Ex parte Foster

9 F. Cas. 508, 2 Story 131, 5 Law Rep. 55, 1842 U.S. App. LEXIS 600
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedApril 30, 1842
DocketCase No. 4,960
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 9 F. Cas. 508 (Ex parte Foster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Foster, 9 F. Cas. 508, 2 Story 131, 5 Law Rep. 55, 1842 U.S. App. LEXIS 600 (circtdma 1842).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

This is the case of an application by Foster, a petitioner for the benefit of the bankrupt act of 1S41, e. 9, against William Appleton and others, who were severally attaching creditors, some of whose attachments were made upon his personal estate and others upon his effects in the hands of his debtors under the trustee process, before the date of the petition, Fos[512]*512ter not having as yet been declared a bankrupt. because the time has not yet arrived, when the petition is to be heard in the district court. The petition, which is on the equity side of the court, seeks relief against these attachments by a decree of the district court, for an injunction enjoining the creditors from further proceedings against the property attached, and requiring them to surrender these attachments, or for an injunction and other relief against these attaching creditors, according to the view, which the court shall take of the matter. The discussion has taken a very wide range, and the questions arising in the case have been argued with great ability and learning. In the view, which I have taken of the questions, I do not deem'it necessary to go into a minute examination of the weight and bearing of the numerous authorities cited at the bar, some of which certainly seem open to much juridical criticism and doubt, from the looseness of the language used, as well as from the extraordinary nature and extent of some of the propositions asserted in them. And, after all, the questions must mainly depend for their decision upon the true character and effect of an attachment upon mesne process under the laws of Massachusetts, and the extent to which such an attachment is recognized and protected, or is maintainable under the bankrupt act of 1841, c. 9, either by the express savings of the act, or by the policy and general provisions thereof. The attachments under the trustee process must be governed by similar considerations, and therefore they will require no separate notice.

Before proceeding to consider the questions, which have been argued, I wish to say a few words as to the jurisdiction of the district court in the premises. And here I lay it down as a general principle, that the district court is possessed of the full jurisdiction of a court of equity, over the whole subject-matters which may arise in bankruptcy, and is authorized by summary proceedings to administer all the relief which a court of equity could administer under the like circumstances, upon a regular bill and regular proceedings, instituted by competent parties. In this respect, the act of congress, for wise purposes, has conferred a more wide and liberal jurisdiction upon the courts of the United States than the lord chancellor, sitting in bankruptcy, was authorized to exercise. In short, whatever he might properly do, sitting in bankruptcy, or sitting in the court of chancery, under his general equity jurisdiction, the courts of the United States are by the act of 1841 competent to do. So that the question resolves itself, so far as the exercise of jurisdiction for relief in this ease is concerned, into this, whether it is a fit case for interposition and relief by a court of equity.

Having disposed of this preliminary matter. let ns now proceed to the consideration of the questions raised at the bar. And in the first place, what is the nature and effect of the common writ of attachment, as mesne process (for the case which I mean here to consider is that of William Appleton, by an attachment upon mesne process, and not of the other attaching creditors and trustees, under the foreign attachment act), under the laws of Massachusetts. It contains a command to the sheriff, or other proper officer, to attach the goods or estate of the defendant, and for want thereof, to take his body. The officer is at liberty, under that precept, to take the goods and chattels, or the lands and other heredit-aments of the defendant, or both, to answer the exigency of the writ. If the officer attaches the goods and chattels of the defendant, he takes them into his possession, and they are then deemed to be in custody of the law, and are to remain under his care and possession, to abide the final judgment in the suit. If lands or other heredita-ments are attached, they are not taken possession of by the officer; but they are bound by the attachment from the time, when it is made, if all the regular proceedings are had. And in such a case, the creditor is-at liberty, if he obtains judgment in the suit, to levy his execution upon the goods and chattels, or lands, or either of them, until he has obtained satisfaction; and his attachment gives him a priority of right of satisfaction, out of the property attached, over all other creditors, for thirty days after his judgment, and no longer. If the judgment is for the defendant, the attachment is forthwith dissolved by mere operation of law. Such is the general character and operation of the common process of attachment (for I need not go into minor particulars); aud by the very language of the laws of Massachusetts, the property so attached, whether real or personal, is “held as security to satisfy such judgment as the plaintiff may recover.” Rev. St. 1836, pt S, tit 2, c. 90, §§ 28, 24. But whether it be such a security, as is within the savings of the bankrupt act of 1841, c. 9, is quite a different question, and will come more directly under consideration hereafter, uhe supreme judicial court of Massachusetts have (as I think) taken the true view of it, in the case of Atlas Bank v. Nahant Bank, 23 Pick. 488, where they declared, that an “attachment on mesne process is to be considered as a remedy merely given and regulated by law, to enable one creditor, who is proceeding for himself alone, to obtain satisfaction of his debt; and when several are so proceeding, he who is first in time is prior in right” But the court immediately adds: “But in equity, a'l these priorities give way to a general proceeding which has for its object to distribute all the effects of a debtor, by paying the whole, if there be assets, and then proceeding for a ratable [513]*513distribution. Ii the property turn out to be sufficient to pay the whole, any priority by attachment would be useless; if not, it would be unjust.” Now, this latter language is exceedingly pointed, and applicable to- the case now before the court; for the bankrupt act has for its object and policy a distribution of all the assets of the debtor equally among all his creditors; and it positively prohibits any preference tio be made by the debtor-in favor of any creditor, in contemplation of bankruptcy. And hence a commission and decree, declaring a man to be a bankrupt, has been emphatically said to be a statute e.xecution for all the creditors. See Barker v. Goodair, 11 Ves. 78-80; Cook, Bankr. Law (Ed. 1799) p. 5, c. 1; Twiss v. Mussey, 1 Atk. 67; Ex parte Knott, 11 Ves 608, 619.

But it is said, that an attachment under our law constitutes a lien upon the property attached; that it is a perfect, fixed, and vested lien, as much so as a lien by a mortgage upon personal estate; that it gives a vested interest in the real estate attached, so that the creditor may dispute the validity of a will thereof; and that it is deemed equivalent to a title by purchase for a valuable consideration. And certain authorities are relied on to establish and confirm these positions. One of these authorities, I own, is very' direct to the position, that an attaching creditor of real estate has a right to contest the validity of a will of that estate before he has obtained judgment, and levied his execution thereon; that is, before it is ascertained, whether he has any debt due to him.

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Bluebook (online)
9 F. Cas. 508, 2 Story 131, 5 Law Rep. 55, 1842 U.S. App. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-foster-circtdma-1842.