Fisher v. Currier

9 F. Cas. 127, 5 Law Rep. 217
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJune 15, 1842
DocketCase No. 4,818
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 F. Cas. 127 (Fisher v. Currier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher v. Currier, 9 F. Cas. 127, 5 Law Rep. 217 (D. Mass. 1842).

Opinion

SPRAGUE, District Judge.

This is a petition to have Currier and Smith declared bankrupts. It is resisted on the ground that they have committed no act of bankruptcy. One act relied upon by the petitioners is an attachment, or rather attachments, of all the stock in trade of the respondents, made on the 19th of March last, on two writs, one In favor of Benjamin Smith, the father; and the other in favor of Benjamin Smith, Junior, the brother of Hambleton E. Smith, one of the respondents. There is some discrepancy in the testimony; but I think the following facts are proved. Currier and Smith are now, and wore, on the 19th of March, insolvent. They had been previously pressed for means to meet their engagements, and Currier had gone to Maine for the purpose of collecting debts. During his absence, the pressure upon the firm increased, and it is testified by Wells, their clerk, that they appeared tó be in embarrassed circumstances. The appearances of embarrassment were such as to attract the attention of Mr. Froth-ingham, who was, or assumed to be the agent of Benjamin Smith, who was absent at his home in Duxbury. Frothingham asked Smith, the respondent, what was the matter. He said they were “terribly short.” A conversation ensued, in which Frothingham asked him if Currier and Smith did not still owe his father and brother; to which he answered in the affirmative, and Frothingham told him he should cause attachments to be made immediately iri their favor; to which Smith made objection, but handed him one of the three notes on which the attachments were made, and copies of the two others which Frotningham immediately carried to Mr. Curtis, and procured two writs upon which the attachments were immediately made. Frothingham had no other authority-to. make-these attachments, than “a general authority, given by Benjamin Smith a year or two before, to keep an eye to his interests here.” Mr. Curtis instructed Froth-ingham, that the actions might be maintained if the plaintiffs should ratify them before any other attachment should be laid, and advised him to send to Duxbury immediately to obtain their ratification. This was after two o’clock. On the same day, Smith, the respondent, wrote to his father to come to Boston and “take care of himself, or secure himself:” and the father came the next morning and ratified the proceedings of Frothing-ham. Frothingham did not write or send to the father. Benjamin Smith, Junior, was absent at sea, and has not returned, nor been informed of the suit commenced in his behalf. Currier returned from Maine on the 20th of March. The actions were entered at the April term of the common pleas in Suffolk. Currier and Smith employed an attorney, who entered on adverse appearance; but a default was entered about the first of May, and judgment on the seventh of that month. Neither of the respondents have petitioned for the benefit of the bankrupt law, and both resist this application.

The first section of the statute [of 1841 (5 Stat. 440)) makes it an act of bankruptcy for a debtor to “willingly or fraudulently procure his goods and chattels to be attached.” If a debtor voluntarily aid his creditor in taking his goods and chattels upon a writ by way of attachment, or in perfecting at attachment previously incomplete, he must be deemed to have willingly procured his goods and chattels to be attached, within the meaning of the statute.

There are two things done by Hambleton E. Smith, of very grave import; First, the de[128]*128livery of the note and copies of notes to Frothingham; and second, writing to his father to come and secure himself. ’

The first is proved by Frothingham, who is a witness for the respondents, and who alone knows the attending circumstances. His testimony therefore, is very material. He says that appearances were such as to excite his suspicions, and on the 17th of March, he asked Hambleton E. Smith what was the matter. And he replied, they were terribly short; and in answer to another question, he said, that they still owed his father and brother; — and upon further inquiry as to ways and means, — Frothingham was so convinced of their great embarrassment that he told Hambleton E. Smith that he should make attachments for the father and brother before he went to dinner. Hambleton E. Smith said, “Oh no, we 'can borrow; we can get along;” that it would be the breaking of them up, and would ruin them, and they could borrow. Further conversation ensued, in which Frothingham again said he should put an officer into the store, and Hambleton E. Smith objected and protested. Frothing-ham told him, if he would show him any thing to alter his opinion he would alter it Smith did not; but delivered to Frothing-ham the note and copies of notes, which he wanted for the sole and avowed purpose of making attachments, and which he carried immediately to Mr. Curtis, and caused the writs to be made. At what point of time the note and copies were delivered, and what was then said we are not distinctly informed, for, in the first deposition given by Mr. Frothingham, which purports, in. answer to the 12th interrogatory, to state all that was said and done between him and Smith, no mention is made of this most material fact, —and, in answer to the third cross-interrogatory, he testified, that he had stated fully all that passed between him and Hamble-ton E. Smith. It was not until his second deposition was taken, and the question was pointedly put to him, whether Hambleton E. Smith handed him copies of notes, that the fact was disclosed by him. And it further appears, that Frothingham learned from Hambleton E. Smith the amounts of the debts due to the father and brother, and that Ham-bleton E. Smith had no knowledge that Frothingham had any agency or authority whatever from the father.

In answer to a question by the respondent’s counsel, whether H. E. Smith gave the note and copies willingly; he replied “Not very willingly;” and to a cross-interrogatory, he said, that the reason he said so, was, that Smith -was not willing he should take the step he did; and refers to his former depositions for the facts on which he made that statement. Now, considering the position which Mr. Frothingham occupies, as the son-in-law of Benjamin Smith, the father, and one who has voluntarily commenced process for securing to him and his brother-in-law a priority, and having a natural anxiety to accomplish that purpose; and considering that he omitted in his first deposition to state-the fact of his receiving the note and copies;, and considering also, the testimony of Baker as to his declarations, touching the letter written by Smith to his father, and Froth- . Ingham’s naked denial of such declarations, and his denial of knowledge who wrote the letter to the father coupled with the fact, that Mr. Curtis advised him to send to the father immediately, and that he did not, but Smith, the son, did, — we are irresistibly led to the conclusion, that his wishes are strong,ly on the side of the respondents, and that, while he has testified truly, in answer to direct and specific inquiries, he has been reserved as to matters adverse to the respondents, and not drawn out by pointed interrogatories.

Now, from the whole testimony in the case, I think it is fairly to be inferred, that, whatever may have been the reluctance of H. E. Smith, in the first instance, to accede to the views of Frothingham in having an attachment made, yet that in the end and before Frothingham left him,, he was so convinced or persuaded as to accede to those views, and voluntarily to lend his aid to carry them into effect And for that purpose, he delivered him the note and copies, and wrote to his-father to come and secure himself.

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Related

Smith v. Brinckerhoff
8 Barb. 519 (New York Supreme Court, 1850)

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Bluebook (online)
9 F. Cas. 127, 5 Law Rep. 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-currier-mad-1842.