Jewell v. Sherman

48 N.W. 55, 78 Wis. 615, 1891 Wisc. LEXIS 43
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 48 N.W. 55 (Jewell v. Sherman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jewell v. Sherman, 48 N.W. 55, 78 Wis. 615, 1891 Wisc. LEXIS 43 (Wis. 1891).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

In the above-entitled actions • the assignee has appealed from an order made in each of said cases upon [618]*618the proof of the several claims of the respondents against the estates in the hands of the said assignee. The claim in each case is made upon a promissory note held by the respondent. The notes were made by the Fond du Lac Furniture Company, a corporation doing business in Fond du Lac, and were indorsed by said Charles J. L. Meyer personally. The notes remain unpaid, and the holders of the notes have taken the proper steps to charge said Meyer as indorser of the same. After said notes became due, and after said indorser had been duly charged as the indorser upon each, both the furniture company and Meyer became insolvent, and each made an assignment under the statute, and in each case an assignee was duly appointed and qualified. The respective holders of said notes proved their claims for the whole amount of the notes against the estate of the furniture company. To this no objection was made. They then severally offered to prove, and the court permitted them to prove, their claims for the whole amount of said notes against the estate of Charles J. L. Meyer. To this the assignee of the estate of Meyer objects, and insists that the proofs of the claim against the estate of Meyer should not be for the whole amount due on the notes, but should be proved conditionally, and that the claim proved and entitled to a dividend in the Meyer estate should, before a distribution of said estate, be reduced by the full amount of any dividend or dividends which may be received, or which the claimants may be entitled to receive, on said notes from the estate of the furniture company. In other words, that the claim proved in the Meyer estate, upon which the holders of the notes should receive a dividend from the estate, should be first reduced by the full amount of dividends received from, or which the claimants may become entitled to receive from, the furniture company. The learned circuit court rejected this claim on the part of the assignee, to have the amount of the claim against the [619]*619Meyer estate, upon 'which a dividend in that estate should be calculated, ultimately reduced as contended for by the assignee. This appeal is made for the purpose of settling the rights of the creditors having the claims above stated, as well as" the rights of other creditors similarly situated in relation to said insolvent estates. Some objection was made as to the appealability of the orders, but as most of the attorneys interested in sustaining the ruling of the circuit judge made no objection of that kind, we shall consider the appeal upon its merits.

The question is this: Can a man who holds a promissory note against the maker and an indorser thereon, after the same becomes due, and after the indorser has been duly charged with payment of the note, and when, before any payment has been made thereon by either maker or in-dorser, the maker and indorser each make a voluntary assignment for the benefit of their creditors, prove his claim against the estate of the maker and of the indorser severally for the whole amount due on such note ? The question is so well settled by the authorities that it is not controverted by the learned counsel for the appellant in this case. That the holder of the note is the creditor of each severally for the whole amount due on the note, is uncontroverted, all courts holding that he may bring separate actions upon the note against the maker and indorsers for the whole amount due, and have several judgments for that amount (Cowles v. MoVickar, 3 Wis. 725;, Charles v. Denis, 42 Wis. 56); and that he may pursue his remedy upon such judgments until his debt is fully satisfied, and that if he can obtain satisfaction of such debt by enforcing the judgment against the indorsers alone he may do so without any hindrance. The indorser himself has no right, in law or equity, to compel his creditor to enforce payment for any part of the judgment out of the assets of the maker before enforcing payment from him. I do not understand the learned counsel [620]*620for the appellant to dispute this proposition. If we rightly understand his contention, it is this: 'that after both parties to the note become insolvent and the estates of each are transferred to an assignee, the other creditors of the as-signee of the indorser have, in equity, the right to insist that the holder shall first pursue his remedy against the maker and recover what he can from the assets of the maker, and that the amount so recovered must be applied as so much paid on his debt; and that as against the estate of the indorser, as between himself and the other creditors of such indorser, he can only have a dividend upon the amount remaining unpaid after so applying what has Jieen realized from the estate of the maker. Perhaps the contention of the learned counsel does not go to this extent, as he need not upon the facts of this case. He, perhaps, does not intend to insist that the holder of the note must pursue his remedy against the estate of the maker in the hands of the assignee before claiming a dividend for the whole amount of the note against the estate of the indorser; but he does contend that if he proves his claim against the maker, and obtains a dividend against that estate, the amount of such dividend must be deducted from the amount due on the note, and he can only have a dividend upon the amount of the note, less the dividend awarded to him from the estate of the maker. The contention is, in short, that any dividend awarded to the holder from the estate of the maker must be treated, so far as the creditors of the indorser are concerned, the same as a payment made on the note by the maker before the assignments were made, or before the holder made his proofs of claim against the estate of the in-dorser.

The learned counsel says: “We all agree that if the maker pays any part of the sum due on the note before the assignments are made, or even before the parties prove, their claims against the several estates, the holder can only [621]*621prove in either estate for the amount remaining unpaid on said note, and consequently can only have a dividend in either on the sum remaining unpaid.” And he asks why he should have a dividend on the whole amount, especially against the other creditors of the indorser, because such payment is obtained from the estate of the maker after the proofs of claim are made against that estate. The learned counsel for the appellant admits that the distinction he suggests has been made by most of the courts in this country and in England, where some different rule has not been established by statute law, and that the great weight of authority is against the rule he contends for; but, as he says, it is a new question in this court, and if there be no good sense or reason for the rule we ought to repudiate it and establish the rule he contends for. If it be as the learned counsel contends, that there is no sense or reason for the rule, we ought not, perhaps, to follow it. But before we determine that the rule is not founded on reason or good sense, we must give due weight to the fact that the most learned judges and courts in this country and in England have established the rule, and they insist that it is founded on right, reason, good sense, and upon well-established principles of equity.

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

Related

Gilbert v. Crane
279 N.W. 24 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1938)
First Wisconsin National Bank of Milwaukee v. Kingston
252 N.W. 153 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1934)
Harrigan v. Gilchrist
99 N.W. 909 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1904)
Receiver for Instructions
55 A. 825 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1903)
In re Swift
106 F. 65 (D. Massachusetts, 1901)
Sacramento Bank v. Pacific Bank
56 P. 787 (California Supreme Court, 1899)
In re Assignment of Sherry
76 N.W. 611 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1898)
Levy v. Chicago National Bank
30 L.R.A. 380 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1895)
Jelke v. Stallo
1 Ohio N.P. 29 (Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County, 1894)
Citizens' Bank v. Kendrick, Pettus & Co.
92 Tenn. 437 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 N.W. 55, 78 Wis. 615, 1891 Wisc. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jewell-v-sherman-wis-1891.