Fera v. . Wickham

31 N.E. 1028, 135 N.Y. 223, 29 Abb. N. Cas. 200, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 866, 90 Sickels 223, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1611
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 31 N.E. 1028 (Fera v. . Wickham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fera v. . Wickham, 31 N.E. 1028, 135 N.Y. 223, 29 Abb. N. Cas. 200, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 866, 90 Sickels 223, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1611 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Gray, J.

The firm of Wickh ,m & Co., having become insolvent, made a general assignment for the benefit of their creditors. On October 27, 1890, at the time of this assignment, the plaintiff held their unmaturéd acceptance of a draft to the amount of $1,390.60 for goods sold. The assignee became by the assignment the holder of a promissory note made by the plaintiff to Wickham & Co.’s order for $536.25. The accepted draft was payable November 6, 1890, and the plaintiff’s note was payable on June 9, 1891.

The plaintiff has brought the present action to secure an equitable offset of the debt to him from the insolvent estate, as against the debt due by him. "Upon the defendant’s demurrer to his complaint, the courts below have held the relief within the power of a court of equity to award, and, therefore, gave plaintiff judgment. In the opinions, delivered at the Special and General Terms of the Supreme Court, the learned justices relied upon the decision in Rothschild v. Mack (42 Hun, 72). The opinion of the General Term of the fifth department in that case was affirmed by this court, as to the correctness of the conclusion arrived at. (115 N. Y. 1.) But the appeal was not decided in this court on the ground taken by the General Term in their opinion, but, solely, because a cause of action on contract did exist in the complainant’s favor against the insolvent assignor at the time of the assignment. The learned justices below, in the present case, have felt themselves constrained, apparently, to follow the decisión 'n the fifth department; inasmuch as in this court, in the Rothschild case, the correctness of the General Term views was not expressly denied.

It must be conceded that the opinion of this court in the Rothschild case seemed to leave open for further discussion the question passed upon by the General Term; namely, of the right to an equitable offset where, at the time of the assign *226 ment, the party was only contingently hable. It was the opinion there that the general rule in equity should obtain, if the liability of the insolvent estate had become actual prior to the time of the maturity of the demand due to the estate. This view, however, I think to be untenable, if we are to be guided by the authority of previous decisions in this court. In the Rothschild case, neither plaintiffs’ claim on the note, nor the assignee’s claim against them, were due at the time of the assignment, but, because of the fraud practiced upon the plaintiffs, in the manner in which the moneys were obtained from them, it was held that a cause of action in assumpsit arose at once in then favor for the recovery back of 'the moneys. It existed the moment the insolvent assignors obtained the money, and being a proper subject of set-off, in any action which might have been brought by the parties against whom it existed, it could properly be offset against the debt due from the plaintiffs to the assignee, pro tcmto.

The subsequent case of Richards v. La Tourette (119 N. Y. 54) was that of an action by the assignee of an insolvent firm to foreclose a mortgage. The defendant demanded that the assignee set off, in reduction of his indebtedness upon the mortgage, the indebtedness due from the assignors to him. The particular and only question presented was whether, as the defendant’s debt upon the mortgage was not due at the time of the assignment, the debt owing to him from the assignors, and which was due at that time, could be equitably applied in reduction of the mortgage debt. The right to the offset was upheld because of the immateriality of the fact that the debt owing to the insolvents was not due when the assignment was made. The debtor to the insolvents could elect to treat his debt as presently due, and waive any defense on any such ground.

Where this case differs from the Rothschild case is that there was no cause of action in favor of the plaintiff at the time of the assignment. The question here is whether the plaintiff has an equitable right to an offset of his demand against the insolvent estate, which had not matured at the *227 time of the assignment, hut which did subsequently mature before the demand held by the assignee against him matured. In the solution of this question, we might find some embarrassment in endeavoring to reconcile expressions of opinion by the judges in earlier cases, and, after a very careful consideration, I am disposed to hold that by an assignment in trust for the assignor’s creditors, what natural equities previously existed become suspended by an intervention of the rights of other creditors. The natural equity in offsetting cross-demands, which had its rise in the rule of the civil law, was soon adopted by the Court of Chancery in cases where, from the situation of the parties, cross-actions at law were inadequate. Hence, if one of the parties should become insolvent, the insolvency was recognized as presenting a case for equitable interference. But the rule was limited in its application to cases where the equitable rights of others were not interfered with.

Thus, in Lindsay v. Jackson (2 Paige, 581), the bill was filed to restrain the defendants from negotiating complainant’s notes to others and for a set-off of cross-demands, and the insolvency of the defendants was considered a sufficient reason for permitting an offset of their debt to complainant as against the complainant’s debt to them.

But in Chance v. Isaacs (5 Paige, 592), which was a similar action to that of Lindsay v. Jackson, the relief of set-off was denied by the vice-chancellor, because an assignment had been made, under which the creditors of the insolvent party acquired an interest in the complainant’s notes before his demand against the defendants had matured. His decree was affirmed. It is trae that the chancellor in that case thought that the right of set-off would have existed, although the defendants’ note, upon which complainant was liable as indorser, was not due at the time of the assignment, if the complainant had held it. He regarded the fact that complainant did not hold the note at that time as precluding him from demanding a set-off. The remark referred to in the opinion in Chance v. Isaacs does not seem to me to have been regarded as controlling in *228 later eases. It was unnecessary to the decision there and I think we must refuse to be guided by it.

In Bradley v. Angel (3 N. Y. 415), the complainants owed defendant’s testator for goods purchased. They held his notes falling due at times subsequent to his decease. A suit was commenced against them for their indebtedness to the estate and they commenced this action to secure an offset of the testator’s unmatured notes as against their present indebtedness and to restrain the action at law. Judge Gardiner, in holding that a set-off could not be' permitted, on the ground that the testator’s contract could not be changed by compelling payment before maturity, assigned as a reason that it would be to the prejudice of other creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.E. 1028, 135 N.Y. 223, 29 Abb. N. Cas. 200, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 866, 90 Sickels 223, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fera-v-wickham-ny-1892.