Charles Maloney & Co. v. Gonhue

116 N.W. 436, 152 Mich. 325, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 852
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1908
DocketDocket No. 68
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 116 N.W. 436 (Charles Maloney & Co. v. Gonhue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charles Maloney & Co. v. Gonhue, 116 N.W. 436, 152 Mich. 325, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 852 (Mich. 1908).

Opinions

Hooker, J.

The public schools in Escanaba were indebted to Leonard Gonhue, who in turn was a debtor of the plaintiff and several other persons, among whom was a firm known as Norton Brothers. He gave to Norton Brothers a written order in the following words:

“Escanaba, Mich., Nov. 4, 1905. “Board op Education,

“City:

“Please pay to Norton Brothers, or order, the sum of Five Hundred and Forty-two Dollars, and charge the same to my account, and oblige.

“Leonard Gonhue.”

The money was due upon a contract for building.

The plaintiff attempted to reach this money by garnishment proceedings, and, being permitted to recover, the defendants have appealed. The case turned in the circuit court and must here upon the question whether this order was void under the provisions of 3 Comp. Laws, § 9539, as a common-law assignment for the benefit of creditors, by reason of preference, and failure to include all of Gonhue’s property.

It is manifest that, upon the face of the instrument, there is nothing to indicate that it was an assignment for the benefit of creditors, but the oral testimony shows that [327]*327the order was given to Norton Brothers with the agreement that they should collect the money due, pay first their own claim and pay the remainder to other creditors who had furnished labor and material on the building (a list of whom was to be furnished later, and which was furnished within a few days), the aggregate of which claims was $576.18, while the order was for $542. Gonhue had'other debts amounting to about $700 and other property worth from $200 to $300.

The manifest intention of Gonhue was to secure the payment of said fund to designated creditors, and it is as certain that he had no intention of making á general assignment of his property in trust for the benefit of creditors. The case would not have been essentially different had he handed the Nortons $542 in money with like instructions. If this order is to be held void for the reasons stated, it can only be done by holding an instrument or a transaction resting in parol to be a common-law assignment for the benefit of creditors, which has no semblance of such, and which was never intended to be or operate as such. Assuming, as counsel for both parties do, that the arrangement between the debtor and, the Nortons was the assignment and acceptance of the title to this fund in trust for the benefit of creditors, the right of plaintiff to recover depends upon the question whether this transaction can be held to be an assignment for the benefit of creditors, within the contemplation of the legislature in its enactment of chapter 260 of the Compiled Laws. The contention of the plaintiff’s counsel is substantially that section 9539 includes all conveyances of money or property to another to be applied by him in the payment of any or all debts of the assignor. To the suggestion that a “common-law assignment for the benefit of creditors” has a well-defined meaning in the law and that this statute refers to no other, it is said that the statute enlarges the ineaning, if it could otherwise be held not to include all conveyances of money or property to another to be applied by him in the payment of any or [328]*328all debts. In short, the argument is that inasmuch as it makes void common-law assignments for the benefit . of creditors which are not without preferences, as between such creditors, and which do not include all of the assign- or’s property subject to execution, — ergo—any assignment of property to another, to be used by him to pay one or more of the assignor’s creditors, is a common-law assignment for the benefit of creditors within the meaning of the statute.

The act, as its title indicates, and its several sections show, was one designed to. provide for the enforcement of assignments for the benefit of creditors, and not with the primary object of preventing preferences. It provides (in a negative manner at least) what is necessary to an enforceable assignment, and points out the practice in enforcing such assignments. It must be an assignment “commonly called a common-law assignment for the benefit of creditors,” and not any assignment which happens to be made for the benefit of creditors. In other words, the statute does not include all assignments which would be assignments at common law, if, perchance, they are made for the benefit of a creditor, but it limits the assignments included to a class of assignments well known in the law and referred to and described as commonly called common-law “assignments for the benefit of creditors.” The mere fact that a general assignment is made void for preferences does not take it out of the class of common-law assignments to which it belonged. It is still what is known as a common-law assignment, though now made void.

It is one of that class of assignments, and no other, then, which must be shown before the statute applies to it at all, unless the argument suggested is to be taken as conclusive of the intent of the legislature to the exclusion of all other considerations. That it should not be so conclusive seems obvious, for the reason that such construction requires the exclusion of words in the statute which, under the best known of the general rules of construction, [329]*329is forbidden, if a construction which avoids such result is possible. It is possible, for the argument made could as well be applied and limited to “ commonly known common-law assignments for the benefit of creditors,” as to the broader class, viz., all assignments having for their object the benefit of creditors.

Again, if the latter was intended, why so mucn care to describe them as common-law assignments, still further, as such as are “commonly called (i. e., commonly understood to be) common-law assignments for the benefit of creditors.” Section 50, subd. 1, 1 Comp. Laws, is applicable here:

“ (50) Sec. 3. In the construction of the statutes of this State, the following rules shall be observed, unless such construction would be inconsistent with the manifest intent of the legislature, that is to say:

“1. All words and phrases shall be construed and understood according to the common and approved usage of the language; but technical words and phrases, and such as may have acquired a peculiar and appropriate meaning in the law, shall be construed and understood according to such peculiar and appropriate meaning.”

If a common-law assignment, etc., has a technical meaning, the words must be held to have been so used, while section 9539, by its terms, enforces the application of the first command of subd. 1 of section 50.

An assignment for the benefit of creditors, ‘ ‘ commonly known and- called ” such, has ' consisted of a writing amounting to a conveyance of the title to all, or substantially all, of a debtor’s property to another, in trust, for the purpose of closing out his business, converting his property into money, and distributing it among his creditors, to the extent of payment if possible, and, if not, proportionately, or with prescribed preferences. That would be a general assignment for the benefit of creditors, and is the “commonly called common-law assignment for the benefit of creditors.” In Burrill on Assignments (6th Ed.), § 86, it is said:

[330]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 N.W. 436, 152 Mich. 325, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-maloney-co-v-gonhue-mich-1908.