Fenton v. Edwards & Johnson

58 P. 320, 126 Cal. 43, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 673
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1899
DocketL.A. No. 526.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 58 P. 320 (Fenton v. Edwards & Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fenton v. Edwards & Johnson, 58 P. 320, 126 Cal. 43, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 673 (Cal. 1899).

Opinion

*45 COOPER, C.

—This case was submitted in the court below upon an agreed statement of facts. Judgment was thereupon entered in favor of plaintiff, and this appeal is by the intervenor from the judgment, and comes here upon the judgment-roll. The agreed statement of facts, which may here be treated as the findings, shows, in substance, as follows: At all times mentioned in the said stipulation the Northrup, Braslan, Goodwin Company was a corporation, organized under the laws of Minnesota, doing business in Minneapolis and in ■ Chicago, Illinois. On May 38, 1896, the said corporation made a general assignment for the benefit of their creditors to plaintiff, who is a resident of the state of Illinois, which assignment purported to convey to the plaintiff, as assignee, all the property, both real and personal, of the said corporation wheresoever situate. The said assignment was made in conformity with the voluntary assignment laws of the state of Illinois. The plaintiff duly qualified as such assignee, filed the proper bond in the office of the clerk of the county court of Cook county, Illinois, and ever since has been the assignee of said corporation, acting under the direction of said county court. It does not appear from the stipulation whether the assignment was executed in the state of Minnesota or the state of Illinois.

On said last-named date the defendants were indebted to said corporation in the sum of three hundred and thirty dollars and sixty-two cents, which said sum is the subject of controversy in this action. At the time of making the said assignment, and prior thereto, the said corporation was, and still is, indebted to the intervenor, who was and is a citizen of the state of Nebraska, in the sum of one thousand dollars.

On the seventeenth day of July, 1896, after proceedings duly commenced by the intervenor in the superior court of Los Angeles county, state of California, against said corporation, a writ of attachment was duly issued and served upon the defendants, by which it was attempted to levy upon and garnishee the amount so due the corporation by the defendants. After the said writ was served upon defendants, the plaintiff made demand upon them for the payment to him as assignee of the amount owing by them to said corporation. Defendants admit the indebtedness, but desire the court to determine to whom it *46 shall be paid. The only issue to be determined here is, whether the indebtedness due by defendants to the corporation passed to plaintiff by said assignment. If it did so pass, then, at the time of the levy of the said writ, the defendants were not indebted to said corporation, but to plaintiff, as such assignee, for the benefit of creditors. There is no question here as to rights of añy citizen of this state or of property situate within this state. The chose in action due from defendants to the corporation has no situs in the state of California, but must follow the person of the owner, and was, therefore, in contemplation of law, situate in the state of Minnesota at the time of the said assignment. ° (Guillander v. Howell, 35 N. Y. 662; Burrill on Assignments, 6th ed., sec. 282.)

The above proposition is conceded by appellant’s counsel. The stipulation of facts shows that the assignment “was made in conformity with the voluntary assignment laws of the state of Illinois,” and that the laws of Minnesota and Illinois shall be considered before the court in determining the question in controversy. The Revised Statutes of Illinois provide that any debtor may make a voluntary assignment of his property for the benefit of his creditors. (Ill. Rev. Stats., c. 10a, sec. 1.)

The assignment, therefore, having been made to a resident of Chicago, in which place the corporation was doing business, under the laws of Illinois, and the assignee having qualified and filed his bond with the county clerk of Cook county, where he is now acting under the direction of the county court of said county, and the voluntary assignment law of Illinois, by its terms, applying to assignments made in the state of Illinois, we think the assignment was valid, and conveyed all the property of the corporation to the plaintiff, including the chose in action due from defendants to the corporation.

It is the rule of all the states of the "Union that a contract valid in the place where it is made is valid everywhere. (2 Parsons on Contracts, 570; Burrill on Assignments, sec. 275; Story on Conflict of Laws, secs. 376-83; Guillander v. Howell, supra.)

Certain exceptions are stated in the books in cases where a contract or sale affects property situate in a different state from the one in which the sale is made, or the revenue laws of an *47 other state, or if it conflicts with the interests of another state or its citizens.

In Burrill on Assignments, section 375, the rule is thus stated: “With.regard to all contracts of which the subject matter is personal property, it may be laid down as a broad general proposition, subject, however, to numerous qualifications, that their validity is to be tested by the law of the place where the contract is made. If valid there, they will be everywhere sustained, and foreign tribunals, on principles of international and interstate comity, will, in determining their force and sufficiency, regard them in the light of the law where they were made. On this principle a voluntary assignment in one state, valid by the laws of that state, would operate to convey personal property (not already subject to liens) in every state where it might be found.”

In Story on Conflict of Laws, section 433a, the author, in discussing the rule that sales and contracts in relation to personal property are to be construed according to the law of the domicile of the owner or the place of the contract, says: “Similar rules will govern in cases of voluntary assignments by debtors, and of involuntary assignments under the bankrupt laws of a state. In each case the lex loci of the assignment or the bankruptcy will ordinarily form the basis of the priorities and privileges attaching to his movable property, and will regulate the distribution thereof among his creditors, at least, if that is the place of his domicile and of the situs of the property.”

In the case of Means v. Hapgood, 19 Pick. 105, it was held that an assignment made in the state of Maine by a citizen thereof to certain of his creditors, was valid against a subsequent attachment of the debt in the commonwealth of Massachusetts by a citizen thereof. The learned Chief Justice Shaw, in the opinion, said: “This is founded upon the general principle that an owner has the disposing power over property which is recognized by all civilized, and especially by all commercial, nations, to transfer his property for a good and valuable consideration, and the general disposition of all friendly governments to give effect to such contracts when not opposed by some great consideration of public policy, or manifestly injurious to their own citizens. A fortiori is this true of the several states of the American *48 Union, who, though foreign for some purposes, are united for many others.”

In Campbell v. Colorado Coal etc. Co., 9 Colo. 60, filed June 17, 1885, 7 West Coast Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
58 P. 320, 126 Cal. 43, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fenton-v-edwards-johnson-cal-1899.