Chamberlin v. Stewart & Powell

36 Ky. 32, 6 Dana 32, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 132
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 31, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 36 Ky. 32 (Chamberlin v. Stewart & Powell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chamberlin v. Stewart & Powell, 36 Ky. 32, 6 Dana 32, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 132 (Ky. Ct. App. 1837).

Opinion

Judge Ewing

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Stewart and Powell — having recovered a judgment before a justice, against Carlile and Waring, for fifty dollars and costs, and had the execution returned no property found, filed their bill in the Chancery Court at Louisville, alleging that Chamberlin was indebted to Carlile and Waring, and praying that he might be enjoined from paying the amount to them, and that the same, as a chose in action, might, under the statute, be subjected to the payment of their debt.

Chamberlin appeared and answered the bill, and the case was submitted to the Chancellor, on the following agreed case:—

It was agreed that Carlile and Waring were then insolvent, and had been, at and anterior to the filing of the bill; that Chamberlin was indebted to them thirty five dollars, on the settlement of accounts, and they were indebted to the firm of Rogers and Chamberlin, on a note for sixty three dollars and ninety two cents — both debts being due and payable before the bill was filed.

Chamberlin insists on his right, to retain in his hands, the debt due from him, as security, or as discount, of so much of the debt due from Carlile and Waring to him.

The Chancellor sustained the complainant’s bill, and decreed that Chamberlin should pay them the thirty five dollars; and from that decree, he has appealed to this Court.

It has been frequently settled by this Court, that the insolvency of a defendant is per sc a good ground to authorize the interposition of a chancellor, in behalf of a solvent party, to set-off one debt or demand against another, in cases 'where otherwise the set-off would not be [33]*33allowed. This principle was distinctly recognized by this Court, in the case of Payne vs. London, 1 Bibb, 519; Littell's Select Cases, 488; 4 Monroe, 1, Dickinson vs. Chism’s Administrators et al.; 5 J. J. Marshall, 659, Dye’s Executors vs. Claunch, and various other cases.

The insolvency the time of the assignment, has been held to entitle the obligor equity to set off, in equity, of a demand due him or, against an innocent assignee, of resulted from the in‘ solvency alone. An insolvent, oor ditor may he°re'stl'auied,mchanlecting his debt, t^'damageiTdte from him to his abe® tho’ the denected. Where an insolvent more persons jointly the creditor of equty will not permit the insolvent debtor to collect the debt dne him; hut will, at the instance of his joint creditors, compel a set off of the debt the one owes him, against the debt he owes that one with others — notwithstanding there is no connection, nor mutuality in the demands. And—

Indeed, insolvency, at the time of an assignment, has been held a good ground to set-off an independent debt, not otherwise a subject of set-off, against an assigned " ’ ° ° debt, though m the hands of an innocent assignee.

And in the cases of Tribble vs. Taul, 7 Monroe, 456; and Talbott vs. Warfield, &c., 3 J. J. Marshall, 86, referred to by the Chancellor, the Court, in laying down the general principle, state, “that there is no suggestion of insolvency,” and, of course, must be understood as excepting from the rules laid down by them, in those cases, as governing a Court of Equity in allowing sets-off, the case of insolvency on the part of the defendant. Indeed, the set-off, in such a state of case, is based on the principle of moral justice. It is unconscientious for an insolvent creditor to coerce the payment of his debt, when he is owing to his debtor, an equal or larger amount, which he has no means to coerce by the ordinary process of a common law court. And cases are numerous, in which an insolvent or non-resident debtor has been stayed in the collection-of his debt, until damages, to which a complainant may he entitled, against him, are liquidated, under the order of the chancellor, and then set off against his independent, disconnected debt,

If insolvency, and a consequent inability to coerce a debt or damages due from him, be a ground for equitable interierence, we can perceive no principle of reason, justice, or policy, in precluding joint creditors, from the aid of the chancellor, in offsetting .their joint demand, against the separate demand of an insolvent debtor due from one'of them. It cannot be to .the injury of either of the joint creditors, for they secure a portion of their debt, nor would they join in the application, for the offset, if they were unwilling to apply their joint debt in 3 J [34]*34that way. And no injustice is done to the insolvent, by requiring him to discount the debt due from him to two creditors, against a debt due from one of them to him, unless it can he regarded, as doing him injustice, to restrain him from taking advantage of his insolvent condition, to evade the payment of his own debt, while he uses the power of a court of law, to coerce from one of his creditors a debt due to him.

He owes a debt to both, and it is moral justice for him to pay it, whether it be joint or several, and unconsci•entious for him to harass one of them, for a debt due to him, when he withholds from them, the very means which would enable his debtor to meet and extinguish his demand against him.

Besides; though there does not appear to be any connection between the demands, or any express or implied understanding, that the one should stand against the other, Chamberlin may have become indebted on the faith of having in his and his partner’s hands, in the debt due from them, an amount sufficient to discharge it.— Whether he did or did not, the means are in their hands, and a chancellor should not permit it to be withdrawn by an insolvent debtor, who is unable or unwilling to refund it.

The cases cited by the learned Chancellor, in the English courts, were cases of insolvency under their statutes of bankruptcy,- which were enacted with a view to the benefit of all the creditors. In furtherance of the policy of those statutes, the Chancellor, looking to the interest of all the creditors, and to the pro rata distribution of all the bankrupt’s means among them, was less inclined to disturb the course of distribution, by interfering in behalf of a single creditor. Hence, in ex parte Towgood, 11 Ves. 517, Lord Elden observed, “if there be debts which could not be set off at law, must all the affairs of the bankruptcy be suspended until all the accounts are cleared, in order to see what rights of set-off there may be in the result?” “The consequence would be that, when there are joint and separate debts, which cannot be set off at law, in every bankruptcy the proceedings' must be suspended, until the accounts are ta[35]*35ken, and it is seen what the joint estate, and what the separate estate, will pay.”

If it were doubtful whether joint creditors could enforce the setofl'iusueha case, still, when another creditor of the insolvent debtor comes with a bill to attach the debt due him, there can be no doubt of the right of such garnishee to set up the debt due to himself & coobligees jointly, as a rebutting equity, to defeat-the attachment. The statute sub-payment of debts, upon

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ky. 32, 6 Dana 32, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chamberlin-v-stewart-powell-kyctapp-1837.