18 A. 962 (Buschman v. Hanna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buschman v. Hanna, 18 A. 962, 72 Md. 1, 1889 Md. LEXIS 74 (Md. 1889).

Opinion

Robinson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case has been ably argued, but the question, after all, is one we think fully covered by the former [3]*3decisions of this Court. The difficulty, and the whole difficulty, is owing, it seems to us, to a misapprehension as to what was actually decided in Thomas vs. Brown & Lowndes, 57 Md., 512, arising, no doubt, from the somewhat imperfect report of the facts and circumstances on which that decision was based.

Now what i§ the case now before us? On the 14th December, 1881, the co-partnership of .Forster, Clark & Co. was dissolved, and on the same day Clark transferred his interest in the firm assets to Forster, and the latter, on the same day, made an assignment of all his property to Fielder C. Slingluff, for the benefit of his creditors. Shortly afterwards, on the 13th of January, 1888, the appellant, a creditor of Forster, Clark & Co., sued out an attachment on original process, under the Act of 1864, chap. 306, and laid it in the hands of Slingluff, assignee, the plaintiff in the attachment alleging in his affidavit that the assignment to Slingluff was made by Forster, Clark & Co. with intent to defraud their creditors. Three days after the issuing of the writ of attachment, proceedings of insolvency were instituted against Forster, Clark & Co., and the appellees were under these proceedings appointed permanent trustees of the insolvent firm. The trustees then intervened in the attachment suit, and moved to quash the same, mainly on the ground that the assignment to Slingluff was not fraudulent, within the meaning of the insolvent law, and at the same time they filed a petition claiming the property attached. On appeal to this Court, the motion to quash was overruled, and the assignment to Slingluff was declared fraudulent and void as to the creditors ot Forster, Clark & Co. The case then proceeded to trial before the Court without the intervention of a jury, and the plaintiff in the attachment, now appellant, recovered judgment in the short note case against the defendant for $1213.8*7; and in the attachment suit, judgment was ren[4]*4dered in favor of the trustees in insolveney, as claimants of the property attached; and it is from the judgment in the claim case that this appeal was taken; the appellant contending that having laid his attachment in the hands of Slingluff, assignee, before proceedings of insolvency were instituted, he was entitled to prosecute the suit to final judgment in order to perfect the inchoate lien acquired by the attachment proceedings. Now the plain answer to this contention is that, upon their appointment and qualification, the assets and property of Forster, Clark & Co. in the hands of Slingluff under the fraudulent assignment, vested in the appellees as trustees of the insolvent firm, and this being so, there was nothing in the hands of Slingluff liable to condemnation.

It is well settled that an adjudication in insolvency stops all further proceedings against the property of the insolvent. It stops even the execution of a fieri facias in the hands of the sheriff, although levied on the property; and prior to the Act o.f 1888, chap. 215, it stopped the sale of mortgaged property, whether decreed to be sold by a Court of equity, or advertised for sale under a power in the mortgage itself. The trastee in insolvency takes the entire property of the insolvent, whatever maybe the liens upon it, and, after converting such property into money, the proceeds of "sale are brought into the insolvent Gourtfor distribution, among the lien creditors and all other creditors, according to their legal precedence and priority. Whatever liens, if any there be, said the Court in Glenn vs. Gill, 2 Md., 18, “must be settled by the decision of the tribunal to whom the trustee owes obedience.'' The policy of the insolvent law in thus bringing the entire property and all creditors into one Court, is to secure the speediest settlement of the insolvent estate, and to avoid possibly conflicting decisions which might arise from the distribution of the trust fund by different Courts. Pierson vs. Trail, 1 [5]*5Md., 144; Waters vs. Dashiell, 1 Md., 471; Glenn vs. Gill, 2 Md., 17; Grove, Trustee of Lynch vs. Rentch, 26 Md., 378; Mackubin vs. Boarman, Trustee, &c., 54 Md., 389.

The judgment, however, in favor of the appellees as trustees in insolvency, in no manner affected or impaired the inchoate lien acquired by the appellant under the attachment. Ordinarily a final judgment of condemnation is necessary, it is true, to enable attaching creditors to perfect the inchoate statutory lien acquired under the attachment; for, till such judgment, the right of the plaintiff in the attachment is not established. But when further proceedings on the part of the attaching creditor are suspended by the insolvency of the debtor, and the trustees intervene and claim the property attached, the inchoate lien acquired under the attachment, follows the fund, or the proceeds arising from the sale of the property attached, into the insolvent Court. That Court has full power to hear and determine all questions as between the attaching creditor and the garnishee and the debtor, and as between these ' parties and all other creditors and claimants. And if the attaching creditor would have been entitled to final judgment, but for the intervention of the trustees in insolvency as claimants, the inchoate lien under the attachment will be recognized, and its priority allowed by the insolvent Court. In this case there were assets in the hands of Slingluff, assignee, at the time the attachment was laid, and the inchoate lien thereby acquired by the appellant attaches and follows the assets in the insolvent Court. As to the contention that the appellant did not acquire a statutory inchoate lien in this case, because the attachment was merely laid in the hands of Slingluff, and not levied on any specific property, we have but a word to say. The Code provides that “ any hind of p^'operty or credits belonging to the defendant in the plaintiff's own hands, [6]*6or in the hands of any one else may be attached. ’ ’ Where specific property is attached, the attachment is levied on such property; hut, where money or credits are attached, the inchoate lien attaches to the fund or credits when the attachment is laid in the hands of the garnishee. In the latter case, that is of garnishment, the judgment is a personal judgment against the garnishee. That an inchoate lien attaches to money or credits in the hands of the garnishee upon service of the attachment is fully recognized in Main and McKellip, Garns. vs. Lynch, 54 Md., 658.

Now Thomas vs. Brown & Lowndes, 67 Md., 512, out of the way, there could not, it seems to us, be any question as to the views we have expressed; and, to understand precisely what was decided in that case, the facts upon which the decision is based, must be stated more fully than will he found in the case as reported. What then were the facts in that case? Brown and Lowndes sued out an attachment on original process against Messrs. Thomas & Oo., and on the 9th of August, 1882, laid it in the hands of the Fanners and Merchants’ National Bank. One of the partners, having absconded, Samuel K.

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Bluebook (online)
18 A. 962, 72 Md. 1, 1889 Md. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buschman-v-hanna-md-1889.