Holmes v. Woodworth

72 Mass. 324
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1856
StatusPublished

This text of 72 Mass. 324 (Holmes v. Woodworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmes v. Woodworth, 72 Mass. 324 (Mass. 1856).

Opinion

Merrick, J.

If the arrangement made or the course of proceedings pursued by William J. Woodworth could be justified and upheld, the means of evading that portion of the provisions of the statutes for the relief of insolvent debtors, which relates to preferences of particular creditors, might be easily discovered, and would be perfect in their effect. But this is not pretended. It is not urged, as an objection to the maintenance of this bilk [326]*326that Edward P. Woodworth has any-right, having collected the note given to him by McIntyre, to retain and hold the money against the claim of the plaintiff in his capacity of assignee of the insolvent debtors whom he represents ; but that the plaintiff has no occasion to invoke the aid of this court as a court of equity, because he has a plain, adequate and complete remedy at law.

But the rule relied upon by the defendant is not to be applied to this case, because the plaintiff has not in fact an adequate and complete as well as a plain remedy at law. He has a right to the possession and control of all assets constituting any part of the estate of the insolvent debtors at the time of the assignment to him, and to reclaim, or recover the value of all the property which previously to his appointment they had unlawfully transferred to any of their creditors in violation of the provisions of the statutes prohibiting preferred payments of preexisting debts. That the delivery of the note of McIntyre to Edward P. Woodworth, at the request and with the direct aid and participation of William J. Woodworth, was designed and intended to be, and was in fact the payment of a preexisting debt in preference to all the other creditors of the insolvent debtors, is too plain to admit of doubt. There is as little doubt, that the note of McIntyre constituted a part of the estate to which their assignee was entitled, and which it was his duty to obtain and hold for the common benefit of all parties having an interest therein. It was given in part satisfaction of the consideration for which the copartnership stock of Russell & Woodworth was sold, and was therefore a mere substitute for the merchandise of which they had been the owners. It might therefore undoubtedly have been properly demanded of Edward P. Woodworth, or, when collected, its contents recovered from him by their assignee.

But this was not the full extent of his right. He could not be deprived, by any artifice or contrivance, of the advantage, if be desired to avail himself of it, of resorting directly to the maker of the note. The right to maintain an action against Edward P. Woodworth for its unlawful conversion, or for the [327]*327money which he may have realized from it, is certainly a very plain remedy at law in favor of the assignee ; but it cannot be said with equal certainty that it is adequate, and it may, if pursued, prove to be wholly incomplete. The plaintiff is not therefore to be restricted, in his efforts to recover what is due to him, solely to the prosecution of suits against Edward P. Wood-worth alone, who may be found in the end to be unable to respond to any judgment which may be rendered against him; but, in some proper form, he is to be allowed to proceed directly and effectually against the party who owes and is bound to pay the money which he is entitled to receive. This cannot be accomplished, in consequence of the substitution of the note which was made payable to Edward P. Woodworth for that originally given to William J. Woodworth, without such assistance as can be afforded only in a court of equity. He ought therefore to be aEowed to avail himself of its authority and of its appropriate forms of proceeding. Under such a necessity, the jurisdiction of this court is amply sufficient to embrace the case, and to afford the requisite relief. The present biE is weE adapted to accompEsh the object proposed. AE parties in interest are joined in it, and their respective rights can be fuEy protected and secured by a proper decree. Demurrer overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
72 Mass. 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-woodworth-mass-1856.