Jefferson County Bank v. Prime

3 How. Pr. 113
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1847
StatusPublished

This text of 3 How. Pr. 113 (Jefferson County Bank v. Prime) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jefferson County Bank v. Prime, 3 How. Pr. 113 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1847).

Opinion

Edmonds, Justice.

This is an application, under the act to abolish imprisonment for debt, and to punish fraudulent debtors, for a warrant to commit the Defendants to close custody for unjustly refusing to apply their assets, amounting to some $50,000, to the payment of a judgment obtained against them by the Jefferson County Bank, for $89,915.31. There is no allegation of fraud or unfair dealing in the case, but it is on one side, a claim by the bank, that under that statute, they have obtained a preference over all other creditors, and that therefore it is unjust in Prime, Ward & Co., to refuse on demand, thus to apply their assets, and on the other, a claim by Prime, Ward & Co., that such preference would be unjust and contrary to their willingness and intention to make an equal distribution of their effects among all their creditors.

The question is one then merely of law, involving the construction of that statute, except that it may perhaps become necessary to consider one of fact growing out of the terms of the demand and refusal.

The provisions of the statute applicable to this case are, that in all eases where a Plaintiff has obtained a judgment founded upon contract, he may apply to a judge of this court for a warrant to arrest the Defendant, upon satisfactory evidence to be adduced to such officer, that the Defendant has rights in action, money or evidences of debt, which he unjustly refuses to apply to the payment of that judgment.

The Defendants have been brought before me on such a warrant, and as allowed by the statute, they have controverted the allegation of an unjust refusal. On that point, proof has been taken before me, and from the evidence, it appears that on the twenty-ninth of October, the Defendants exhibited to the attorney of the bank a list of their assets, which he demanded that they should apply on its judgment, which they refused to do, at the same time avowing their readiness to make a general assignment for the benefit of all their creditors; and I am now called upon to take the next step authorised by the statute, namely, if I am satisfied that the allegations of the complainant are substantiated, to direct that the Defendants be committed to the jail of the county, where they shall remain in custody in the same manner as other prisoners on criminal process, until they shall assign their property and obtain their discharge, as provided in that act.

The professed object of the statute is to abolish imprisonment for debt [116]*116and to punish fraudulent debtors; but it contains many provisions which aim only at enabling the creditor, in a certain class of cases, to enforce the collection of his demand. Thus, while it authorizes the commitment of the debtor to custody as a prisoner on criminal process, and his conviction as guilty of a misdemeanor, it permits him to be discharged from his commitment on paying the debt in question; on giving security to pay the debt in sixty days; on making an assignment of his property, or on giving a bond that he will within thirty days apply for an assignment of his property and a discharge.

And in analogy to the proceedings against one who has been convicted of crime, and sentenced to the state prison, (2 E. S. 14, Art. 2,) when the debtor shall be thus convicted of the misdemeanor, trustees may be appointed to take charge of his property and distribute it among his creditors, and may have his person, any place occupied by him, his trunk or other article possessed by him, searched for money or evidence of debt to be delivered to the trustees.

The statute has then a double aspect, as a civil remedy and a criminal proceeding, and it cannot be well understood without keeping this consideration constantly in view.

So far as it is a civil remedy (except where the debtor may be induced by fear of commitment to pay the particular debt) it seeks to attain its purpose by means of an assignment of the debtor’s property, and it is not a little singular that after fifteen years practice under the law, it should at this moment be a matter of doubt for whose benefit such assignment shall be made—the creditors at large or the pursuing creditor alone.

That question is now distinctly presented to me, and I cannot decide it without running counter either to the views of the Supreme Court, or to the court of chancery.

The question arises before me in this form: If the prosecuting creditor did, by his proceedings, obtain a right to priority of payment, then it was unjust for the Defendants to refuse the demanded application of their assets, and a case is made out to warrant their commitment. In the People v. Abel, 3 Hill, 109 ; in Buthelon v. Betts, 4 Hill, 577, and in Moak v. De Forest, 5 Hill, 605, the Supreme Court clearly intimate their opinion that the proceeding under the act of 1831, is for the benefit of the prosecuting creditor, to enable him to collect his debt, and that the assignment enures to his benefit rather than to that of all the creditors While on the contrary the Supreme Court in Townsend v. Morrell, 10 Wend. 577, and the chancellor in Spear & Ripley v. Wardells, (decided August 4, 1847,) as clearly intimate the contrary opinion; and that if [117]*117the imprisonment does not coerce from the debtor payment or security of the particular debt, but does coerce an assignment, that will be for the benefit of all the creditors.

When the case of the Wardells was before me as circuit judge, I intimated views similar to those afterwards expressed by the chancellor, though I purposely abstained from deciding the point. I committed the Defendants in that case, because, on a demand of them like that made of Prime, Ward & Co., they had refused to apply their assets to the payment of the particular judgment, on the ground of their intention to make an equal distribution among all their creditors. But I decided so to commit, not because I had arrived at a satisfactory conclusion on the point now again before me, but because of the opinion which the supreme court had intimated, because the practice in the hall had been, as I was informed, in conformity with such an opinion, and in the expectation, on my so ruling, that the case would be taken to that court for review.

The supreme court, however, refused to review it; and if the decisions of our courts now remained in the same condition in which they were then, I might, on a matter where I find it so difficult to arrive at a satisfactory result, pursue the same course in this case which I adopted in that. But since that time the chancellor has intimated an opinion contrary to that on which I rested my decision to commit the Wardells, so that I am no longer at liberty to repose on an obiter dictum of the supreme court any more than on a similar opinion of the court of chancery ; and as there has not been in either court any express decision on the point, I am compelled, so far as may be practicable, amid these conflicting dicta, to arrive at a satisfactory conclusion for myself, in reference to the meaning of this unhappy statute.

The proceedings under it, have been sometimes regarded as in the nature of a statute execution, that is, as a statutory means of enforcing the payment of debts. In some respects this may be a just view. Thus, if the Defendant before arrest, and in answer to a demand made under the 4th section, applies his evidence of debt to the payment of a judgment against him, it is pro tanto a means of enforcing payment of a debt.

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

Related

Ex parte Townsend v. Morrell
10 Wend. 577 (New York Supreme Court, 1833)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 How. Pr. 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-county-bank-v-prime-nysupct-1847.