Hoyt v. Thompson

3 Sandf. 416
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedFebruary 23, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 Sandf. 416 (Hoyt v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoyt v. Thompson, 3 Sandf. 416 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1850).

Opinion

By the Court. Dues, J.

The grounds upon which we shall decide this case will render unnecessary the consideration of many of the questions that were elaborately discussed at the hearing; and as in the progress of a litigation that may still be expected, the same questions may again be raised, we shall abstain from any expression of our present views in relation to them.

The plaintiff claims to be the assignee of a debt of $40,000, which in its origin, was due from the defendants, The Long Island Rail Road Company to The Morris Canal and Banking Company, and the payment of which was seemed by the bond of the former company and by two successive mortgages, one a chattel mortgage, the other covering the railroad itself, its rights, privileges, and appurtenances.

The main objects of the bill are to set aside a prior assignment of the debt and its securities from the Morris Canal and Banking Company to the state of Michigan, and a subsequent assignment from the state to the defendant, Thompson, and to obtain, as against the Long Island Railroad Company, the ordinary decree of foreclosure and sale; and if we are bound to conclude from the statements in the bill, that the plaintiff is the legal or equitable owner of the debt, or is entitled in his own name to demand its payment, his right to maintain the present suit cannot be questioned.

The plaintiff derives his title from the receivers of the Morris Canal and Banking Company, who, in consequence of the insolvency of that company, were duly appointed by the chancellor of the state of Mew Jersey, upon the 29th of January, 1842, in conformity to the provisions of an act of the legislature -of that state, entitled an act “ to prevent frauds by incorporated companies.” The terms of the order of the chancellor, which exactly correspond with those of the law, give to the receivers (i fall power and authority to demand, sue for, collect, receive, and take into their possession, all the goods and chattels, rights and credits, moneys and effects, lands and tenements, books, papers, choses in action, bills, notes, and property of every description,- belonging to the said Morris Canal and Banking Company, at the time of its insolvency, or suspension of business, [421]*421as set forth in the hill of the complainants, and to sell, convey, and assign all the said real and personal estate.” The proper construction of this order, and of the statute upon which it was founded, is evidently the first subject of inquiry.

We shall not examine the question, to the discussion of which the arguments of the counsel on both sides were mainly directed, namely, whether the act of the legislature of ¡New Jersey, and the order of the court of chancery, can be construed to have had an extra territorial operation, so as to have vested in the receivers a legal or equitable title to any of the property or effects of the corporation not within the jurisdiction of the state. We decline to consider this question, because we are now satisfied, (although upon the hearing our impressions were somewhat different,) that, in reality, it is not involved in the cause.

It may be perfectly true, that it is competent to a state legislature to direct a transfer to receivers of all the property and effects, wherever situated, of an insolvent corporation, created by its own laws, and that it would be our duty to give full faith and effect to the judgment or decree of a state tribunal, in conformity to the provisions of such a statute. But there is conclusive evidence that in this cause the act of the legislature of ¡New Jersey, and the consequent order in chancery, were not designed to operate, even within the jurisdiction of that state, as a transfer to the receivers of the whole or any portion of the property of the insolvent corporation. In a case which escaped the attention of the counsel, Willink v. The Morris Canal and Banking Company, 3 Green’s Ch. R. 400, the chancellor of ¡New Jersey expressly decided, that the only effect of the statute and of the order which he had founded upon its provisions, was to substitute the receivers in the place of the directors of the company, for the purpose of settling up and closing its affairs, and that the company was not dissolved, nor the title to its property changed, but only a power delegated to the receivers to take charge of and sell it. This construction- of the statute we think is 'fully justified by its terms, and, at any rate, it is that which we are bound to adopt.

In each state it is the province of its courts of justice to determine the' construction of its statutes, and as the construction [422]*422which they adopt becomes the law of the state, it must be regarded and followed as such by all foreign tribunals. Hence the averment in the present bill, that by force of the order or decree of the chancellor of Hew Jersey, all the property and assets, including the debt in controversy, belonging to the Morris Canal and Banking Company, when it first became insolvent, were vested in the receivers, must be rejected as an unsound and groundless conclusion of law.

The company was not divested of any portion of its property, and no title or interest of any kind passed to the receivers. It may be thought, however, that although the receivers had only a naked authority, not clothed with any title or interest, yet substantially the same question, that we have declined to consider, is still necessary to be decided. The extent of their authority, it may be said, is as necessary to be ascertained as the extent of their title, had a title been given to them. But in reality, if the acts of the receivers are to be judged by the same rules that wduld have been applied to those of the directors, no such question is requisite to be considered. If the assignment under which the plaintiff claims was made by the receivers in the name and under the seal of the company, it is just as valid as if it had been madp under the sanction of the directors in a similar form; while on the other hand, if the assignment was made by the receivers in their own names, and as the transfer of a title vested in themselves, its invalidity can hardly be doubted. (Bank of Metropolis v. Guttschliech, 14 Peters R. 19; Hatch v. Barr, 1 Ohio R. 390.) The averments in the bill upon this subject are materially defective. They leave it wholly uncertain whether the assignment upon which the plaintiff relies as the source of his title was made by the receivers in their own right and in their own names, or as the representatives and in the name of the company. It is stated to have been made under a special order of the chancellor, but to enable us to say affirmatively that under this order the plaintiff has acquired the title which he claims, the terms of the order, and of the assignment that followed, ought to have been fully set forth. These are defects, however, that may be supplied by amendment, and as we desire to reach the merits of the case, we shall consider [423]*423the hill in these respects as amended. We shall assume that the assignment was made in the form that perhaps alone could render it valid. We shall assume that it was an act of the company, sanctioned by the court and directed by the receivers.

The question, therefore, whether the plaintiff by virtue of his assignment became the legal or equitable owner of the debt in controversy, is seen to he exactly the same as whether an assignment, having this effect, could at that time have been ordered by the hoard of directora, had not their authority been superseded by that of the receivers.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Matthews v. Dickinson
36 Misc. 187 (Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York, 1901)
Whitehead v. Hamilton Rubber Co.
52 N.J. Eq. 78 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1893)
Weeks v. Cornwall
19 Abb. N. Cas. 356 (New York Supreme Court, 1887)
Philpot v. Sandwich Manufacturing Co.
18 Neb. 54 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1885)
Jessup v. . Carnegie
80 N.Y. 441 (New York Court of Appeals, 1880)
Leas, Harsh & Sinclair v. White
15 Iowa 187 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1863)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Sandf. 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoyt-v-thompson-nysuperctnyc-1850.