Juliand v. . Rathbone

39 N.Y. 369, 7 Trans. App. 51
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 39 N.Y. 369 (Juliand v. . Rathbone) 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
Juliand v. . Rathbone, 39 N.Y. 369, 7 Trans. App. 51 (N.Y. 1868).

Opinion

Grover, J.

The Respondent’s counsel insists that the judgment in the present case is not appealable to this Court, and cites Van Bergen v. Bradley, 36 N. Y. 316, in support of his position. The cases are not analogous. In the latter the judgment was entered upon the verdict without any order therefor by the General Term. In the present case the judgment was rendered upon the order of the General Term. It was, therefore, appealable to this Court without any further proceedings in the Supreme Court.

This case was regarded by the Supreme Court as involving the question whether an observance of sections 2 and 3 of chap. 348, Laws of 1860, by the assignor and assignee respectively within the time therein prescribed for the performance of the acts required, was necessary to the validity of the title of the assignee to the assigned property. That Court held these sections directory, and consequently that non-compliance with their provisions within the time prescribed did not impair the title of the assignee. In this I cannot concur.

The first section of the act provides that the assignment shall be duly acknowledged by the assignor and the certificate thereof duly endorsed before delivery to the assignee. Sec. 2 of the Act provides that the assignor shall at the date of the assignment, or within twenty days thereafter, make and deliver to the Judge of the county of his residence a schedule verified by him as prescribed by the act containing a full and true account of all his creditors, and their residence, as far as known; the sum owing to each creditor, and the nature of the debt, and how it arose ; the consideration of the debt and place where it. arose; a statement of any security for any debt; an inventory of all his estate, and the incumbrances thereon, if any, and of the value of such, according to the best knowledge of the debtor.

Sec. 3 provides that the assignee shall, within thirty days after the date of the assignment (and before he shall have power or authority to sell, dispose of, or convert to the purposes of the *54 trust any of the assigned property), enter into a bond, with sureties, as prescribed by the section. . ■

In construing these two latter sections the Supreme Court, as appears from the opinions delivered, applied the rule adopted in the construction of statutes prescribing the time for the performance of official acts by public officers in the performance of which the public have an interest. In construing these latter statutes, it is well settled that when the act prescribes a time for the performance of the act, without anything prohibiting the doing it after the time so fixed, the, act shall be valid if performed after the time prescribed.

■ The reason for this construction is, that the public, or some portion thereof, have an interest in the performance of the act, and to prevent injury from the neglect of the officer the rule has been adopted. That class of cases, holding that where the common law confers a right or gives a remedy, and a statute is enacted conferring a new right or giving a new remedy, will be so construed as not to take away the common law right or remedy, unless it contains negative words, showing that such was the legislative intent, was somewhat relied on. Neither class is .analogous to the present statute. The acts to be performed are by private persons, not public officers. The act creates no new right or remedy, but is designed to regulate an existing right merely.

In construing such statutes, the common law rule, as laid down by the elementary writers, is to consider: First, What mischief, if any, resulted from the exercise of the common law right. Second, What is the remedy provided by the statute for such mischief? Third, To give the statute such construction, if practicable, as will suppress the mischief, and make the remedy efficient, applying the rule to the present statute. The mischief to be remedied is obvious. To prevent pretended assignments being made obstacles in the way of creditors.

The first section provides that it shall be acknowledged, and the proof thereof (1) certified, before delivery. This Court has held •(case not reported) that an assignment delivered without such (1) See Transcript Appeals, Vol. 6, 323, Hardman v. Bowen. *55 acknowledgment and certificate is void. This does not necessarily determine the effect of non-compliance with the requirements of the two following sections, as the judgment may be upheld by the provision that the acknowledgment, &c., shall be made before the delivery of the assignment.

But in the absence of this, I think the same construction should be given to the clause, which then would read, “ Every conveyance, &c., made by a debtor in trust for his creditor shall be acknowledged.” Experience had shown that debtors frequently, with a view to defraud their creditors and make compositions with them advantageous to themselves, made general assignments of all their property in trust for creditors, giving no information of the character, situation, or value of the property assigned, or the amount of the debts, residence of creditors, whether the debts were secured, and giving no information to a creditor to enable him to ascertain anything in relation to the value of the property assigned, or the amount and bona tides of the debts entitled to share in the proceeds of the property. To remedy this, the second section provides that within twenty days from the making of the assignment the assignor shall make a schedule, verified by his oath, giving all the requisite information. This information will enable the creditors to defeat fraudulent assignments. The intention of the Legislature was, I think, to require this schedule to be made as a necessary part of a valid assignment, and as a prerequisite of vesting an absolute title to the property in the assignee.

In view of the fact that time for the preparation of this statement might be,required, twenty days were given for this purpose, after the delivery of the assignment, and in the meantime the title vested in the assignor was good against creditors, provided it was thereafter perfected by a compliance with sections 2 and 3 of the act; but in case of failure so to comply, the assignment must be adjudged void.

This construction will render these sections efficient in suppressing fraud, while that adopted by the Supreme Court renders them almost nugatory and useless. The class of cases relied upon in the Supreme Court for holding these sections directory, *56 and therefore nearly, if not quite, useless, we have endeavored to show, rest upon a principle peculiar to themselves, having no analogy to the present case; and while their authority is fully recognized, they do not justify, much less require, a construction that will defeat the manifest intention of the Legislature, so to regulate the exercise of the rights of debtors in making assignments of their property in trust for creditors as to defeat fraud and insure the application of the entire property to the payment of honest debts.

Assignments were frequently made to assignees destitute of pecuniary responsibility.

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.Y. 369, 7 Trans. App. 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/juliand-v-rathbone-ny-1868.