Horsey v. Stockley

4 Del. Ch. 536
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Del. Ch. 536 (Horsey v. Stockley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horsey v. Stockley, 4 Del. Ch. 536 (Del. Ct. App. 1872).

Opinion

The Chancellor :—

My own conclusion with respect to this case lies between the conflicting claims of the parties. I think Stockley is entitled to be reimbursed what he paid with interest and nothing more on account of the Baltimore debts. I will state my reasons. In the first place it is clearly proved and now hardly, if at all, disputed, that Stockley applied to the debts his.own money and that no part of it came from Horsey. The answers of the defendants on this point being responsive to the bill would be alone conclusive, but they are corroborated by the testimony of Edmundson. It appears from the testimony of this witness that Horsey failed in his first plan of liquidating these debts by raising a loan upon the mortgage of his real estate, and that at this juncture Edmund-son advised Stockley to take Horsey’s affairs in hand, and upon Stockley’s objecting- that he had not the money at command, offered to loan him what might" be necessary to settle with the other creditors; and to take Stockley’s note for the fifty per cent, on his (Edmundson’s) debt. Stockley acceded to this suggestion and it was carried into effect. Edmundson’s debt amounted at that date to $2140.77, one-half of which was $1070.38. Stockley paid in cash $70.38 and gave his note for $1000.00 which as Edmundson further testifies, Stockley afterward paid, partly out of the proceeds of grain and partly in money at different times. Edmundson also loaned to Stockley $1000.00 for the purpose of enabling him to settle with the other creditors, a sum very nearly sufficient for that purpose. This loan was afterward repaid by Stockley.

In the next place the evidence clearly satisfies me that the transaction between Stockley and the creditors was not a purchase of their claims, but a satisfaction and [543]*543discharge of them for Horsey & Martin’s benefit, the payment by Stockley being in effect a loan to Horsey & Martin. The settlement with the creditors was the direct fruit of a negotiation just had between Horsey and the creditors at a meeting with them for the purpose of obtaining a compromise of the debts at fifty per cent. Stockley was not present at the meeting, but was, throughout, in communication with Horsey, acting as his friend and adviser in the business, and his settlement with the creditors, as appears by his answer and Edmundson’s testimony, was made upon a suggestion of Edmundson, which evidently looked to a compromise for the benefit of the debtors. I must consider that such was the substance and effect of the transaction, and, in accordance with this view of it, the vouchers given by the creditors to Stockley and produced in evidence are all receipts in full of the respective claims, and not assignments or agreements to hold them for Stocldey’s use. There is nothing whatever in the circumstances or in the form of the receipt to suggest the idea of a purchase. I come now to the real point of controversy, which arises out of the denial on the part of the complainants of the right of Stockley to receive-the judgment, even sums paid by him for Horsey & Martin. The complainants insist that the bond was void in toto on two grounds, ist, That it was an illegal preference of one creditor” over others, contrary to our statute against fraudulent insolvency, Rev. Code pp. 486, 487, the bond being given, as is insisted, in contemplation of insolvency, and of sufficient amount to cover all the debtor’s property. But, under the provision of the statute referred to, sec. 4, chap. 132, it is not preferences, given in contemplation of insolvency, or under failing circumstances, which are prohibited, but preferences given under an assignment made for the benefit of creditors; it is the act of assignment and not merely his being in failing circumstances which brings the debtor within the scope of this statute. Our [544]*544law recognizes two distinct policies with respect to the liquidation of a failing debtor’s estate, and one is the policy of giving to a creditor the benefit of his diligence as against other creditors. This policy obtains so long as the debtor keeps the control of his property by not making an assignment. If -no assignment be made he may prefer an honest creditor, though he be in failing circumstances, and though the preference, in effect, covers all his property for the benefit of creditors ; but the moment he makes an assignment, and not before, the policy of equal distribution among all the creditors prevails, and the debtor can give no preference either under the assignment, or by an act done in contemplation of it. There is sound reason for treating the fact of an assignment as a test of the application of this statute to the debtor. It is a highly penal statute, and, upon general principles, penal statutes are to be strictly construed, and especially should that rule apply to this statute, for if the fact of an assignment alone subjects the debtor to its provisions, and renders him punishable for a preference, we have a certain test of his liability which he himself could not misunderstand, and which could be easily proved against him, but if his being in failing circumstances is held to render the preference of a creditor illegal, and subjects the debtor to the penalty of the law, a very uncertain test of his liability would be created, depending upon a wide range of proof; and frequent injustice might be done to debtors who often fail to appreciate their real situation and honestly believe themselves to be solvent when they are not solvent. On the whole it is a sound policy of the statute working the least injustice, which avoids a preference only when given under or in contemplatation of an assignment. The point now made under this statute was first raised in Newell vs.Morgan, 2 Harring. 225. A creditor who had obtained, by a confession, a judgment against a failing debtor, pending suits against him by other creditors, filed a bill in equity, in order to reach certain real estate, [545]*545which the debtor had previously bought and paid for, taking the title in the name of his children. The Chancellor decreed the conveyance to be fraudulent, as against creditors, and directed the real estate to be sold and the proceeds to be brought into Court. At this stage of the cause,the other creditors who had obtained judgments after the complainant, came in and by petition were admitted as parties. In the proceedings which followed, the other creditors contested the validity of the complainant’s judgment as a fraudulent and illegal preference within the statute under consideration ; the point was raised and argued ; the Court do not appear to have considered it of sufficient substance to be discussed in the opinion delivered, but treated the complainant’s judgment as unquestionably valid and enforced it against the proceeds, giving it its legal priority, as the first of the judgments recovered.

This case is a very strong one to show how far under our law, the policy of diligence prevails where no assignment is made. For, in this case, the complainant’s judgment had no legal priority against the lands,- the legal title to which was never in the debtor; the land was sold as the legal estate of his children and the proceeds brought into court and subjected to the debts of the real purchaser upon the ground of fraud. Now the doctrine of equity is, that distribution in that Court among creditors shall be pari passu, and the Chancellor in the case cited held the doctrine applicable and allowed no legal priority among creditors.

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Related

Kennedy v. Emerald Coal & Coke Co.
30 A.2d 269 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Del. Ch. 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horsey-v-stockley-delch-1872.