In Re the General Assignment of Hatch

50 N.E. 49, 155 N.Y. 401, 9 E.H. Smith 401, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 888
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 19, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 50 N.E. 49 (In Re the General Assignment of Hatch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the General Assignment of Hatch, 50 N.E. 49, 155 N.Y. 401, 9 E.H. Smith 401, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 888 (N.Y. 1898).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The only question necessary for us to consider in this case is that of the right to offset one claim against another. The facts that bear upon this question are these: On the 14th of November, 1887, the firm of A. S. Hatch & Co., as a firm, and each of the individual members as such, made a general assignment for the benefit of creditors. At that time Huntington had a claim against A. S. Hatch, individually, of $17,389.22, and against the firm of $20,167.49, and he still holds these claims against the individual and firm estate in the hands of the assignee.

On the 24th of June, 1886, more than a year before the assignment, Huntington had entered -into a written contract with A. S. Hatch, individually, whereby the latter transferred to the former certain judgments which were to be collected, and when collected divided between the parties in the manner indicated in the agreement. Nothing, however, had been collected on these judgments, and nothing was due on this contract at the date of the assignment above mentioned. Several years after the assignment was made a considerable sum of money was paid to Huntington in compromise and satisfaction of the judgments by the defendants therein, and for a certain share of the sum so paid, after deducting certain expenses, Huntington is bound to account to Hatch, or in this case to his assignee.

*404 This was a proceeding under the statute relating to general assignments for the purpose of ascertaining and adjusting the claim of the assignee against Huntington by reason of the money in his hands received on the judgments, and of ' Huntington against the assignee in consequence of his debt against Hatch individually above stated. The amount of the claim of each party was determined upon a reference under the statute and subsequently confirmed by the court.

The referee and the court permitted Huntington to set off against the claim of the assignee for the moneys collected on the judgments, the debt held against Hatch individually at the date of the assignment, but the Appellate Division reversed the order in so far as it permitted the offset, and this presents the only question of law which we need consider.

In the view that we have taken of the case, it is not necessary to decide whether the right of set-off exists under the statute on that subject. (Code, §§ 501, 502.) The question can be disposed of under the rule in equity, which exists, as it always did, quite independent of the statute. It is this rule that the learned court below dealt with, as will appear from the opinion. But we think that the learned judge who spoke for the court misapprehended the true scope and application of the decisions on the question in assuming, as he evidently did, that it is necessary that the mutual debts or claims should both be due at the time of the assignment of the insolvent estate. The insolvency of one of the parties in this case draws the question with respect to the right of set-off into the domain of equity. • The party who asserts- the right is Huntington alone. His debt was due when the assignment was made, though the claim of the assignee against him did not accrue until some years afterwards. The question is, whether Huntington is not entitled to apply the former in extinguishment of the latter.

The general language used in some of the decisions would seem to sustain the decision below, but it will be seen on closer examination that it is not necessary, in order to warrant the set-off that both debts should be due at the time of the insol *405 vency. The learned court helow supposed that the case of Fera v. Wickham (135 N. Y. 223) deprived Huntington of the right of set-ofE. In that case neither claim was due at the time of the assignment, but both accrued afterwards, and the right was for that reason denied. It was held that where this right did not exist at the time of the insolvency or assignment it could not arise afterwards.

In Smith v. Felton (43 N. Y. 419) an assignee of an insolvent sued upon a note made by the defendant to the ihsolvent not due at the time of the assignment. The defendant had a debt against the insolvent exceeding the amount of the note which was due at the time of the assignment. It was held that the defendant was entitled to set off this claim against the note. In Smith v. Fox (48 N. Y. 674) the debt due to the assignee did not accrue till after the assignment, but that held by the defendant was due, and the latter was allowed to set off the debt so due.

In Richards v. La Tourette (119 N. Y. 54) the debt due from the assignee accrued prior to the assignment, while the debt due to him matured afterwards, as is the case here, and it was held that the right of set-off existed in such a case. In Rothschild v. Mack (115 N. Y. 1) the court said: “ It has been frequently held that, as to the right of set-off in equity, the fact that the debt owing to the insolvent is not due when he makes an assignment is entirely immaterial ” (p. 8). The same rule was laid down in the same words in the case of Richards v. La Tourette (supra p. 58) and a careful reading of the opinion in Fera v. Wickham (supra) will show that the learned judge had the same principle in mind.

The principle upon which the rule proceeds is, that in case of mutual debts it is only the balance which is the real and just sum owing by or to the insolvent. Hence, when the assignee in this case became vested with the assets of his insolvent assignor, he took the contract above mentioned which had not then matured into a claim or right of action, but which did mature in his hands some years thereafter. He acquired no greater right than his assignor had prior to the *406 assignment, had the claim then matured, and since Huntington had, prior to the assignment, a valid existing set-off against what the assignee took, that right was not lost or impaired by the assignment. The rights of the parties being adjusted in equity as of the date of the insolvency, all the assignee took as assets was the balance subsequently accruing on the contract, after deducting Huntington’s debt due against the assignor before the rights of creditors intervened.

Had Huntington’s debt accrued after the insolvency, as that of the assignee did, then equity would not permit the set-off and the case would come within the rule laid down in Fera v. Wickham (supra), but, as already shown, such was not the case. When the debt of the party claiming the set-off does not exist 'when the insolvent estate passed into the hands of a trustee for creditors, but accrued subsequently during the administration of the estate, then the equities of the other creditors will intervene to prevent the depletion of the assets in the hands of the trustee by extinguishing a good debt due to the estate by a bad one due to the creditor from the estate. In all cases of mutual debts, it is the insolvency of one of the debtors and the rights of the other creditors in the assigned estate that equity takes notice of, and modifies the legal right of set-off accordingly in order to promote equality and justice.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.E. 49, 155 N.Y. 401, 9 E.H. Smith 401, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-general-assignment-of-hatch-ny-1898.