Howe v. Warren

40 N.E. 472, 154 Ill. 227
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 40 N.E. 472 (Howe v. Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howe v. Warren, 40 N.E. 472, 154 Ill. 227 (Ill. 1894).

Opinions

Shope, J.:

It is insisted by plaintiffs in error, that by the execution of the deed of assignment from Samuel A. Kean to B. F. Jacobs, and the express acceptance thereof by said Jacobs, as assignee, for himself and successors therein, there was created an irrevocable trust, imposed upon all the assigned estate, and which, notwithstanding the order of discontinuance of the assignment, is still subsisting, and enforceable in' equity for the benefit of all of Kean’s creditors; that the order of discontinuance, which, it is conceded, remitted the parties to the same rights and duties existing at the date of the assignment, was ineffectual to destroy the trust in favor of creditors created by the deed, and that the further order of the county court, under and by which the estate of Kean was transferred to the defendant in error Everett M. Warren, was void. On the other hand, it is as strenuously contended that the parties were remitted, by the order of discontinuance, to the same rights that existed at the date of the assignment; that the trust created by the deed of assignment was extinguished, and that Kean, the assignor, had a right to convey the property therein described, and undisposed of by the assignee, to said Warren, and that the county court was authorized by the statute to make an order directing the transfer and conveyance of said property by the assignee, Jacobs, to said Warren, accordingly.

In our opinion neither of these contentions can be sustained. The questions presented are of more than ordinary importance, and consideration of them requires a ' construction of section 15, in force July 1, 1879, amendatory of the “Act concerning voluntary assignments,” etc., of 1877. (Hurd’s Stat. 1893, chap. 10.) That section provides that “all proceedings under the act of which this (section) is amendatory, may be discontinued upon the assent, in writing, of such debtor and the majority of his creditors, in number and amount; and in such ca'ses all parties shall be restored to the same rights and duties éxisting at the date of the assignment, except so far as such estate shall have already been administered and disposed of; and the court shall have power to make all needful orders to carry the foregoing provision into effect.”

Deeds of assignment, prior to the enactment of the Voluntary Assignment act, were in common use in this - State, and it will be well to consider the nature and effect of such an assignment. In England, deeds of assignment, as it seems, are of two kinds: deeds of assignment or of arrangement with creditors, and voluntary deeds of agency. The former, were executed by the debtor and creditor, and were held to be irrevocable. The latter, to which the creditor is not a party, and which were executed only by the debtor and the trustee to whom the debtor conveys his property, to be applied to the payment of his debts, or otherwise, as the debtor may direct, were held to be revocable or not by the assignor, according to the position in which the estate is, and" the rights of creditors under the assignment,. at the time of the attempted revocation. (McKenna v. Stewart, 20 L. J. Ch. 49.) That is, the doctrine in the British courts appears to be, that where the creditors, under a voluntary deed of agency, on notice thereof from the trustee, have manifested unequivocal assent thereto, and by presenting their ‘Claims to the trustee, or by performing some act by which their position has become materially changed or by which they will be warranted in looking to the fund in the hands of the trustee for the payment of their debts, the deed of, assignment is regarded as irrevocable. (Acton v. Woodgate, 2 M. & K. 492; Siggers v. Evans, 32 Eng. L. & Eq. 139; Brown v. Cavendish, 1 Jones & L. 606; 2 Pomeroy's Eq. Jur. sec. 993.) On the other hand, it seems to have been held that, at any time prior to the rights of the creditors actually attaching under the assignment, the deed, not being signed by the creditors, might be corrected, altered or revoked, at the instance of the assignor. (Girrard v. Lord Lauderdale, 3 Sim. 1; Walwyn v. Coutts, 3 Mer. 707, and 3 Sim. 14; Johns v. James, (L. R.) 8 Ch. Div. 744; Brown v. Cavendish, supra.) But it appears that the holdings are not entirely uniform.

In the United States, assignments for the benefit of creditors have generally been of one kind, and required to be executed only by the assignor and accepted by the trustee. As a general rule, the express assent or joinder of the creditors, as parties to the making of the assignment, has not been regarded as essential to its validity. “The prevailing doctrine,” says Burrill, (Law of Assignments, 6th ed. 459, 460,) “was, that an assignment in trust for creditors, executed and delivered by the assignor and accepted by the assignee, creates at once the relation of trustee and cestui que trust between the assignee and the creditors, .and cannot be revoked by the assignor, or by the joint act of the assignor and the assignee. * * * Thus, after the rights of the creditors have once actually attached, or after notice of the assignment to those provided for by it, or after notice by creditors to the assignee of their desire and intention to avail themselves of the assignment, or after they have taken steps to enforce the trust, as by filing a bill praying for the distribution of the fund according to the provisions of the deed, or after any of the trusts have been actually executed, it is too late to revoke the assignment.” And this seems to be the general doctrine, and has received the approval of this court in Gibson v. Rees, 50 Ill. 383, where it was held, that where the trust, under a deed of assignment for the benefit of creditors, “is accepted and the trustee enters upon the discharge of the trust, so long as it remains in force, or where the creditors are parties to the instrqment, or have presented their claims to the trustee and given him notice that they look to the fund for payment, it is binding upon all parties in interest, and a court of equity will entertain jurisdiction and carry the trust into effect.” And it was there said, that “a power created by a deed of this character may be revoked and the trust destroyed by an arrangement between the grantor and the trustee. * * * But to be effectual it must occur before the creditors have manifested their assent by presenting their claims to the trustee, or in some manner manifest their assent, or do some act entitling them to rely upon the fund for the payment of their claims.” See, also, 2 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur. sec. 994; 2 Lewin on Trusts, *515, and cases cited.

It seems clear that prior to the passage of section 15, before quoted, and its becoming part of the act of 1877, the law- in this State was, generally, that a deed of assignment for the benefit of creditors, executed in the usual form by the assignor, was subject to revocation and change by the assignor and assignee at any time before the rights of creditors attached thereunder. On the other hand, if by any of the modes indicated, or their equivalent, the rights of creditors had attached, the deed was binding upon all the parties, and irrevocable. (Wilson v. Pearson, 20 Ill. 81.) In such cases, it is manifest that it would require the assent of all the creditors to set aside the deed of assignment and restore the property to the debtor.

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Bluebook (online)
40 N.E. 472, 154 Ill. 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howe-v-warren-ill-1894.