Gardner v. Commercial National Bank

13 R.I. 155, 1880 R.I. LEXIS 71
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 18, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 13 R.I. 155 (Gardner v. Commercial National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Commercial National Bank, 13 R.I. 155, 1880 R.I. LEXIS 71 (R.I. 1880).

Opinion

Durpee, C. J.

The mere fact that an assignment for the benefit of creditors has a tendency to hinder and delay them, or some of them, in the enforcement of their claims, is not decisive against it, for such is the tendency of. such an assignment, even when it is entirely unconditional. It is permissible to frame the assignment so that it will hinder and delay the creditors or some of them to some extent, when it is done for the more effectual accomplishment of the proper purpose of the assignment, namely, the application of the assigned property to the payment in the fullest possible measure of the debts. In such an assignment there is no fraudulent intent, and it is not the mere hindering and delaying, but the fraudulent intent to hinder and delay on the part of the assignor, which makes : the assignment void. It is easy, however, to exceed the allowable limit, and to make an assignment calculated to hinder and delay, for the purpose of securing a benefit to the assignor or some person other than the creditors at their expense. Such an assign *167 ment would be fraudulent and void. For instance, an assignment by a solvent person in order to protect the property from legal process because the times are bad and to hold it for better times, would be fraudulent and void, being an attempt by the assignor to get an advantage for himself at the expense of his creditors. Van Nest v. Yoe et als. 1 Sandf. Ch. 4 ; Planck v. Schermerhorn, 3 Barb. Ch. 644 ; Burt v. McKinstry & Seely, 4 Minn. 204, 215; Gere v. Murray, 6 Minn. 305 ; Vernon v. Morton & Smith, 8 Dana, 247, 263; Ward v. Trotter, 3 T. B. Mon. 1; Phelps v. Curts, 80 Ill. 109; Gardner v. Commercial National Bank, 95 Ill. 298. Creditors are entitled not only to be paid, but to be paid as their claims accrue, and, therefore, in contemplation of law, the debtor has no more right to postpone payment simply for bis own advantage than to defeat it altogether. Nicholson v. Leavitt, 6 N. Y. 510.

We think the assignment here, dated December 5, 1878, must be regarded, primd facie at least, as fraudulent and void under our statute of fraudulent conveyances. It is an assignment by four persons who describe themselves as copartners doing business under the firm name of Sackett, Davis & Co. It conveys all their property, both copartnership and individual, except such as is exempt from attachment by law. The question has been made whether it is for the benefit of copartnership creditors only or for both copartnership and individual creditors. We think it is for the benefit of both classes alike. It states, by way of preamble, that “ the said Sackett, Davis & Co. are indebted and under liability to divers persons in divers sums of money, and their assets, although amounting in value to about three times their said indebtedness, cannot immediately be made available for the payment of the same as their said indebtedness shall from time to time mature.” Literally taken, the statement is that the partnership assets are almost three times as great as the partnership debts. We are inclined to think, however, in view of the assignment as a whole, that the meaning is that the partnership and individual assets are almost three times as great as the partnership and ihdividual debts, and that the partnership is put for the partners as well individually as jointly, because the embarrassment originated in the business of the partnership. The *168 assignment states further, by way of preamble, that “ the best interests of the creditors may require that the jewelry business, in which the said Sackett, Davis & Co. have been hitherto engaged, should be for some period continued by the said trustees, and by them gradually discontinued and closed out.” For these reasons, and “for the purpose of equally securing and paying all their creditors,” the assignment purports to have been made. It confers, very large discretionary powers upon the assignees. It empowers them “to invest, reinvest, and change investments,” and “ to manage, act, and deal ” with the assigned property “ absolutely, in their uncontrolled discretion, as they may judge for the best interests of all the creditors.” It gives them “free, full, and uncontrolled power in their discretion to carry on ” the business “ for such time ” as they may “ deem for the best interests of the creditors, and necessary .for the purpose of preventing shrinkage and loss, and of closing out and liquidating the same to the best advantage.'’’’ It also empowers them to give new notes and indorsements in lieu of the existing notes or indorsements or other debts of the assignors, as well as for their own liabilities contracted in carrying on the business, and to lease the real property assigned “ upon such terms as they may see fit, or to mortgage any and all ” of it, and to “ pledge or mortgage any and all of the personal property.” The only restraint to which the assignment subjects the assignees is that their authority to carry on the business shall forthwith cease and determine whenever a majority in amount of the creditors shall so direct. In view of these powers and of the careful provision made for carrying on the business, it looks very much as if a principal purpose of the assignment was to rescue the business from impending ruin and keep it alive for the benefit of the assignors, meanwhile paying the creditors gradually out of the profits and out of such other property as could be disposed of without seriously crippling the business. It is true that the assignment does contain directions to the effect that whatever is done by the assignees under it shall be done with a view to the best interests of the creditors; but, to say nothing of the numerous minor indications which the assignment contains that these directions were not meant to be im-' perative, the great fact which it recites, that the property was *169 almost three times as much as was necessary to pay the debts, renders it incredible that the assignment was designed to promote not any interest or advantage of the assignors as distinct from that of the creditors, but simply the best interests of the creditors. In Gardner v. Commercial National Bank, 95 Ill. 298, the validity of this assignment was litigated before the Supreme Court of Illinois, and the court held it. to be invalid under the laws of that State, because it appeared on the face of it to have been made not simply for the benefit of the creditors, but to secure an advantage to the assignors, namely, to prevent a sacrifice of the property. We cannot resist the belief that the conclusion of the Supreme Court of Illinois in regard to the purpose of the assignment was correct. And this being so, the assignment is, in our opinion, as invalid under the laws of this State as it was under the laws of Illinois. See the cases above cited.

In Dunham v. Waterman, 17 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
13 R.I. 155, 1880 R.I. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-commercial-national-bank-ri-1880.