Downer v. Brackett

21 Vt. 599
CourtUnited States District Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 21 Vt. 599 (Downer v. Brackett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States District Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Downer v. Brackett, 21 Vt. 599 (usdistct 1842).

Opinion

Prentiss, J.

The general question presented in this case is one of much importance, affecting, as its ultimate decision undoubtedly will, to a very considerable extent, the rights and interests of many persons in this state. Viewing it in that light, I have given to the question all the consideration the time afforded me would allow, and have endeavored to form an opinion upon it with a single eye to its merits, and without indulging in any extraneous or irrelevant specu[601]*601lations. I have not allowed myself to be influenced by any considerations arising out of the supposed policy of the bankrupt act, beyond what appears to be its policy from the act itself. To go aside of a written positive law, and reason upon an assumed and imputed general policy in regard to it, especially if there be no apparent ambiguity in the law, is, in my opinion, an unsafe and unsatisfactory mode of argument, in judicial questions. It is, as one of the present judges of England said of public policy as a ground of argument, like an unruly horse; when you once get astride-it, you never know where it will carry you. The policy of the act, whatever it may be in respect to the distribution of the bankrupt’s estate among his creditors, and whether more or less restricted, is to be collected from the provisions of the act itself, giving to all its parts a just construction. It is conceded, as it must be, that it is not the policy of the act to distribute the property of the bankrupt, pari passu, among his creditors, in ratable proportions, regardless of all existing liens, for that would be a contradiction of the act, at once direct, palpable and undisguised. It is admitted, that some liens are saved ; and if so, the question is, upon a fair interpretation of the act, what liens 1 Are they those only, which are created by express contract, or' are they all liens whatever, which are created or exist under the laws of the respective states ?

The act provides, “ that nothing in this act contained shall be construed to annul, destroy, or impair, any lawful rights of married women, or minors, or any liens, mortgages, or other securities on property, real or personal, which may be valid by the laws of the states respectively, and which are not inconsistent with the second and fifth sections of this act.”

“Any liens, mortgages, or other securities on property, real or personal,” are very comprehensive terms, and are used without any qualification or limitation whatever, except what is imposed by reference to the laws of the states and to the provisions of the second and fifth sections of the act. The obvious reading would seem to be, that every kind of lien or security, upon real or personal property, is protected and preserved, where such lien or security is valid by the state laws, unless it be fraudulent within some of the provisions referred to, or be liable to the objection of creating such a preference, as those provisions prohibit.

[602]*602Though lien, in a narrow and perhaps the more technical sense, signifies the right, by which a person in possession of personal property holds and detains it against the owner in satisfaction of a demand, yet it has a more extensive meaning, and, in common acceptation, is understood and used to denote a legal claim or charge on property, either real or personal, for the payment of any debt osduty. Every such claim or charge is styled a lien on the property, although the property be not in the possession of him, to whom the debt or duty is due. The right of a vendor upon land as security for the purchase money, the right of a judgment creditor against the lands or goods of the judgment debtor, given bylaw in England and in many of the states in this country, and the right acquired by a creditor under an attachment of property, where the law of attachment exists, are all spoken of and treated as liens, in abridgments of the law, in elementary treatises, and in judicial decisions. Indeed, an attachment is expressly called and denominated a lien in the statutes of this state. Revised Statutes, chap. 49, § 53, and chap. 43, § 51.

That the term lien is used in the act in the latter sense, and that the bankrupt’s property vests in the assignee, subject to any such lien, or claim, which others may legally have upon it, is not only evident from the term being applied in the act to real as well as personal property, but seems to receive countenance and support from other provisions of the act. The eleventh section gives the assignee power, under the direction of the-court, “ to redeem or discharge any mortgage, or other pledge or deposit, or lien upon any property, real or personalthe third section authorizes him to defend any suit pending against the bankrupt at the time of the decree of bankruptcy; and the fifth section declares the proving of any debt by a creditor, under the bankruptcy, to be a waiver of any action pending therefor, or judgment recovered thereon; so that whatever lien may have been acquired by suit or judgment' is thereby surrendered and given up. These provisions help to strengthen the conclusion, that it was the intention to save from the operation of the act every Iona fide claim or charge on property, valid by the local laws, and not declared fraudulent or unlawful by the act, whether created by express agreement of the parties, or given by operation and effect of law. Even under the English bankrupt acts it has been held, that [603]*603the lien of the vendor of land was a valid charge upon it for the purchase money, though the vendee become bankrupt, and though there be no agreement for the purpose. Chapman v. Tanner, 1 Vern, 267. Vin. Abr. 74. Fonb. Eq. 380.

That a judgment was a lien, within the meaning of the bankrupt act of 1800, was decided in the case of Livingston v. Livingston, 2 Caine 300. The question arose under the thirty first and sixty third sections of the act, containing the following provisions,' — “In the distribution of the bankrupt’s effects, there shall be paid to every of the creditors a portionrate, according to the amount of their respective debts, so that every creditor, having security for his debt by judgment, statute, recognizance, or specialty, or having an attachment under any of the laws of the individual states, or of the United States, on the estate of such bankrupts, (provided there be no execution executed upon any of the real or personal estate of such bankrupt before the time he or she became bankrupt,) shall not be relieved upon any such judgment, statute, recognizance, specialty, or attachment, for more than a ratable part of his debt, with the other creditors of the bankrupt. Nothing contained in this act shall be taken, or construed, to invalidate or impair any lien existing at the date of this act, upon the lands or chattels of any person, who may become bankrupt.”

The plaintiff’s judgment was obtained before the passing of the act, and the question was, whether the lands held by the bankrupt, at the time of docketing the judgment, passed to the assignees, discharged of the judgment, or whether the judgment remained a subsisting lien, paramount to the claims of the general creditors. It was insisted, that the lien mentioned in the sixty third section contemplated only such liens as were created by the act of the party, as mortgages and the- like; but the court held, that the section preserved all preceding liens, and that there could be no doubt that a judgment was a lien.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Vt. 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downer-v-brackett-usdistct-1842.