Dockray v. Dockray

2 R.I. 547
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 6, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 2 R.I. 547 (Dockray v. Dockray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dockray v. Dockray, 2 R.I. 547 (R.I. 1850).

Opinion

Provided, however, that such of the creditors of me, the said Dockray, as do not, within three months from the date hereof, execute and deliver to said assignees a full discharge of their claims and demands against me, the said assignor, shall not be entitled to or receive any dividend or profit under this deed of assignment, but the dividends on the claims and demands of such creditors shall be paid over to the aforesaid assignor, or to such person or persons as he shall appoint."

The affidavits further showed, that the assignees had sold all the real and personal estate of the defendant, except his reversionary interest in certain bank stock, and applied the proceeds to the payment of the expenses of *Page 549 the assignment and of the debt of John D. Brown, preferred by the second clause of the assignment, and that this debt was paid and cancelled before the service of the plaintiff's writ. That the defendant's interest in twenty-two shares of the capital stock of the Rhode Island Union Bank remained unsold, and that said stock stood pledged for the payment of a note discounted at said Bank for One Thousand Dollars, signed by J.P. Dockray and endorsed by Mary P. Dockray, his mother, (who was entitled to the dividend on said stock during her life,) which note was preferred in said deed of assignment and directed to be paid; which stock it was said would not sell for more than enough to pay this debt, with interest, and the remainder of the expenses of the assignment, and was not subject to attachment.

For the plaintiff it was contended, in the opening. This assignment is void, for causes apparent on the face of the instrument, and, being void, the assigned property is subject to attachment in the hands of the assignees. The utmost a debtor can legally do is to make a general assignment of all his property, with preferences, and requiring those who take under the assignment to discharge him within a reasonable time. When he adds to these the claim to retain portions of his property not exempt from attachment by law, that claim, together with preferences and the requisition of a release of the whole debt in consideration of the fraction paid, makes the instrument a fraudulent attempt to tie up property, to hinder, delay, and defraud creditors, and it will be set aside as void. 2 Kent's Com. 534, and the cases cited in note C. In the case of Austin v. Bell, 20 Johns. 442, a stipulation that "in case any of the creditors named in the several *Page 550 classes should not, within the time limited, become parties to the assignment, the grantees should pay to the grantors the proportions of such of the creditors who neglect or refuse to execute these presents," was held to avoid the assignment. InHyslop v. Clarke, 14 Johns. 458, a reservation of the dividends of the non-releasing creditors, subject to the order or appointment of the debtor, was held to vitiate the whole instrument. See, also, Learing v. Bronkerhoff, 5 Johns. Ch. R. 339, and the remarks of Chief Justice MARSHALL in Brasher v.West, 7 Peters, 603.

For the defendant and garnishees, it was contended. This assignment is sought to be avoided, because it contains a resulting trust to the assignor. The clause was of no practical importance to the assignor, because there was no probability that the class of creditors of whom a release was required would be reached before the funds were exhausted. The plaintiff's counsel cite 2 Kent, p. 534, and the cases there referred to These cases prove that in some States an assignment with a clause requiring a release from creditors as a condition of their receiving a dividend, will be void. We do not dispute that such is the law in New York, Connecticut, Illinois, Missouri, and perhaps in other States. That the opposite doctrine is the law in England, (where the Bankrupt Act has not interfered,) in Massachusetts, (prior to the Insolvent law,) in Pennsylvania, in New Hampshire, and in the Supreme and Circuit Courts of the United States, and in this State, is equally indisputable. This was so decided in this State twenty years ago in the case of Burgess v. Boone.* (See Angell on Assignments, pages 112 and 128.) *Page 551 Under the sanction of this decision, numerous assignments with this clause, drawn by eminent counsel, have been executed, and are on record, and a decision adverse to this common practice and belief in the law as settled would shake the titles of manufacturing property to the amount of hundreds of thousands of dollars. The decision in Burgess v. Boone, was grounded on the judgment of STORY, J. in Halsey et al. v. Whitney et al., 4 Mason, 206. The assignment in that case contained a provision identical with that in this. The funds were to be divided amongcertain creditors named in a schedule in proportion to the amountwhich the debts of each bore to the whole amount in theschedule. The creditors, or a portion of them, became parties to the assignment, and "accepted the premises, in full payment and satisfaction and discharge of all their claims and demands." The judges held that the weight of authority was in favor of the stipulation for the release, and sustained the assignment. This decision was followed by Andrews v. Ludlow, 5 Pick. 28, in which the facts disclosed in the answers of the trustees are almost identical with those in the case at bar. It was an assignment for creditors generally, with a stipulation for a release and a reservation of the surplus and of the dividends of those creditors who should not execute the release. And the court, distinguishing *Page 552 this case from that of Harris et al. v. Sumner, 2 Pick. 129, in which a large provision was secured to the debtor unconditionally, on the ground that here the reservation was contingent, and not inserted for the benefit of the debtor, held that it did not vitiate the instrument. This doctrine was again confirmed in Lupton v. Cutter, 8 Pick. 298, and is also the doctrine of the English cases. Jackson v. Lomas, 4 Term, 166. Such settlements are almost as frequent in England as by the Bankrupt Act itself. The debtor cannot make preferences directly to certain specified creditors, because that would contravene the Bankrupt Act; and to do it indirectly, as by dividing his property among such as should release by a given day, would be equally objectionable. But if he divides his property equally, he may require a release, and the Bankrupt Act will not interfere. The dividends of those who refuse to release cannot be divided among the releasing creditors, for that would be to create a preference, and they must of course result to the assignor, and a clause in the assignment to that effect would simply express what the law implies. See The King v. Watson, 3 Price, 6. Such an assignment is more equitable than one which appropriates all the property to the releasing creditors; for if any, from accident, neglect, or other cause, do not come in within the stipulated time, their chance is not gone, for the dividend remains at the disposal of the assignor, and it is as fair to suppose that he will use it to settle with his creditors, as for a provision for himself. The assignment does not deprive the creditor of any remedy, and if he elects to pursue his remedy at law, he can compel the application of the surplus to the payment of his debt. Without doubt, the assignor cannot reserve a provision to himself, but how can he be said *Page 553

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Related

Scott v. Ezra Lunt's Administrator
32 U.S. 596 (Supreme Court, 1833)
Hyslop & Cambpell v. Clarke
14 Johns. 458 (New York Supreme Court, 1817)
Austin v. Bell
20 Johns. 442 (New York Supreme Court, 1823)
Ames v. Blunt
5 Paige Ch. 13 (New York Court of Chancery, 1834)
Halsey v. Fairbanks
11 F. Cas. 295 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts, 1826)

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Bluebook (online)
2 R.I. 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dockray-v-dockray-ri-1850.